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Title: Topic 5 Globalization and China: Shenzhen


1
Topic 5Globalization and China Shenzhen
2
I. The Case of Shenzhen SEZ
  • Questions
  • What is the glocalizing process in China?
  • How is the glocalizing process revealed in the
    building of SEZ?
  • Theme
  • how SEZs are built as glocalized landscapes in
    illustrating the process of China entering the
    global economy

3
Building Glocalized Landscapes
  • SEZs are the outcomes of Chinas engaging into
    the global economy. SEZs are already a formidable
    presence in the global economy

4
Building Glocalized Landscapes
  • The process of glocalization- how the SEZs
    develop themselves into glocalized landscapes
    that serve to bring China into the world economy
  • Focus on the development of Shenzhen SEZ

5
Shenzhen as an immigrant city
  • Shenzhen is an immigrant city, built quickly with
    a borrowed population.
  • In 1979, the Central government and the Guangdong
    Government decided to upgrade a small town,
    Baoan county, to the status of a city named
    Shenzhen.

Shenzhen before 1979
6
Shenzhen as an immigrant city
  • In May 1980 the Special Economic Zone was set up.
  • Shenzhen SEZ was erected as a test case as an
    economic development zone open to the global
    capital.

7
Shenzhen as an immigrant city
  • Shenzhen thus was the specific place where global
    capital and the socialist state encountered each
    other and worked hand in hand, though not always
    in harmony, in shaping a new economy.
  • Shenzhen is on the east of the Pearl River Delta.
    In the north it is connected to Dongguan,
    Weiyuan, in the south to Hong Kong, and in the
    east it faces Daya Bay.

8
Shenzhen as an immigrant city
  • The Shenzhen SEZ is only part of Shenzhen city.
    It occupies one sixth of the whole city.

9
Shenzhen as an immigrant city
  • The SEZ is special not only in its economic but
    also in its political and social aspects.
  • There is a long iron curtain from east to west
    separating the SEZ from the non-special zone of
    the whole country those who wanted to enter the
    SEZ require special permission from the Public
    Security Branch in their local regions.

10
Shenzhen as an immigrant city
  • Before the setting up of the SEZ, Shenzhen was
    only a small town with 310,000 residents and less
    than 30,000 workers.

11
Shenzhen as an immigrant city
  • The total population of the whole Shenzhen now
    was over 8.27 million and the total population of
    SEZ is over 2 million.
  • In its population composition, less than 20 are
    categorized as permanent residents who have come
    from major cities and become state officials,
    entrepreneurs, technicians and skilled workers.

12
Shenzhen as an immigrant city
  • Over 82 are temporary residents, which means
    they do not have the official household
    registration entitling them to recognized
    citizenship in Shenzhen.

13
Shenzhen as an immigrant city
  • When they lose their jobs in Shenzhen, they are
    not officially permitted to stay in Shenzhen.
  • It is clear that the expansion of Shenzhen and
    its Special Economic Zone is based on the
    mobility of migrants as temporary residents.

14
Shenzhen as an immigrant city
  • In Shenzhen all workers and staff members are
    categorized into three kinds
  • Guding zhigong(????), regular workers and staff
    members,
  • Hetong zhigong(????), contract workers and staff
    members,
  • Linshi zhigong(????), temporary workers and staff
    members.

Key concept to remember!
15
Shenzhen as an immigrant city
  • Guding zhigong refers to those employed by
    state-owned enterprises or government organs and
    they enjoy all the state welfare such as housing
    and food provision.
  • Hetong zhigong refers to those employed on a
    contract basis by all kinds of enterprises the
    contracts may last for three or five years. Most
    contract workers in Shenzhen are university
    graduates who are employed as technicians,
    skilled workers or management staff

Key concept to remember!
16
Shenzhen as an immigrant city
  • Linshi zhigong, temporary workers are the most
    disadvantaged in Shenzhen not until 1988 were
    they officially given temporary contracts on a
    yearly basis.
  • In the second half of the 1980s, the number of
    temporary workers increased rapidly and surpassed
    the total number of regular workers and contract
    workers.

Key concept to remember!
17
Shenzhen as an immigrant city
  • Most manual labour in the SEZ is undertaken by
    these temporary residents from rural areas. In
    Shenzhen, as soon as one becomes a legal
    temporary worker, one is then entitled to be a
    temporary resident.
  • A rural laborer can get a temporary hukou(??) in
    Shenzhen only if he/she is hired as a temporary
    worker.

18
The Transformation of Local Community
  • Encouraged by the Open-door policies and the
    economic reforms, the local state of the villages
    greatly transform themselves by turning into
    companies.
  • The local state of Blue River not only merely
    formed a company, but completely turned itself
    into a company in 1984.

19
The Transformation of Local Community
  • The former name Blue River Peoples Commune was
    changed to Blue River Manufacturers Chief
    Company, under which it owned or joint-ventured
    over thirteen companies.
  • The old government offices building remained, but
    it was expanded to include a new wing of four
    storeys connected to the old one.

20
The Transformation of Local Community
  • The bureaucratic structure of the Chief Company
    was changed and expanded as well.
  • Now there was a General Office, an External Trade
    Department, a Finance Department, an
    Administrative Department, a Population and Birth
    Control Department, a Labour Regulation
    Department, and a Mass Organization Division
    which included a Youth Committee, a Womens
    Federation and Trade Union.

21
The Transformation of Local Community
  • The Company itself was a mixture of pre-existing
    socialist politics and a reform market
    economy, a hybrid reflection of the ongoing
    development of the socialist market economy.

Key concept to remember!
22
The Transformation of Local Community
  • the Blue River government gained complete
    independence in regulating foreign investment and
    local trade without any intervention from the
    upper levels.
  • Blue River was not an exceptional case.

23
The Transformation of Local Community
  • It was the state, or political forces rather than
    capital, which served as the locomotive of
    economic development.
  • Land was distributed to the families for less
    than two years in Blue River and requisitioned
    again in 1984 for the use of industrial
    development.

24
The Transformation of Local Community
  • Every household, according to the number of
    household members, was to be allocated a share
    each year in the yearly profit made by the Chief
    Company, formerly their village government.
  • Every year, households obtained share dividends
    ranging from RMB 15,000 to 20,000.

25
The Transformation of Local Community
  • A local cadre proudly told,

It was almost ten times what the family could
earn before. Nowadays people dont need to do
anything but just wait for their share dividend
at the end of the year. Whats more, the family
can free hands from farming and they can choose
to do business.
26
The Transformation of Local Community
  • The local residents suddenly became rich, with
    their official identity changed from rural people
    to urban citizens and, with their economic status
    or class position totally altered.
  • In terms of occupation, almost 80 of the local
    working population was self-employed persons.

27
The Transformation of Local Community
  • 10 were managerial or supervisory staff in the
    companies newly set up in the village.
  • 10 worked outside the village, some holding a
    position in the District government or employed
    in big companies in Central Shenzhen or
    Guangzhou.

28
The Transformation of Local Community
  • The living standard of the village was
    comparatively higher than any other cities in
    China. Every family was well furnished with
    electric appliances, a color TV set, hi-fi disc
    and air-conditioners.
  • not without worry - an economic recession in
    Shenzhen from 1997 till, as more and more foreign
    capital moved out of the SEZ to the much cheaper
    area in the internal cities.

29
The Transformation of Local Community
  • Foods, goods and daily necessities here were
    relatively very expensive. The prices were
    one-third higher in Guangzhou and probably double
    those in other northern cities.

30
The Transformation of Local Community
  • Yet as long as a family could afford it, they
    still preferred to buy imported foreign-labeled.
  • Shenzhen ren- the people of Shenzhen, a broad
    cultural identity signifying a modern
    cosmopolitanism attached to the space and the
    people who lived there.

31
The Transformation of Local Community
  • The majority of economic producers, or the
    working class in the village, on the other hand,
    were not local residents.
  • Of the total population, over 75 were temporary
    residents, migrant workers who had moved in from
    outside the village

32
The Transformation of Local Community
  • The socio-economic structure of Blue River
    village was thus conditioned mainly by a
    two-tiered system
  • One tier was local urban residents who not only
    possessed the means of production but also the
    space, the right of abode.

Key concept to remember!
33
The Transformation of Local Community
  • The other tier consisted of rural migrants who
    had to sell their labor to the factories in which
    they worked, while having no right to stay
    permanently where they worked.
  • These migrant temporary labour were three times
    the number of the local residents, and were the
    lowest status workers in the community.

Key concept to remember!
34
HK Company in Shenzhen
  • The HK company, named Meteor, is located in
    Blue River in Nanshan District, Shenzhen,
    within the confines of the Special Economic Zone.
  • The history of the HK Company in Shenzhen has
    demonstrated the development of the industrial
    village, Blue River village in SEZ, and the
    changing social relations of the local community
    for more than one decade.

35
Hong Kong Company in Shenzhen
  • The Meteor was set up in 1985, a year after the
    village, formerly a rural commune, had undergone
    a dramatic change.
  • It was an electronics enterprise which produced
    mobile phones and electronic route-finders for
    Phillips.

36
Hong Kong Company in Shenzhen
  • Headed by five HK managers in each department,
    there were almost no communications between HK
    and local staff and workers.
  • Huge income gaps and class status created
    mistrust among each other.

37
Hong Kong Company in Shenzhen
  • Except for most of the engineers, technicians,
    managers, supervisors and some office clerks who
    came from urban areas, more than 80 of the work
    force formerly held a rural hukou.
  • The work force in the Meteor, and in
    manufacturing industry as a whole was mainly
    made up of the rural population.

38
The Dormitory Labor Regime
  • A new theorization on spatial politics of
    production and globalization
  • Taylorism and Fordism to flexible accumulation is
    problematic
  • The transnational political economy of production
    that links not only a new scale of the economic,
    but a new economy of scale

39
The Dormitory Labor Regime
  • Mass production and the space of work-residence
    are extensively reconfigured for capital
    accumulation on a global scale.
  • Transnational processes require intensive
    reconfiguration of time rapid re-organization
    of space.
  • Neglected- a more micro study to see how the
    spatial factor influences the production
    politics.
  • Transnational re-organization gives birth to a
    new form of labor regime the dormitory labor
    regime in China

40
The Dormitory Labor Regime in China
  • Use of dormitories to accommodate migrant labour
    is a systemic feature of global production.
  • Irrespective of industry, location, or nature of
    capital, Chinese migrant workers, are
    accommodated in dormitories within or close to
    factory compounds in China.
  • We theorize this phenomenon as a dormitory
    labour regime to capture the recurrence of
    dormitory factories as the hybrid outgrowth of
    global capitalism and the legacies of state
    socialism.

41
The Dormitory Labor Regime in China
  • Historically dormitories appeared in China, other
    Asian countries, US and European countries in
    early 19th and 20th Century
  • Forms of living with the employer had occurred,
    as household and labour processes were more
    unified than under factory systems.
  • Divisions between factory forms in Eastern and
    Western patterns of industrialization also reveal
    variability.
  • In Japanese, Korean and pre-communist Chinese
    factories (especially textile industries)
    dormitory accommodation was typically provided by
    employers or contractors.
  • Similar focus on young, single, migrant female
    workers

42
What is specific and noteworthy in China?
  • The re-emergence of these types of dormitories on
    a systemic basis.
  • The recurrence of this old form is the hybrid
    outcome of global capitalism and state socialism.
  • It reinvigorated through foreign-invested and
    private companies, local states and the central
    government in a globalising economic context.
  • Virtually all companies utilize dormitories,
    whether rented from local authorities or
    increasingly provided privately within the
    enterprise.

43
Features of Dormitory
  • Such dormitories are communal multi-storey
    buildings, housing several hundred workers.
  • Rooms are shared, with typically between 8-20
    workers per room. Washing and toilet facilities
    are communal between rooms, floors or whole
    units.
  • living space is intensely collective, with no
    area, except within the closed curtains of the
    workers bunk, for limited private space.
  • These material conditions do not explain the role
    of the dormitory as a form of accommodation or
    living at work.

44
Features of Dormitory
  • Central to the dormitory form is a political
    economy of grouping of migrants, typically
    single, young and female workers.
  • Such workers are separated from families, the
    customary locale, and daily practices and
    concentrated in a factory and workspace as
    homogenized labourers.
  • Alienation of labour is therefore significantly
    more than the lack of ownership of product, tools
    and control of skills sufficient to support
    independent production.
  • Workers in dorms are alienated from their
    hometowns, their parents, working within
    factories dominated by unfamiliar others,
    languages, food, production methods and products.

45
Labor Process of DLR
  1. Tied employment
  2. Extending the working day - just in time labour
  3. Labour allocation easier in more volatile product
    markets
  4. Young workers, employers control skill definition
  5. Greater control over workers job search
  6. Inhibits labour organisation
  7. Fresh supplies of young workers

46
Features of DLR
  • Extends labour market
  • Market is not just local area
  • Circulatory migrants
  • Labour costs can be depressed
  • Recruitment networks
  • Advantages of networks for management
  • Market versus network recruitment
  • In-province constraints on management choice
  • Worker network constraints on management

47
Types of Workers Dormitory in China
  • Enterprises purchase land and build their own
    dormitory premises (often with factory
    buildings).
  • These enterprises are usually large or
    transnational companies which possess a workforce
    of several thousands.
  • A room of 30 sq. m. will be housed by eight to
    twelve persons.
  • Accommodation is often free of charge, while some
    companies will deduct reminbi (30 to 50) from
    workers monthly salaries

48
Types of Workers Dormitory in China
  • Enterprises house their workers by purchasing
    their dormitories premises from the local
    government or private owners.
  • Purchases of workers dormitories from a third
    party are not frequent unless the dormitories
    premises are very close to their factory
    buildings.

49
Types of Workers Dormitory in China
  • Enterprises rent dormitories from the local
    government or local residents
  • This type roughly accounts to 80 of all
    dormitory provision
  • These enterprises range from small to medium
    size, and usually have a workforce over a few
    hundreds
  • A dorm room will be shared by eight to sixteen
    persons. It ranges from 20 to 80 each month
    inclusive or exclusive to the electricity or
    other expenses.

50
Types of Workers Dormitory in China
  • Workers themselves rent dormitories from the
    local residents in the city or in the industrial
    town
  • A room will cost as high as 300 and be shared by
    four to six persons.
  • single-sexed, and only a few would have dorms for
    married couple.
  • Couple rooms for husband and wife working in the
    same company
  • These rooms will be charged with a range from
    100 to 200.

51
Types of Workers Dormitory in China
  • Enterprises rent apartments, hotel rooms and even
    villas as accommodation for their senior
    managerial staff.
  • Renting apartments or flats from residential
    areas is the usually practice.
  • An apartment will cost 1-2000 Reminbi depending
    on the quality of the housing.

52
Dormitory as Lived Site for Struggle
  • Institutional and power analysis Dormitory
    labour regime as coercive control
  • Return to Actor dormitory as lived site for
    struggle
  • Common fate in a common house nurtured the
    basis for collective action
  • Kin and ethnic enclaves formed in the dormitory
    enhanced workers bonding and solidarity

53
Dormitory as Lived Site for Struggle
  • Dormitories as gendered space bound working women
    into a collectivity
  • In times of crisis or strikes, the workers turned
    soft spaces - the kin networks, ethnic
    enclaves, sisterhood, and collectivities - into
    hard struggles
  • Petition letters circulated from dorm to dorm
    with signatures collected in a single night.
  • Strategies against the management in times of
    wage arrears, bodily punishments, insults or
    lay-offs were intensively discussed.

54
Dormitory as Lived Site for Struggle
  • On strike, workers were efficiently organized and
    spontaneously participated without any
    organizational help such as trade unions or
    labour organizations.
  • Compression of time for production in this
    dormitory labour regime, in return, works against
    itself by shortening time for generating workers
    consensus and forming strategies for collective
    actions.

55
Conclusion
  • Shenzhen is a dual city.
  • A hukou is attached to employment, and once a
    migrant worker was dismissed, or left the job, he
    or she was not granted the right to stay in
    Shenzhen.
  • As a dual city, Shenzhen is contributed to the
    dormitory labor regime
  • Shenzhen is a place by them, contributed but not
    for them.

Key concept to remember!
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