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Articles

The Meaning of Work in Neoliberal Globalisation: the Asian exception?

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Pages 37-53 | Published online: 13 Dec 2011
 

Abstract

This article argues that a central element of capitalist development, especially in its neo-liberal form, has been the configuration of a rationalised and individuated conception of work that helps to maximise capitalist efficiency. As the capitalist system has become globalised there has been an attempt to export this conception of work to the Global South by means of liberalisation programmes, many of them sponsored by the World Bank. These have entailed repression of organised labour in the attempt to force workers to adopt the role allocated to them by neo-liberalism, that of individual rational maximisers of utilities. It is argued that this attempt to globalise a neo-liberal conception of work must confront an Asia wherein local values (notably a preference for communitarian rather than individualistic values) and conditions have led both state and civil society to frame the concept of work as having collective rather than just individual significance.

Notes

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3 A Tilgher, Homo Faber: Work through the Ages, trans DC Fisher, New York: Harcourt Brace, 1930.

4 K Marx, Capital: A Critique of Political Economy, trans B Fowkes, London: Penguin, 1976, esp ch 6.

5 E Durkheim. The Division of Labour in Society, New York: Free Press of Glencoe, 1960.

6 K Polanyi, The Great Transformation, Boston, MA: Beacon Press, 1944.

7 AD Chandler, The Visible Hand, Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press, 1977; and Chandler, Scale and Scope, Cambridge, MA: Belknap, 1990.

8 AD Chandler, ‘The emergence of managerial capitalism’, Business History Review, 58(4), 1984, p474.

9 Ibid, p 492.

10 DT Rogers, ‘In search of progressivism’, Reviews in American History, 10(4), 1982, pp 113–132.

11 L Galambos, ‘Technology, political economy, and professionalization: central themes of the organizational synthesis’, Business History Review, 57(4), 1983, pp 471–493.

12 RM Collins, The Business Response to Keynes, 1929–1964, New York: Columbia University Press, 1981, p 204.

13 H Aitken, Scientific Management in Action: Taylorism at Watertown Arsenal 1908–1915, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1985.

14 A Gorz, Capitalism, Socialism, Ecology, trans C Turner, Guilford, CT: Biddles, 1994, p 53.

15 C Maier, ‘The politics of productivity: foundations of American international economic policy after World War II’, International Organization, 31(4), 1977, pp 607–633.

16 D Harvey, A Brief History of Neoliberalism, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005, pp 39–63.

17 Ibid.

18 I Wallerstein, ‘Cancun: the collapse of the neo-liberal offensive’, Commentary, 1 October 2003, at http//:fbc.binghampton.edu/commentr.htm, accessed 10 March 2011.

19 G Harrison, Neoliberal Africa: The Impact of Global Social Engineering, London: Zed Books, 2010, p 20.

20 saprin, Structural Adjustment: The saprin Report—The Policy Roots of Economic Crisis, Poverty and Inequality, London: Zed Books, 2004, p 93.

21 Ibid, p 94.

22 Ibid, p 97.

23 Ibid.

24 R Van Der Hoeven & L Taylor, ‘Introduction: structural adjustment, labour markets and employment: some considerations for sensible people’, Journal of Development Studies, 36(4), 2000, p 64.

25 P Konings, ‘Organised labour and neo-liberal economic and political reforms in West and Central Africa’, Journal of Contemporary African Studies, 21(3), 2003, p 452.

26 saprin, Structural Adjustment, p 103.

27 Ibid, p 106.

28 See Harrison, Neoliberal Africa; and S Riley & T Parfitt, ‘Economic adjustment and democratization in Africa’, in J Walton & D Seddon (eds), Free Markets and Food Riots: The Politics of Global Adjustment, Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1994, pp 135–170.

29 H Kahn, World Economic Development: 1979 and Beyond, London: Croom and Helm, 1979.

30 MT Berger, ‘Yellow mythologies: the East Asian miracle and post-cold war capitalism’, Positions: East Asian Cultures and Critique, 4(1), 1996, pp 90–126.

31 A Dirlik, ‘Confucius in the borderlands: global capitalism and the reinvention of Confucianism’, Boundary 2, 22(3), 1995, pp 229–273.

32 T Koh, ‘Ten Asian values that helped East Asia's economic progress and prosperity’, Straits Times (Singapore), 17 July 1993.

33 A Milner, ‘What's happened to Asian values?’, in DSG Goodman & G Segal (eds), Beyond the Asia Crisis, London: Routledge, 1999.

34 See A Sen, ‘Human rights and Asian values: what Lee Kuan Yew and Le Peng don't understand about Asia’, The New Republic, 14 July 1997, pp 2-3, 33–38; and KB Teik, ‘The values of a miracle: Malaysian and Singaporean elite constructions of Asia’, Asian Studies Review, 23(2), 1999, pp 181–192.

35 See SH Thornton, ‘From miracle to mirage: rethinking Asian exceptionalism vis-à-vis the Third World’, Journal of Third World Studies, 26(2), 2009, pp 11–29.

36 SY Kim, ‘Do Asian values exist? Empirical tests of the four dimensions of Asian values’, Journal of East Asian Studies, 10, 2010, p 321.

37 Ibid, p 330.

38 Ibid.

39 GG Hamilton & NW Biggart, ‘Market, culture, and authority: a comparative analysis of management and organization in the Far East’, American Journal of Sociology, 94, 1988 (Supplement), pp S52–S94.

40 AE Kim & G Park, ‘Nationalism, Confucianism, work ethic and industrialization in South Korea’, Journal of Contemporary Asia, 33(1), 2003, pp 37–49.

41 R Stubbs, ‘Whatever happened to the East Asian developmental state? The unfolding debate’, Pacific Review, 22(1), 2009, pp 1–22.

42 R Wade, ‘Resolving the state–market dilemma in East Asia’, in H-J Chang & R Rowthorn (eds), The Role of the State in Economic Change, Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1995, p 120.

43 A Leftwich, Developmental States, Effective States and Poverty Reduction: The Primacy of Politics, unrisd Project on Poverty Reduction and Policy Regimes, 2008, p 12.

44 Ibid, p 13.

45 Ibid.

46 Ibid, p 16.

47 H-J Kwon, ‘The reform of the developmental welfare state in East Asia’, International Journal of Social Welfare, 18, 2009, S20.

48 Harvey, A Brief History of Neoliberalism, ch 5.

49 Ibid, p 130.

50 Ibid, p 148.

51 Human Rights Watch, 2009, ‘China: Economic crisis increases risks for migrant workers’, at http://www.hrw.org/en/news/2009/01/23/china-economic-crisis-increases-risks-migrant-workers, accessed 8 March 2011.

52 Harvey, A Brief History of Neoliberalism, p 144.

53 T Hout & J Lebretton, quoted in Harvey, A Brief History of Neoliberalism, p 138.

55 R McCormack, ‘US steel industry says get ready, Chinese government companies are coming to America’, Manufacturing and Technology News, 19 October 2010.

56 bbc World News, 5 March 2011, at www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-pacific-12654931, accessed 9 March 2011.

57 L Walsh, ‘The character of the Chinese state’, Socialism Today, 11, 2008, at www.socialismtoday.org/122/china.html, accessed 2 March 2011.

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