以牺牲埃塞俄比亚服装出口工业园区的劳工权利为代价的强大的商业-国家联盟

IF 0.6 Q4 BUSINESS
Mohammed Seid Ali, Solomon Molla Ademe
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摘要

在过去的十年中,埃塞俄比亚对东亚“发展型国家”模式表现出强烈的意识形态惯例,该模式将国家主导的工业化作为其基本的产业政策前提。然而,在现有的学术和实践政策辩论中,这种产业政策制定的劳工权利外部性被忽视了。因此,使用定性实证数据,本文试图通过分析埃塞俄比亚国家主导的工业化和服装出口公司的企业行为以及他们各自的全球品牌买家,为什么以及如何导致现有的贫困工资和对该国选定的服装出口工业园区当地产业工人协会权利的压制做法,来解决研究差距。与新古典主义知识分子关于劳资关系的观点相比,人性化的工业化格言日益成为一种有希望的选择,这种观点遵循了在特定国家实现更可持续的工业发展的基本原则。鉴于这一人权要求,调查结果显示,埃塞俄比亚的国家工业化已经坚定地接受了强大的商业-国家联盟,从而遏制了当地产业工人的权力。埃塞俄比亚政府在该国选定的服装出口工业园区采用各种事实上或法律上的劳工控制机制。这表现在低工资和剥夺工人结社权利的压制性措施上。此外,雇佣公司和他们各自的全球品牌的企业社会责任(CSR)有缺陷,导致了这些选定的服装出口公司正在进行的劳工滥用。因此,预计埃塞俄比亚的工业政策将在促进工业追赶和确保劳工标准以建立更可行和可持续的劳工关系之间取得合理的平衡。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Strong business–state alliances at the expense of labour rights in Ethiopia’s apparel-exporting industrial parks
In the past decade, Ethiopia has demonstrated a strong ideological convention to the East-Asian model of ‘developmental state’, which stands for state-led industrialisation as its underlying industrial policy premise. Nevertheless, the labour rights externalities of this industrial policymaking have been overlooked in the existing academic and practical policy debates. Hence, using qualitative empirical data, the article attempts to address the research gap by analysing why and how Ethiopia’s state-led industrialisation and the corporate behaviours of apparel-exporting firms, as well as their respective global brand buyers, have contributed to the existing poverty wages and repressive practices against the associational rights of local industrial workers at those selected apparel-exporting industrial parks of the country. The maxim of industrialisation with a human face has increasingly become a promising alternative to the neoclassical intellectual view of labour relations following its fundamentals towards achieving a more sustainable industrial development in a given state. In light of this human right imperative, the finding revealed Ethiopia’s stateled industrialisation has firmly embraced strong business-state alliances, thereby curbing the power of local industrial workers. The Ethiopian government employs diverse de facto or de jure labour control mechanisms across those selected apparel-exporting industrial parks of the country. This is manifested through poverty wages and repressive measures todeny the associational rights of workers. Further, the flawed Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) of employing firms and their respective global brands have contributed to the ongoing labour abuses across those selected apparel-exporting firms. Hence, Ethiopia’s industrial policy is expected to navigate a reasonable balance between facilitating industrial catch-up and ensuring labour standards for more viable and sustainable labour relations.
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