by fathead » Sat 17 Dec 2005, 21:22:38
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')am not making an unfounded assumption, I am stating a fundamentally correct assumption. Unless they're slaves, if these people could earn more than they do working for corporate outsourcers, they would do it! If it was better for them to stay in their village, they would stay.
Thats assuming the ceteris paribus principle is in operation though. In many situations it is not simply a case of new transnational employers offering a better deal.
e.g. a few scenarios that a neo-classical analysis fails to recognise
As has been the case in Indonesia, the Phillipines, South Korea, Mexico and India, agricultural workers are often dispossesed of their land in order to make way for industrialised production controlled by transnational firms (or the state funded infrastructure to support/attract their operations). Now lacking their previous means of production, and often with little monetary wealth to aid in relocation, these people will often be left with the choice of starvation or working for whatever wages the new employers are offering. The end result of this, and has been demonstrated in many cases, is that whilst these people may start receiving a monetary wage that moves them above the US $2/day poverty line, and boosts the monetary GNP of an economy, it has the effect of reducing the bundle of goods which individuals and communities are able to access.
Changes in the nature of markets for agricultural output and the nature of agriculture production also need to be accounted for. For instance the increasing disparities caused by subsidised first world output flooding third world markets, the increasing reliance upon the price of monoculture cash crops for survival, the 'green revolution' and the introduction of mechanized and chemical driven agriculture (again highly reliant on external, monopolistic prices). This increasingly makes small scale agriculture less profitable, and less reliant upon human labour. Yet at the same time, agriculture production is becoming increasingly concerned with earning export income, as opposed to providing directly for the needs of the community in which the production is occuring. This contradictory state of affairs hands further leverage to transnational firms in that it creates a large pool of surplus and choice-less labour.
Add in the role of population gowth alongside the deminished small scale land holdings, declining productivity of land (due to high intensity ag. production) and increasing monetary emphasis, and it further creates a situaion where desperate people have little choice but to accept whatever wages are on offer.
It could well be argued that in this case transnational firms are doing these people a favour but providing some income, and in a static model that would appear to be the case. However, all things are not equal, and as Ive tried to point out above, transnational firms and mutilateral bodies (WTO, IMF, IBRD etc) are in part responsible for creating this situation where people have their exisiting means of sustenance stripped away and conveinently replaced with wage labour that often delivers a smaller bundle of goods, at the cost of geographic dislocation, increasd environmental degradation and increasing social alienation.
*steps off soapbox*