Upgrading service delivery and employment conditions through indirect insertion in global value chains

被引:5
|
作者
Beerepoot, Niels [1 ]
Kumar, Randhir [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Amsterdam, Amsterdam Inst Social Sci Res, Amsterdam, Netherlands
[2] Univ Mumbai, Dept Econ, Bombay, Maharashtra, India
关键词
Globalization; global value chains; global standards; service upgrading; India; security sector; labour standards;
D O I
10.1177/1024529415593244
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
The study of labour in global value chains is so far largely concentrated on the workers directly involved in the sequential chain structures. Limited research has been conducted on how global value chains impact on the indirect employment that is generated through the integration of places in global value chains. This article examines how new demand for security services from international client firms in Mumbai impacts on the quality standards and job contents of security guards. Using empirical data, this article highlights the increasing differentiation in terms of job contents and benefits for security guards. The emergence of new clients for security services has increased the need for trained, educated personnel to handle multiple, and sophisticated tasks leading to these jobs being better paid and more skilled. Indirect insertion in global value chains leads to upgrading of low-end support services, but do not offer new opportunities to those who are traditionally involved in these services.
引用
收藏
页码:374 / 389
页数:16
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Transactional Dependence and Technological Upgrading in Global Value Chains
    Deng, Ziliang
    Ma, Xufei
    Zhu, Ziyan
    JOURNAL OF MANAGEMENT STUDIES, 2022, 59 (02) : 390 - 416
  • [2] Global value chains and service liberalization: do they matter for skill-upgrading?
    Ehab, Marina
    Zaki, Chahir R.
    APPLIED ECONOMICS, 2021, 53 (12) : 1342 - 1360
  • [3] The Role of Innovation in Upgrading in Global Value Chains
    Choi, Hyelin
    Kim, Semin
    Jung, Taehwan
    GLOBAL ECONOMIC REVIEW, 2019, 48 (03) : 273 - 283
  • [4] The Employment Effects of Global Value Chains
    Ma, Shuzhong
    Liang, Yinfeng
    Zhang, Hongsheng
    EMERGING MARKETS FINANCE AND TRADE, 2019, 55 (10) : 2230 - 2253
  • [5] Meta-analysis: global value chains and employment
    Carneiro, Silvia
    Neves, Pedro Cunha
    Afonso, Oscar
    Sochirca, Elena
    APPLIED ECONOMICS, 2024, 56 (19) : 2295 - 2314
  • [6] Applicability of global value chains analysis to tourism: issues of governance and upgrading
    Tejada, Pilar
    Santos, Francisco J.
    Guzman, Joaquin
    SERVICE INDUSTRIES JOURNAL, 2011, 31 (10): : 1627 - 1643
  • [7] Collaborative public spaces and upgrading through global value chains: The case of Dongguan, China
    Murphree, Michael
    Breznitz, Dan
    GLOBAL STRATEGY JOURNAL, 2020, 10 (03) : 556 - 584
  • [8] Economic upgrading in global value chains: concepts and measures
    Marcato, Marilia Bassetti
    Baltar, Carolina Troncoso
    REVISTA BRASILEIRA DE INOVACAO, 2020, 19
  • [9] The hidden costs of environmental upgrading in global value chains
    Ponte, Stefano
    REVIEW OF INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY, 2022, 29 (03) : 818 - 843
  • [10] Upgrading in the Global Value Chains: The Case of the Czech Republic
    Vlckova, Jana
    De Castro, Tereza
    Antal, Jarolim
    HOW TO BENEFIT FROM GLOBAL VALUE CHAINS - IMPLICATIONS FOR THE V4 COUNTRIES, 2015, : 38 - 66