Full text: https://www.sv.uio.no/sai/english/research/projects/anthropos-and-the-material/Intranet/economic-practices/reading-group/texts/tsing-supply-chains-and-the-human-condition.pdf
Abstract: “This article theorizes supply chain capitalism as a model for understanding both the continent-crossing scale and the constitutive diversity of contemporary global capitalism. In contrast with theories of growing capitalist homogeneity, the analysis points to the structural role of difference in the mobilization of capital, labor, and resources. Here labor mobilization in supply chains is the focus, as it depends on the performance of gender, ethnicity, nationality, religion, and citizenship status. The article uses the concept of figuration to show how difference is mobilized within supply chains, and to point to the importance of tropes of management, consumption, and entrepreneurship in workers’ understandings of supply chain labor. These tropes make supply chains possible by bringing together self-exploitation and superexploitation. Diversity is thus structurally central to global capitalism, and not decoration on a common core.”
Some of the examples given are:
- Walmart and fake Christian values, such as “allowing” people to prioritize church and family to justify irregular hours and starvation wages.
- Textile companies moved “their assembly plants abroad to match the superior sewing skills of women in the global South. These skills, the managers told her, are learned at home, not on the job. ‘This paradoxical framing of skill makes women’s ‘disadvantages’ in the labor market at least a temporary advantage.’”
- Nominally “nonwork” work, such as U.S. chicken farmer entrepreneurs, FedEx drivers, and matsutake mushroom pickers.
IMO a good way of framing the analysis is supply chains being a useful basis of analysis for understanding capitalism. This is similar to how Marxism views the factory, although Tsing’s thesis is not as ambitious.
Disclaimer: It's the first time I've read something like this, but I read the article 3 times to try and not mischaracterize it.
Part 1/2
Terms
- Supply chain capitalism: “Subcontracting, outsourcing, and allied arrangements'' (enterprises that are legally autonomous, but not actually). This has happened since the 1990s
- Superexploitation: “Exploitation that depends on so-called noneconomic factors such as gender, race, ethnicity, nationality, religion, sexuality, age, and citizenship status”
- Other terms for “so-called economic factors” are “identity” and “cultural identity”
- Self-exploitation: Self-inflicted exploitation
- Figuration
- “Firms distance themselves from labor victories of the past by outsourcing and resignifying work outside of earlier labor struggles”
- Configuration without the “con,” meaning “together.” Because supply chains are fragmented, they “figure” without “configuring.” (thanks /u/Nagarjuna)
Introduction
- Analyzing supply chain capitalism grants insight into contemporary global capitalism
- Supply chain capitalism
- Supply chain capitalism is not the only contemporary form of global capitalism. Other examples include finance and giant, centralized corporations
- Supply chain capitalism is not necessarily more diverse, but supply chain capitalists consider diversity because they link up dissimilar firms
- Outsourcing relies on:
- New technologies to communicate and send commodities quickly and reliably
- New financial arrangements
- Mobile labor and economic/political vulnerabilities created by imperialism
- “Creative” accounting
- This outsourcing is pressured by stockholders
- Types of mobilization: labor, nature, and capital
- This paper focuses on labor mobilization, which depends on performance of identities (gender, ethnicity, nationality, religion, and citizenship status)
- Heterogeneity of identities is mobilized in supply chains
- This paper focuses on labor mobilization, which depends on performance of identities (gender, ethnicity, nationality, religion, and citizenship status)
- Superexploitation
- Labor, nature, and capital are mobilized in fragmented but linked economic niches
- Supply chains are made possible by the blurring between the lines of superexploitation and self-exploitation
- Thus, diversity is a central part of the structure of global capitalism, not a contingency
- Supply chain diversity is influenced by both inside and outside the supply chain
- “No firm has to personally invent patriarchy”
- Supply chain capitalism
Thinking Big
- Theories tend to either:
- Try to find a single, homogenous, underlying structure
- e.g. Marxism and the universal proletariat
- The English working class had the same race, gender, and national privileges as the bourgeoisie. This made class relations appear foundational, transcendent, and neutral towards other factors such as gender, race, and national. This was all while the English working class benefited from, for example, cheap commodities produced by New World slavery such as sugar
- With the decline of white male labor unions in the late 20th century, this view is no longer tenable. There are other figurations of labor, and we should pay attention to these differences rather than reject them as flawed protagonists
- e.g. Marxism and the universal proletariat
- Be too particular (e.g. some conceptions of intersectionality, which are too particular to have revolutionary potential)
- We need to simultaneously see the “bigness” of global capitalism (in its generality and its scale) and its heterogeneity
- Analyzing supply chains can do this
- Analyzing diversity aids the “critical imagination”
- Analyzing supply chains can do this
- Try to find a single, homogenous, underlying structure
- “Figurations of the capital-labor relationship often use imagery from successful firms.” Successful firms become models for capitalists. However, they only inspire; they do not determine practice. Examples:
-
- Bigness - mid-20th century General Motors was used as an example in the 1970s and early 1980s
- It was characterized by bigness: economies of scale, expansion, the dominance of American manufacturing, and justifying development of the Third World
- This featured “the institutional and ideological separation of the ‘‘economy’’ [from] “culture””
- “Economy” was seen as forward-looking
- “Culture” was seen to be backward-looking, particular, and not very relevant
-
- Franchising - McDonalds was used as an example in the 1990s
- Franchising resulted in local enactments of globalization
- “the BigMac would be the transnational standard of consumption”
- There is deterritorialization, but capital and labor still have singular logics
-
- Walmart has been used as an example recently
- 2 strategies: cutting labor costs and dictating conditions to suppliers
- Walmart exerts overwhelming control, such as by requiring subcontractors to share their cost analyses and follow Walmart’s rules of conduct and standards
- However, Walmart does not (and does not want to) control labor arrangements and environmental practices. This allows Walmart to be responsible for only its “community,” while corporate labor practices are not applied to suppliers
- “Wal-Mart goes beyond exploiting market inequalities; it reshapes the possibilities of trade. ‘Wal-Mart often requires suppliers to open their books and submit to a rigorous cost analysis’”
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- “where firms succeed, it is often not by coercion alone. Supply chains tap and vitalize performances of so-called noneconomic features of identity. Labor is both recruited and motivated by these performances. On the one hand, workers become complicit with their own exploitation. On the other hand, they express hopes and desires that exceed the disciplinary apparatus of the firms they serve.”
- “Diversity is both the source of low wages, and, potentially, the source of creative alternatives. The situation of labor is further complicated by the fact that performances of identity are by their nature particularistic, drawing oppositions and lines of exclusion with others who might otherwise have similar class interests”
Part 2/2
New Figures of Labor
Conclusion (End of “New Figures of Labor” + “Into the Labyrinth”)