Market transition and the deinstitutionalization of standard work hours in post-socialist China
2014
67
3
July
864-890
arrangement of working time ; working time
Working time and leave
http://ilr.sagepub.com/content/67/3.toc
English
Bibliogr.
"The authors investigate the relationship between market transition and work hours in urban China. Regression analysis of data from the 2006 Chinese General Social Survey reveals a negative relationship between economic marketization, measured at the province level, and the likelihood that an employee works standard hours. Standard hours are less common among those working for smaller employers, which are less subject to outside scrutiny. This relationship between employer size and standard hours is stronger in more marketized regions. These findings support the authors' argument that standard work hours are deinstitutionalized as employers strive for low cost and flexibility in China's increasingly marketized but poorly regulated economy. Comparisons of the Chinese experience with recent trends in the United States reveal remarkable similarities in the weakening of social employment contracts precipitated by the ascendency of markets and the systematic disempowering of labor. "
Paper
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