Title: Reading on
1Reading on global commodity chains and
sweatshop labor
- What happens in global commodity chains?
- Production of shoes, clothes, toys, consumer
electronics - Design
- Factory investment, ownership, management
- Manufacturing (some call sweatshop labor)
- Marketing
- Where does each function take place?
- Core?
- Semi-periphery?
- Periphery?
- Which functions command the biggest share of the
profits?
1
2Background to reading on global commodity
chains and sweatshop labor
- Dependency World Systems
- Core Core
- Periphery Semi-periphery
- Periphery
- World systems theory
- There is some potential for countries in the
periphery to develop and move into the
semi-periphery, although they are unlikely to
catch up to core countries. - Global commodity chain studies draw on the
insights of dependency/world systems theory
2
3Chinese Development in Comparative Perspective
- China was extremely backward in late 19th and
early 20th C - Agriculturefailed to keep up with population
growth leading to extreme poverty - Little industrial development
4China Faced Severe Military Threats
- Repeatedly defeat in war
- Opium Wars 1842, 1860
- Sino-Japanese War 1895
- Resulted in limits on sovereignty
- China carved up like a ripe melon
- treaty ports, foreign concessions,
- extra-territoriality
5Chinese Development in Comparative Perspective
- Chinas early failed response to the challenge of
the West - Contrasts w/ Japan
- resistance to Westernization
- China how to adopt Western technology without
Western values? - Internal crisis
- population pressure
- 1600s 125 million mid-1800s 400 million
- peasant rebellions
- 1850-1880est. 100 million deaths
6Chinese Development in Comparative Perspective
- China begins to catch up
- Successful industrialization
- Military implications
7Origins of the Chinese Communist System
- Communist Party of China founded 1921
- Fights for power
- Peoples Republic of China founded 1949
8Origins of the Chinese Communist System
- Sources of support for Communist revolution in
China - redistribution of land to peasants (land reform)
- ? appeal to socio-economic interests
- resistance to Japanese invasion (1937-45)
- ? appeal to nationalism
9Origins of the Chinese Communist System
- China looks to Soviet Union for model of
catch-up development - Soviet-style planned economy
- Totalitarian regime under Mao Zedong
10Chinese Development in Comparative Perspective
- China attempts to adopt Soviet-style planned
economy - Contrasts w/ Soviet Union
- Compare starting points of First Five-Year
Plans - Soviet1927
- China1953
- Even more backward (Gerschenkron)
- China Lower agricultural output (Soviet 5x
higher) - China Lower industrial output (Soviet 4x higher)
11Chinese Development in Comparative Perspective
- Lenins innovation
- vanguard party leads proletariat in establishing
socialism - Maos innovations
- vanguard party leads peasantrynot proletariatin
establishing socialism - voluntarism (where theres a will theres a way)
- Contrast orthodox Marxist emphasis on real
material conditions - mass mobilization
12Chinese Development in Comparative Perspective
- Mao tries to compensate for Chinas relative
backwardness - Great Leap Forward 1958-61
13Chinese Development in Comparative Perspective
- Mao tries to compensate for Chinas relative
backwardness - Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution 1966-76
- part struggle over correct model for economic
development - part struggle for power w/in CCP (Chinese
Communist Party)
14Impetus for Reform in China
- Crisis of political legitimacy
- Communist utopia? ? or economic stagnation
- Per capita household expenditures
- Increased only 2.2 1952-75
- 1975 per capita consumption
- Grain, cooking oil, meat ? lower than
in 1950s
14
15Impetus for Reform in China
- Crisis of political legitimacy
- Nationalism (wealthy/strong China)?
?Demonstration effect/challenge of East Asian
tigers - South Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Singapore
15
16Reform in China and Comparisons with Russia
- Communist Party welcomes reform
- Cultural Revolution chaos in China
- ? made reform more welcome/more urgent to
Communist Party cadres - Contrast entrenched bureaucracy in Soviet Union
17Reform in China and Comparisons with Russia
- China introduces market forces
- Maos death creates political opportunity
- Communist Party begins economic reform 1978
- Under new leader Deng Xiaoping
18Reform in China and Comparisons with Russia
- Economic
- China still a largely agricultural economy as of
1978 - Huge opportunities for growth through
industrialization - Contrast Soviet Union had already completed
transition from agricultural to industrial economy
19Reform in China and Comparisons with Russia
- Contrast Shock therapy in Russia
- Gradualism in China
- Introduce market forces into agricultural sector
first
20Reform in China and Comparisons with Russia
- Contrast Shock therapy in Russia
- Gradualism in China
- Gradual change in smaller industrial sector
- Froze plan obligations at 1984 levels
- Introduced prices on the margin
- made reform less painful in China
-
21Reform in China and Comparisons with Russia
- Russianeo-liberal-informed policies destroy
state sector - Chinamarket-oriented policies link state and
market - Fundamental change in strategy
- From planned to market economy
- With active but more selective state intervention
- Pre-WTO high tariff barriers,
- bank loans for state industry
- tax breaks for exporters, key industries
22Developmental Outcomes in China
- Spectacular economic growth
- About 9-10 percent per year since the late 1970s
- Increasing incomes on average (7-fold increase in
20 years) - 1985 293
- 2006 2,025
- Improving literacy
- 1978 37 of adults illiterate
- 2005 lt10
- Improving infant survival
- 1978 41 deaths per 1,000 live births
- 2005 23
- Major drop in absolute poverty
- Between 1990 and 2004 the number of people living
on a dollar per day fell by 246 million, while
total population rose by over 156 million. - Growth has helped to lift several hundred million
people out of absolute poverty, with the result
that China alone accounted for over 75 percent of
poverty reduction in the developing world over
the last 20 years.
23Social Implications of Chinas Economic Reforms
- Symptoms of a 19th-Century-style capitalism
- Large and growing income inequality
- 1983 0.28 (gini coefficient)
- 2001 0.447
- Environmental degradation
- China has 20 of the world's 30 most polluted
cities, largely due to high coal use and
motorization. - Lack of protection for vulnerable social groups
- Poor
- Unemployed
- Elderly
- Sick