TY - JOUR
T1 - Export incentives, domestic mobilization, & labor reforms
AU - Evans, Alice
N1 - Funding Information:
I am extremely grateful to my Vietnamese and North American participants (who shared their reflections with me, explained complex political dynamics, and provided useful comments on earlier drafts). This article has greatly benefited fantastically insightful, thoughtful, and constructive criticism from three reviewers; as well as Matt Amengual, Tim Bartley, Susanna Campbell, Greg Distelhorst, Kim Elliott, Alisha Holland, Naomi Hossain, Dan Honig, Genevieve LeBaron, Axel Marx, Ken Opalo, Elke Sch??ler; extensive editing by Pseudoerasmus; together with feedback at the APSA Annual Meeting, the Harvard Kennedy School, Center for Global Development, London School of Economics, and Ho Chi Minh City University of Law. Fieldwork was financed by the Development Leadership Programme (DLP), and the Effective States and Inclusive Development (ESID). The debts are many, deficits mine, and critique is very welcome.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
PY - 2021/9/3
Y1 - 2021/9/3
N2 - There is a complementary relationship between export incentives and domestic mobilization in improving workers’ rights in global supply chains. Governments will repress labor in order to boost export competitiveness; resistance is then sporadic, ineffective, and dangerous. If governments anticipate economic rewards, they may reduce labor repression; but domestic activists must simultaneously mobilize for substantive reforms. I demonstrate this by exploiting within-case variation in Bangladesh and Vietnam, showing what happened before the introduction of export incentives; in their presence; and after they subsided. Vietnam liberalized labor laws in order to join the Trans-Pacific Partnership; and Bangladesh did likewise in order to salvage its reputation after Rana Plaza. Activists became less fearful once Bangladeshi politicians had announced reforms. They registered unions, demonstrated en masse, and secured a 77% increase in the minimum wage. In Vietnam, party reformists were crucial in persuading their conservative colleagues that TPP would help strengthen the regime’s hold on power, while pushing for genuinely independent unions. This paper explicates the synergies between export incentives and domestic mobilization by connecting protagonists’ motivations to macro-level reforms, via process-tracing and in-depth qualitative research.
AB - There is a complementary relationship between export incentives and domestic mobilization in improving workers’ rights in global supply chains. Governments will repress labor in order to boost export competitiveness; resistance is then sporadic, ineffective, and dangerous. If governments anticipate economic rewards, they may reduce labor repression; but domestic activists must simultaneously mobilize for substantive reforms. I demonstrate this by exploiting within-case variation in Bangladesh and Vietnam, showing what happened before the introduction of export incentives; in their presence; and after they subsided. Vietnam liberalized labor laws in order to join the Trans-Pacific Partnership; and Bangladesh did likewise in order to salvage its reputation after Rana Plaza. Activists became less fearful once Bangladeshi politicians had announced reforms. They registered unions, demonstrated en masse, and secured a 77% increase in the minimum wage. In Vietnam, party reformists were crucial in persuading their conservative colleagues that TPP would help strengthen the regime’s hold on power, while pushing for genuinely independent unions. This paper explicates the synergies between export incentives and domestic mobilization by connecting protagonists’ motivations to macro-level reforms, via process-tracing and in-depth qualitative research.
KW - Bangladesh
KW - free trade agreements (FTAs)
KW - global supply chains
KW - trade
KW - Vietnam
KW - Workers’ rights
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85087483473&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/09692290.2020.1788113
DO - 10.1080/09692290.2020.1788113
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85087483473
SN - 0969-2290
VL - 28
SP - 1332
EP - 1361
JO - REVIEW OF INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY
JF - REVIEW OF INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY
IS - 5
ER -