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Arne L. Kalleberg University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Chung-Ang University--July 19, 2011. Precarious Work in Asia: Introductory Remarks. Overview. Conceptualizing Precarious Work The Growth of Precarious Work The Importance of Studying Precarious Work Need for Comparative Studies.
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Arne L. Kalleberg University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Chung-Ang University--July 19, 2011 Precarious Work in Asia:Introductory Remarks
Overview • Conceptualizing Precarious Work • The Growth of Precarious Work • The Importance of Studying Precarious Work • Need for Comparative Studies
Precarious Work • Work that is: • Insecure • Uncertain • Risks borne by workers • Limited income and benefits • Little potential for better jobs • Examples: • Temporary work (Formal economy) • Informal economy work
Precarity as Loss(Developed countries) • Loss of: • labor rights historically won by unions and workers’ movements. • stable employment relationships and employment protections due to legalization of temporary, part-time and training contracts. • welfare protections such as health insurance and reductions in unemployment benefits associated with transformations in labor conditions and labor contracts such as: from full-time to part-time, from permanent to temporary jobs, etc.
Standard Employment Relationship • Pillars: • Bilateral Employment Relation • Standardized Hours • Continuous Employment • Psychological Contract • Access to • Regulatory protections • Training • Careers • (Adult Male Citizens)
Macro Changes COUNTRY DIFFERENCES Precarious Work SER Pressures for Greater Flexibility Shift in Employment Norms Employer & State Responses
Polanyi’s “Double Movement” (U.S.) Flexibility Security 1800 Precarious Work Uncertainty 1930 SER > Growth; > Certainty 1975 Precarious Work Uncertainty 2010 A New Social Contract???
Some Nonstandard Employment Relations Org C Contractor Organization A On-Call, Fixed Term Temp Org B
Precarity as Informal Economy • Labor in the InformalSector • Informalself-employed (streetvendors, homeworkers), Informalemployees (domesticworkers), Migrant workers • Informallabor in formal sector (atypicalworkers not protected by regulatoryframework) • THA workers, contractedworkers • De-facto informallabor (formal workers in informaleconomywhohave no powertoobtain the rightstowhcihtheyareentitled) • Workers in developingcountrieswith no union, part-timers (D.O. Chang, 2009)
Family Outcomes Individual Outcomes Economic Insecurity & Inequality Community Outcomes Consequences of Precarious Work Precarious Work COUNTRY DIFFERENCES
Need for Comparative Research • Cross-national studies are necessary in order to: • account for the diversity of precarious work (types of nonstandard work, informal work) • understand impacts of institutions and cultures
Studying Precarious Work in 10 Asian Countries • China • India • Indonesia • Japan • Philippines • South Korea • Sri Lanka • Taiwan • Thailand • Vietnam • More developed countries: • Nonstandard work arrangements (e.g., temporary, contract work) • Less developed countries: • Informal economy
Research Questions • What does “precarious work” mean in the different countries? • What statistics on PW are available? What are the estimates of the extent/trends in PW? • Who is doing research on PW in the country? • Case illustrating the nature of PW in country? • What strategies might reduce PW in country? • Other important information about PW in country?
Goals of the Workshop • Share information about precarious work in the various countries • Develop a common framework for studying precarious work • Identify key issues for comparative analysis • Develop a strategy for moving forward • Set date for next conference, at UNC-Chapel Hill