Secondary Sector

Chances are, you've come across a construction site. Maybe it was a single worker replacing a rotted wooden beam – or a large team of workers building an entirely new apartment complex, blocking off roads and sidewalks and working day and night, rain or shine, to meet building deadlines. 

Get started

Scan and solve every subject with AI

Try our homework helper for free Homework Helper
Avatar

Millions of flashcards designed to help you ace your studies

Sign up for free

Achieve better grades quicker with Premium

PREMIUM
Karteikarten Spaced Repetition Lernsets AI-Tools Probeklausuren Lernplan Erklärungen Karteikarten Spaced Repetition Lernsets AI-Tools Probeklausuren Lernplan Erklärungen
Kostenlos testen

Geld-zurück-Garantie, wenn du durch die Prüfung fällst

Did you know that StudySmarter supports you beyond learning?

SS Benefits Icon

Find your perfect university

Get started for free
SS Benefits Icon

Find your dream job

Get started for free
SS Benefits Icon

Claim big discounts on brands

Get started for free
SS Benefits Icon

Finance your studies

Get started for free
Sign up for free and improve your grades

Review generated flashcards

Sign up for free
You have reached the daily AI limit

Start learning or create your own AI flashcards

Contents
Contents
  • Fact Checked Content
  • Last Updated: 13.12.2022
  • 9 min reading time
  • Content creation process designed by
    Lily Hulatt Avatar
  • Content cross-checked by
    Gabriel Freitas Avatar
  • Content quality checked by
    Gabriel Freitas Avatar
Sign up for free to save, edit & create flashcards.
Save Article Save Article

Thank you for your interest in audio learning!

This feature isn’t ready just yet, but we’d love to hear why you prefer audio learning.

Why do you prefer audio learning? (optional)

Send Feedback
Play as podcast 12 Minutes

Regardless of the scope, you've encountered the sector of the economy that is most indicative of expanding socioeconomic development: the secondary sector. Allow us to explain.

Test your knowledge with multiple choice flashcards

1/3

The secondary sector can also be called:

1/3

Which of the following activities are part of the secondary sector?

1/3

Which of the following is an example of a secondary sector activity in the context of the world system?

Next

Secondary Sector Definition Geography

Economists and geographers often divide economic activity into different sectors based on each activity's attributes. This is sometimes referred to as the three-sector model. The secondary sector is the sector associated with "making things."

The Secondary Sector: The sector of the economy that revolves around manufacturing.

The secondary sector transforms natural resources, raw materials collected from nature, into artificial resources, human-created objects for use by people. The secondary sector may also be called 'the manufacturing sector' or just 'the manufacturing industry.'

Types of Secondary Sector

Secondary sector activities include, but are not limited to:

  • Construction

  • Fabrication

  • Assembly

  • Distillation

  • Filtration/Purification

Secondary Sector Types of Secondary Sector construction in downtown Seattle StudySmarter

Do you want to see this and many more great infographics?

Sign up now for free
Fig. 1 - Construction on a new apartment complex in Seattle, Washington, USA

Outside of construction (using raw and fabricated materials to create buildings), probably the most quintessential occupation of the secondary sector is factory work. Raw materials are delivered to a factory, where employees and machinery process those materials into something not-so-raw. In some cases, those artificial resources are then sent to another factory where they join together with other artificial resources to create a fully-assembled tool or retail product.

A mining company delivers raw iron to a factory. This factory combines the iron with carbon to create steel wires. These steel wires are then shipped to another factory, where they are reshaped to create steel screws. The steel screws are then shipped to a car manufacturing factory, where they are used to help assemble cars, which are then sold to consumers.

The scope of the secondary sector is larger than you might imagine. Turning raw grains into a sugary breakfast cereal is a secondary sector activity. Turning crude oil into petrol for your car is a secondary sector activity. Virtually all activities that involve the creation of processed or fabricated goods are part of the secondary sector.

Secondary Sector of the Economy

Did you notice the starting and ending points of the example in the section above? The secondary sector's role in an economy can only be fully understood by juxtaposing it against other economic sectors.

The primary sector of the economy revolves around the collection of natural resources. These are activities that humanity has been doing for thousands of years: farming, fishing, hunting, logging, mining. Modern economic activity has expanded the scope and scale of these activities.

The primary sector is what provides a foundation for the secondary sector. Once materials from the primary sector arrive in the secondary sector, they can be reshaped into items we use in everyday life.

The tertiary sector is the economic sector that revolves around making use of the materials that were manufactured in the secondary sector. This includes retail (selling the manufactured items) and service (using the manufactured items as tools to enable the function of transportation, restaurants, medical professions, and so on).

The primary, secondary, and tertiary sectors comprise the three-sector model we mentioned earlier, though many economic geographers now also recognize the existence of the quaternary sector (technology, information, and entertainment) and the quinary sector (charity work, some public services, high-level decision-making).

Secondary Sector Examples

If the primary sector provides the foundation and the tertiary sector makes use of the finished product, then the secondary sector is the element that connects the two sectors together. Let's revisit the example we used above again, but this time label which activity belongs to each sector:

A mining company extracts raw iron and delivers it to a factory (primary sector). This factory combines the iron with carbon to create steel wires (secondary sector). These steel wires are then shipped to another factory, where they are reshaped to create steel screws (secondary sector). The steel screws are then shipped to a car manufacturing factory, where they are used to help assemble cars (secondary sector). A car is sold to a consumer (tertiary sector), who uses it as a taxi cab (tertiary sector).

As you can see, the secondary sector is the bridge!

Stay organized and focused with your smart to do list

Sign up for free
Secondary Sector

Secondary Sector Development

The landscapes so ubiquitous to secondary sector activity, like a skyline dominated by factories or endlessly expanding urban construction, are very likely the same images that come to mind when we use words like 'industrialisation' or 'urbanisation.' And that's no coincidence: the expansion of the secondary sector is a good indication that a country is, indeed, industrializing. In fact, the word 'industrialisation' refers to an expansion of industry, that is, manufacturing capability: industrialisation and the secondary sector go hand-in-hand.

Secondary Sector Secondary Sector Development smoke billowing from industrial factories StudySmarter

Do you want to see this and many more great infographics?

Sign up now for free
Fig. 2 - Smoke billowing from factories is a ubiquitous image of secondary sector development

Why might a country choose to industrialise? The main factor is socioeconomic development. In other words, the idea is that expanding industry will improve a national economy by bringing in more income (economic development), which will ultimately improve the welfare of citizens (social development), whether that income is realised as personal spending power or social programs funded by taxes.

This idea that industrialisation, as difficult and costly as it is, will ultimately lead to greater well-being has been borne out in many highly industrialised countries, which tend to have higher rates of literacy, higher life expectancy, and better medical services than countries that are less industrialised.

Least Developed, Developing, and Developed Countries

Geographers and economists place countries in one of three socioeconomic development categories. On the one hand, least developed countries typically have undergone relatively little industrialisation, and their economies are dominated by the primary sector. On the other hand, developing countries are in the process of industrializing, and their economies are dominated by the secondary sector. As a country continues to industrialise (and develop), the secondary sector gives way to the tertiary sector, as the income and artificial resources generated by the secondary sector are what enable the tertiary sector to exist, leading to the 'developed' category.

Access millions of flashcards designed to help you ace your studies

Sign up for free
Secondary Sector

The Secondary Sector and the World Economy

To take full advantage of the secondary sector, a country must join the 'world system,' i.e., the interconnected network of global trade. In this way, countries can link their secondary sector to other economies in a few different ways:

  • Trading locally produced secondary sector products internationally

  • Inviting foreign countries to use their land and labour pool for their own secondary sector needs

  • Inviting foreign labourers to work as secondary sector employees

International Trade

The first option is probably the most straightforward. Suppose Country Teal, for example, has expanded its primary sector to create a foundation for its secondary sector. Businesses in Country Teal then mass produce highly desirable secondary sector goods, which are then exported all over the world. Income from these exports provides employees salaried wages, and taxes on the secondary sector's successful businesses allow Country Teal's government to invest in social and public services like education, roadways, police departments, firefighting, and healthcare.

Foreign Businesses, Domestic Labour

The second option involves inviting foreign businesses to establish a secondary sector. This might happen for one of two reasons: either the country has very limited natural resources, so can neither expand its primary sector nor establish a secondary sector (think Singapore); or the country has quite a few natural resources and a sufficient labour pool to support secondary sector activity but lacks the infrastructure or investment needed to get things started (think Mexico, Vietnam).

In both of those situations, foreign companies may open local factories. Foreign companies can access cheap labour, allowing them to increase profit margins when the manufactured goods are then sold back to consumers in developed countries. Meanwhile, the labourers can benefit from a higher salary relative to their fellow citizens, and their government can benefit from the taxation, creating, in ideal situations, a symbiotic relationship.

As you can imagine, the ideal does not always play out, as many foreign businesses are looking for ways to cut costs as much as possible. It has even been speculated that developed countries may actively try to stall developing countries' socioeconomic development as long as possible so they can continue to take advantage of cheap labour and cheap manufactured goods (see our explanation on World Systems Theory). Singapore, however, was able to industrialise extremely rapidly using this method and is now one of the most developed countries in the world.

Secondary Sector Secondary Sector Development downtown Singapore from Marina Bay Sands StudySmarter

Do you want to see this and many more great infographics?

Sign up now for free
Fig. 3 - Singapore, now highly urbanised, was able to industrialise rapidly by opening its secondary sector to foreign businesses

Domestic Businesses, Foreign Labour

The third option, inviting foreign labour to meet secondary sector needs, is very rarely a tactic developing nations adopt. Instead, you are more likely to find this arrangement in developed countries where most of the workforce has moved to the tertiary sector, leaving many of the remaining manufacturing jobs (and even many of the remaining primary sector jobs) vacant. However, India and China, both deep within the process of industrialisation, are experiencing labour shortages because global demand for their secondary services and products now outweighs what their working populations can produce. Migrant workers in China often come from Vietnam and Mongolia, while migrant workers in India often come from Bangladesh.

Secondary Sector - Key takeaways

  • The secondary sector is the sector of the economy that revolves around manufacturing.
  • Secondary sector activity includes construction, fabrication, assembly, distillation, and purification. Think construction sites and factories.
  • A large secondary sector is very indicative of a country that is actively undergoing industrialisation and, by extension, improving socioeconomic development.
  • To fully invest in the secondary sector, a country may export manufactured goods internationally, invite foreign companies to set up factories locally, or invite foreign labourers to work in secondary sector businesses.
Frequently Asked Questions about Secondary Sector

What is secondary sector in geography? 

In economic geography, the secondary sector is the economic sector that revolves around manufacturing. 

What are examples of secondary sector? 

Examples of secondary sector activity include constructing a new apartment complex, manufacturing a motor vehicle, or processing raw grains into a sugary breakfast cereal. 

What is the difference between tertiary and secondary sector? 

The secondary sector revolves around manufacturing artificial goods and resources, while the tertiary sector involves putting those resources to use. For example, manufacturing a vehicle is a secondary sector activity, while operating that vehicle as a taxi cab is a tertiary sector activity.

Why is the secondary sector important to the economy? 

The secondary sector is key to industrialisation. You cannot industrialise (i.e., expand manufacturing capability) without expanding secondary sector (manufacturing) activity. 

What is the secondary sector also known as?

The secondary sector can also be called 'the manufacturing sector' or 'the manufacturing industry.'

Save Article
How we ensure our content is accurate and trustworthy?

At StudySmarter, we have created a learning platform that serves millions of students. Meet the people who work hard to deliver fact based content as well as making sure it is verified.

Content Creation Process:
Lily Hulatt Avatar

Lily Hulatt

Digital Content Specialist

Lily Hulatt is a Digital Content Specialist with over three years of experience in content strategy and curriculum design. She gained her PhD in English Literature from Durham University in 2022, taught in Durham University’s English Studies Department, and has contributed to a number of publications. Lily specialises in English Literature, English Language, History, and Philosophy.

Get to know Lily
Content Quality Monitored by:
Gabriel Freitas Avatar

Gabriel Freitas

AI Engineer

Gabriel Freitas is an AI Engineer with a solid experience in software development, machine learning algorithms, and generative AI, including large language models’ (LLMs) applications. Graduated in Electrical Engineering at the University of São Paulo, he is currently pursuing an MSc in Computer Engineering at the University of Campinas, specializing in machine learning topics. Gabriel has a strong background in software engineering and has worked on projects involving computer vision, embedded AI, and LLM applications.

Get to know Gabriel

Discover learning materials with the free StudySmarter app

Sign up for free
1
About StudySmarter

StudySmarter is a globally recognized educational technology company, offering a holistic learning platform designed for students of all ages and educational levels. Our platform provides learning support for a wide range of subjects, including STEM, Social Sciences, and Languages and also helps students to successfully master various tests and exams worldwide, such as GCSE, A Level, SAT, ACT, Abitur, and more. We offer an extensive library of learning materials, including interactive flashcards, comprehensive textbook solutions, and detailed explanations. The cutting-edge technology and tools we provide help students create their own learning materials. StudySmarter’s content is not only expert-verified but also regularly updated to ensure accuracy and relevance.

Learn more
StudySmarter Editorial Team

Team Human Geography Teachers

  • 9 minutes reading time
  • Checked by StudySmarter Editorial Team
Save Explanation Save Explanation

Study anywhere. Anytime.Across all devices.

Sign-up for free

Sign up to highlight and take notes. It’s 100% free.

Join over 22 million students in learning with our StudySmarter App

The first learning app that truly has everything you need to ace your exams in one place

  • Flashcards & Quizzes
  • AI Study Assistant
  • Study Planner
  • Mock-Exams
  • Smart Note-Taking
Join over 22 million students in learning with our StudySmarter App
Sign up with GoogleSign up with Google
Sign up with Email

Join over 30 million students learning with our free Vaia app

The first learning platform with all the tools and study materials you need.

Intent Image
  • Note Editing
  • Flashcards
  • AI Assistant
  • Explanations
  • Mock Exams