Correlation in the Central Zone - Hinterland of economic geography in Canada Until the early 20 th century, Canada was predominantly a country of agriculture. Since then, it has become one of the most industrialized countries in the world, leading directly to the development of the "central zone". In most cases, manufacturing in the central region supplies raw materials produced by the Canadian economy's agriculture, mining, forestry and fishery departments. This is known as "Hinterland".
The economic focus of "the center - hinterland" is quite obvious in Canada. Every aspect of the Canadian economy will determine the unmistakable relationship between the center and the edge of this vast country. In extreme cases, the central area is characterized by prosperous economic areas, the Golden Horseshoe area as a collective big city, and the primary resource production, the dispersed population and limited innovation capabilities "the rest of Canada Part. " Although the two regions are interdependent, they are still affected by economic and important factors and hinder integration of common areas. Therefore, Canada has the characteristic of "heart zone - hinterland" which is obvious in the field of economic geography.
Innis explains Canada's interregional relationship as a relationship between "ventral" and "ventral", ie, the central or heart-dominated peripheral or hinterland. Because the central region relies on finding and accumulating staple foods (in the hinterland) to make the economy persistent, it tries to acquire economic and political power through the development of the hinterland. Historians continue to use elements of the Inis model, such as applying it to British Columbia. The state economic structure embodies the "core edge" structure of the relationship within the region. At the center of the big city of Vancouver is the management function of the enterprise, the transport function, and the growth of the manufacturing industry. It dominates the undeveloped superiority which depends on the production and export of major products.