1st Edition

Enterprise and Welfare Reform in Communist Asia

Edited By Peter Ferdinand, Martin Gainsborough Copyright 2004

    Featuring a wide geographical scope, this collection of essays surveys enterprise and welfare reforms in all the remaining four Asian communist states: China, Vietnam, Laos and North Korea. Since the collapse of the Soviet Union they can no longer place major reliance upon assistance from other 'fraternal' states and have to devise their own strategies for survival. All have shown a trend towards greater reliance on market forces, though in different ways and to varying degrees. Enterprise management has to adapt to this. In some of them entrepreneurs have become politically and socially acceptable. They may even begin to set trends for social evolution. Yet since state entreprises used to be responsible for all welfare payments to employees and their families, management reforms cannot be separated from those of welfare arrangements. Reducing an enterprise's non-commerical obligations for the sake of greater market efficiency is bound to affect welfare provision. It also reopens the role of official trade unions. How these regimes cope with these conflicting pressures are vital factors in their long-term viability.

    Introduction, Fluctuating Institutions of Enterprise Management in North Korea: Prospects for Local Enterprise Reform, Pragmatism in the Face of Adversity: Enterprise Reform in Laos, Slow, Quick, Quick: Assessing Equitization and Enterprise Performance Prospects in Vietnam, Entrepreneurs in China and Vietnam as Strategic Players in Social and Political Change, China’s Social Security Reforms and the Comparative Politics of Market Transition, Trade Unionism in China: Sinking or Swimming?, Abstracts, Notes on Contributors, Index

    Biography

    Ferdinand, Peter; Gainsborough, Martin