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Wiley InterScience

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Regional Studies of Comparative International Industrial Relations
Globalization and Industrial Relations in East Asia: A Three-Country Comparison
Stephen J. Frenkel & David Peetz
  1 University of New South Wales, Sydney,   2 Griffith University, Brisbane
Copyright 1998 The Regents of the University of California

ABSTRACT

Globalization enhances competitiveness, both at the level of the firm and at the level of the nation. As observed in China, Malaysia, and Korea, this leads management and the state to adopt strategies designed to increase labor effectiveness to the benefit of capital. However, the effect of globalization on industrial relations procedures and substantive outcomes is contingent. Pressure for greater flexibility in the use of labor is ubiquitous, but the outcome is constrained by cultural norms valuing hierarchy and security. State strategies vary by historical circumstance, resource endowments, and internal political dynamics, including the influence of trade unions. While Malaysian industrial relations is heavily constrained by the discipline of high exposure to international capital, in China and Korea, major struggles are shaping the future of workplace and national labor market governance. Thus the extent and impact of globalization vary between countries, resulting in similar preoccupations by policymakers yet leading to variable responses and industrial relations outcomes.


DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/0019-8676.00089 About DOI

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