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82                                                           Women in the Economy (MWG-011)
               The fact that activity is spatially concentrated also has implications for the distribution of the gains
               from trade.  Specifically,  the  literature that studies the impact of international  trade on wages
               completely neglected the fact that industries affected by trade are often spatially concentrated within a
               country. As a result of  this concentration, large local effects may be felt  even when the  aggregate
               national effect is small.
               Spatial concentration also plays a role in determining the impact of trade liberalization in developing
               countries. Large national companies are joining together more and more on an international basis.
               The relocation of production stages (outsourcing) that existed for a long time in small and mid-size
               business at  home and abroad increased in the 1970s. The international division of  labor  became
               intensified when extreme labor-intensive stages of production in the clothing and electronic industries
               were moved  from the  industrial  nations of the North to  the  countries of Southern  Europe, North
               Africa, Eastern Asia and Latin America. At the same time, the labor costs and the incidental wage
               costs were gradually reduced in highly industrialised countries. It cost jobs for women. The reason is
               that labor-intensive production is predominantly carried out by women. Women work in the ‘cheap-
               wage countries’, as the name already says, cheaply. For employers, there are no incidental wage costs
               and no taxes to be paid.  But women also work there more willingly because very few of them are
               organized in trade unions.
               The newly industrialised countries of Southeast Asia owe their high rate of growth that is acclaimed as
               an economic miracle  to the millions  of women who are drawn into the suction of international
               manufacturing plants in a global rotation process and then spit out again. Especially young women are
               hired for dumping prices and after a few years, after marriage or starting a family, are laid off. Alone
               in Southeast Asia the employment of women has climbed from 25% to 44% since 1970. In Bangladesh,
               700,000 jobs were created in just under 20 years.
               The surge of transnational corporations towards ever cheaper workers and ever larger profit margins
               has led to a corporation mobility in the past few decades that is unprecedented in history. Since wages
               in the newly industrialised countries of Southeast Asia are increasing (also for women), European and
               American companies award their orders to their still cheaper competitors. Clothing manufacturers in
               Hong Kong  pass on their orders to subcontractors in Vietnam and China for example.  Working
               conditions in the production plants and the service industries that were swiftly created are often
               extremely burdensome and discriminating. With almost no trade union organization, the mobilization
               of resistance proves to be difficult.
               The new phase of the global division  of  labor  reveals itself not only in  the increasing  tempo of
               production  relocation  and  the  ever-greater  fragmentation  of  individual  stages  of  production.
               Transnational groups of affiliated companies no longer limit their activities to the production sector.
               They have moved on  to the service industry sector. Hotel chains, banks and insurance companies
               operate  across  borders. Besides the  liberalization  of the financial markets, the new areas of
               information technology and communication  technology are door openers for new  branches. As of
               recently, groups of affiliated companies offer advertising, market research, bookkeeping, management
               consultation, legal consultation, as well as data processing, etc. Women sit on-line in satellite offices
               or at home at a computer and do not have to leave their residential areas and can ‘earn some extra
               money’ on an hourly basis. It saves on the  construction of public  transportation systems, on an
               educational infrastructure for looking after and raising children, and on institutions for the care and
               welfare of elderly persons and those who cannot help themselves.
               On the other end of this ‘global conveyor belt,’ 70% percent of the former 900,000 jobs in the textile
               and clothing industries were eliminated between 1970 and 1995 – again predominantly women’s jobs.
               This elimination was even more thorough in the former GDR: only 26,500 jobs remained of the
               320,000 in the textile industry. The textile and clothing industries were especially affected in Saxony,
               where  93 years before ‘Saxony’s most  significant  labor  dispute’  was carried  out and  went down in
               history. It involved a strike by the textile worker from Crimmitschau concerning the 10-hour work
               day, higher  wages and  better working conditions.  The textile industry has  been almost  completely
               ‘liquidated’ there today, and predominately women’s jobs have  been eliminated. Other jobs in  the
               region are  not available to them. The absence of  resistance in the form of large strikes and the
               (continued) lack of support by male dominated trade unions as in the past has to do with the fact that
               the ‘job site family’ is supposed to be palatable to women, instead of their fight to save jobs. When
               men’s  jobs were affected  by plant shutdowns,  the affected parties could count on  the solidarity of
               women (i.e. Bischof erode, the mineworker’s chain).

               Q4. Write a note on feminisation of poverty and workforce.
               Ans. The catch phrase ‘globalization’ is an invention of American management schools. It suggests
               that only the companies that promptly and ruthlessly adjust to the new global competition for markets
               and locations are able to survive. Only those who become global players and extend their business
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