Monopsony capitalism : power and production in the twilight of the sweatshop age / Ashok Kumar.
Material type:
- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 9781108731973 (pbk.)
- 331.2091724 KUM 23 015190
- HD2339.D44 K86 2020
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Indian Institute for Human Settlements, Bangalore | 331.2091724 KUM 015190 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 015190 |
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331.13770973 MOR DS0609 More benefits to jobless can be attained in public service employment, Department of Labor : report to the Congress / | 331.2 WEE 008345 The problem with work : | 331.20477130954147 FER 005479 Producing workers : | 331.2091724 KUM 015190 Monopsony capitalism : | 331.2101 BEY 021944 Beyond the wage : ordinary work in diverse economies / | 331.210954 SWA 000502 Swamy's handbook 2010 : | 331.230954 KAV 005070 An information booklet on : |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
"Monopsony Capitalism explores the combination of capital's changing composition and labour's subjective agency to examine whether the waning days of the 'sweatshop' have indeed begun. Focused on the garment and footwear sectors - which epitomize the leading edges in the advance of globalization and the spread of vertically disintegrated value chains - the book introduces a universal logic that governs competition and reshapes the chain. Simply put, deregulation produces high degrees of monopsony power, increasing the value share for the lead firm. This intensifies competition, exerts downward pressure, and winnows the number of suppliers able to compete. The result is supplier-end consolidation. Consolidation increases the surviving suppliers' share of value, which expands access to finance, facilitates self-investment, and raises entry barriers. In 2005, the regulatory regime that had once enforced a degree of spatial inflexibility finally dwindled to nothing with the phase-out of the Multi-Fibre Agreement (MFA). The subsequent emergence of market spatial inflexibility, which gives labour new openings, occurs with free, unrestricted flows between supplier and buyer. This book analyses workers' collective action at various sites of production primarily in China, India, Honduras, and United States, and secondarily in Vietnam, Cambodia, Bangladesh, and Indonesia. It observes how this internal logic plays out for labour who are testing the limits of the social order, stretching it until the seams show, and making it possible for bosses to come to the proverbial table, hat in hand, to hash out agreements with those who assemble their goods. By examining the most valorized parts of underdeveloped sectors, one can see where capital is going and how it is getting there. The findings contribute to ongoing strategies to bolster workers' bargaining power in sectors plagued by poverty, powerlessness, and perilous workplaces. Indeed, with these changes in global capitalism and a capable labour movement, there's hope yet that workers may close the gap"--
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