the human population: patterns, processes, and problematics lecture #19: ch14: demographics
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The Human Population: Patterns, Processes, and Problematics Lecture #19: Ch14: Demographics. Paul Sutton [email protected] Department of Geography University of Denver. Ch 14: Demographics. The material covered in Chapters 1-13 can actually be put to practical use. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
The Human Population:The Human Population:Patterns, Processes, and ProblematicsPatterns, Processes, and Problematics
Lecture #19: Lecture #19: Ch14: DemographicsCh14: Demographics
Paul SuttonPaul [email protected]@du.edu
Department of GeographyDepartment of GeographyUniversity of DenverUniversity of Denver
Ch 14: Demographics
• The material covered in Chapters 1-13 can actually be put to practical use.
• People make a living as “Demographers”– Political Planning– Social Planning– Business Planning
Defining Demography
• Demography is a small but significant academic discipline dedicated to discovering new information about population patterns and processes
• Demographics or ‘Applied Demography’ is the process of using existing theory, knowledge, and data to solve real world problems.
Uses of Demographics• Central to the U.S. Political Process
– Census for apportionment & redistricting– Allocation of tax dollars– Social security– Fiscal impacts of immigration– Campaign strategy
• Social Planning– School districting– Crime mapping/resource allocation– Day care provision– Hospital locating
• Business Planning– Marketing– Site selection– Labor pool analysis
GIS and Demography• Data is much
easier to handle and visualize. Dramatic changes taking place in demography as a result of GIS
Marketing to Hispanics in San Diego
Congressional Reapportionment & Redistricting
• State Pop Counts due to president on December 31st of year of census
• 435 congressional seats to allocate to the states• Each State gets at least one house representative.
Then use ‘Method of Equal Proportions’• In 2000 32 of 50 states neither lost nor gained
seats• If # of seats change for a state then redistricting
occurs.
Figure 14.3 What’s wrong with this picture?
So I went to the web site & got a better one
Politics & Choropleth MapsThe famous 2000 presidential Election
Republican ‘Take’Counties won:Gore – 677Bush – 2,434.
Square miles won:Gore – 580,134Bush – 2,427,039
Population of counties won:Gore – 127 millionBush – 143 million
Murder rates in counties won by:Gore --- over 13 per 100,000
Bush --- less than 2 per 100,000
By County
By State
Democratic ‘Take’Gore: 50,158,094Bush: 49,820,518Nader: 2,778,546Buchanan: 445,343
Gerrymandering Image
Gerrymandering II
“Gerrymadering is named after early 19th century MassachussettsGovernor Elbridge Gerry (later a Vice President). Drew districtsTo favor his Federalist party over the Democrat-Republicans”
Campaign Strategy• “The demography of the voting age population
within a political district is a crucial ingredient in winning an election because demographic characteristics such as age, sex, race, likelihood of voting , and to some extent political preferences.”
• Candidates are “packaged and sold” just like consumer products based on demographics.
• Demographics is the key element to understanding the electoral process and likelihood of winning an election.
Legislative Analysis• “Demographic change bears directly on the formulation
of social policy because it determines in a large part whose income or wealth is redistributed to who.”
• Baby boomers in 1970’s caused inflation• Govt. Policies tried to create more jobs for swelling labor
force• The baby boom retiring…
– That’s why 401K’s were created and allowed– That’s why Social Security is such a big deal– That a reason we have lax immigration policy
Social Planning: Education• Declining enrollment• Increasing enrollment• Shifting enrollment• Do you close some schools and open new ones
elsewhere? If so, what do you do with the closed schools?– College enrollments– Baby boomlets– Aging neighborhoods
Social Planning: Health Services
• Illegal Immigration and Emergency rooms in Private Hospitals. (Regionally serious problem)
• Aging Population and changes to health care services.
• Private – Public Disconnect a big problem
Social Planning: Criminal Justice
• Stephen Leavitt’s Controversial explanation for reduced crime rates in the early 1990’s
Demographic considerations for policy development and evaluation.
Social Planning: Transportation
Business Planning• “When it comes to understanding today’s consumer maketplace, just about
the only thing that’s certain is that uncertainty reigns. The speed of technological change, the volatile global economy, the emergence of media-savvy, ever-more-demanding customers – all have coalesced into the blur that characterizes business-as-usual at the end of the century. “Grappling with uncertainty in business planning requires more than guesswork”, warns business guru Peter Drucker. “It requires looking at what has already happened that will create the future. The first place to look,” says Drucker, “is in demographics”
• Marketing Demographics• Cluster Marketing• Site Selection (location, location, location)• Investment Demographics• Human Resource Demographics
Marketing Demographics and Segmentation
• “Demographics are used to segment and target the market for a product, and this approach has become so populatr that it has eve been suggested that a television program’s demographic base now determines its commercial success “far more than sheer audience numbers” Segmentation refers to the manufacturing and packaging of products or the provision of services that appeal to specific socio-demographically identifiable groups within the population. “consumer markets are segmented on the basis of such demographic variables as geographic location, rate or product usage, income, age, sex, education, stage in the family life cycle, religion, race and social class. Industrial markets are segmented demographically according to such variables as geographic location, kind of business, rate of product usage, and size of user. Automobile manufacturers are most famous for segmenting the market and producing different cars to appeal to different categories of people.”
The Ford Mustang (“a demographic product”)
• “Our market research showed that the youthful image of the new decade had afirm basis in demographic reality. Millions of teenagers, born in the postwar baby boom, were about to9 surge into the national marketplace. Here was a market in search of a car. Any car that would appeal to these young customers had to have three main features: great styling, strong perfomance, and a low price.” Lee Iacoca
What can you learn from this figure?
Demographics and TV• What commercials would you expect to see on:
– Sesame Street?– NFL Football games?– Friends?– Oprah?– McNeil-Lehrer News Hour– Sponge Bob Square Pants (this might surprise you)
Marketing and the Age Structure
• “People at different ages have different needs and tastes for products and differing amounts of money to spend” (duh…?)
• Baby Stuff Sellers– How many babies born in a give year?– Birth Order– Where are the grandparents?
Religious Planning
There are lots of companies that do this. There are jobs in this field.
Marketing to teenagers• 1980’s babies (Generation ‘Y’ or Millenials ?)• Parents spend the money on education &
entertainment• As the children age they have more control over
the money• Money money than earlier generations because of
smaller family size & increasing wealth• Big products: Food, entertainment, sports,
clothes, …COLLEGE
Middle Age Marketing(The Baby Boomers Now)
• Lasik Surgery• Walking (not running) shoes• SUVs• Non Fat Foods
The Young Old (65-74)
• Leisure Travel• Watches with Big #s on the dial• Health Services• Retirement Property
Racial Marketing• U.S. African American market is wealthiest
& 4th largest in world behind Nigeria, Ethiopia, and South Africa. (35 million)
• Hispanic Market soon to Pass African-American in the U.S.– Mexican-American Los Angeles– Cuban American Miami– Puerto Rican New York• Asian – American Market growing