Value chains: the new economic imperialism
Material type:
- 9781583677810
- 331.1091724 S8V2
Item type | Current library | Item location | Collection | Shelving location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Books | Vikram Sarabhai Library | Rack 16-A / Slot 602 (0 Floor, West Wing) | Non-fiction | General Stacks | 331.1091724 S8V2 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 201625 |
Table of Contents
1.The Hidden Abode of Global Production
2.Labor-Value Commodity Chains: Power and Class Relations in the World Economy
3.Flexibility and Systemic Rationalization: Control in Labor-Value Commodity Chains
4."We're Just a Seamstress": Case Studies of Two Indonesian Companies
5.The New Economic Imperialism: Looking through the Eyes of the Global South.
Winner of the 2018 Paul A. Baran—Paul M. Sweezy Memorial Award for original work regarding the political economy of imperialism, Intan Suwandi’s Value Chains examines the exploitation of labor in the Global South. Focusing on the issue of labor within global value chains—vast networks of people, tools, and activities needed to deliver goods and services to the market and controlled by multinationals—Suwandi offers a deft empirical analysis of unit labor costs that is closely related to Marx’s own theory of exploitation.
Value Chains uncovers the concrete processes through which multinational corporations, located primarily in the Global North, capture value from the Global South. We are brought face to face with various state-of-the-art corporate strategies that enforce “economical” and “flexible” production, including labor management methods, aimed to reassert the imperial dominance of the North, while continuing the dependency of the Global South and polarizing the global economy. Case studies of Indonesian suppliers exemplify the growing burden borne by the workers of the Global South, whose labor creates the surplus value that enriches the capitalists of the North, as well as the secondary capitals of the South. Today, those who control the value chains and siphon off the profits are primarily financial interests with vast economic and political power—the power that must be broken if the global working class is to liberate itself. Suwandi’s book depicts in concrete detail the relations of unequal exchange that structure today’s world economy. This study, up-to-date and richly documented, puts labor and class back at the center of our understanding of the world capitalist system.
https://monthlyreview.org/product/value-chains/
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