Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-g7gxr Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-15T09:04:43.916Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Asian Connection: The U.S.-Caribbean Apparel Circuit and a New Model of Industrial Relations

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 October 2022

Cecilia Green*
Affiliation:
Bowling Green State University
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Extract

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

This article seeks to accomplish four goals. First, it will examine the historical circumstances of the rise of the U.S.-Caribbean garment production circuit from the standpoint of economic restructuring within the U.S. industry and U.S.-Caribbean trade relations and from the perspective of the major political interests involved. It will also examine the impact of this restructuring on local garment sectors and the wider host economies in the Caribbean. The article will then explore the role of the “Big Three” Asian suppliers in the contemporary restructuring as well as their role in the offshore garment sector in the Caribbean. The latter effort constitutes a preliminary investigation of an emerging area of political and scholarly interest, and it will be partly integrated into the treatment of the first two topics. Finally, while I will refer more broadly to the major garment-producing Caribbean islands, Jamaica will provide a case-study focus for my remarks here. The essay will conclude by looking briefly at the “free-zone” or “free-trade-zone” model of industrial relations and its impact on older traditions of trade unionism and labor-management practices, taking the experience of a number of Hong Kongese garment factories in the state-owned Kingston and Garmex Free Zones in Kingston, Jamaica, as an example.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1998 by the University of Texas Press

Footnotes

*

I wish to thank in particular two anonymous LARR reviewers whose extensive useful comments contributed to considerable improvement and fine-tuning of an earlier draft of this article.

References

Aldana, Cornelia H. 1989 A Contract for Under development. N.p. (Philippines): IBON Databank Phils.Google Scholar
Bakan, Abigail B., David, Cox, AND Leys, Colin, EDS. 1993 Imperial Power and Regional Trade: The Caribbean Basin Initiative. Ontario: Wilfrid Laurier University Press.Google Scholar
Bonacich, Edna, AND Waller, David V. 1994aMapping a Global Industry: Apparel Production in the Pacific Rim Triangle.” In BONACICH ET AL., EDS. 1994, 2141.Google Scholar
Bonacich, Edna, AND Waller, David V. 1994bThe Role of U.S. Apparel Manufacturers in the Globalization of the Industry in the Pacific Rim.” In BONACICH ET AL., EDS., 1994, 80104.Google Scholar
Bonacich, Edna, Cheng, Lucie, Chinchilla, Norma, Hamilton, Nora, AND Paul, Ong, EDS. 1994 Global Production: The Apparel Industry in the Pacific Rim. Philadelphia, Pa.: Temple University Press.Google Scholar
Charnovitz, Steve 1985Varieties of Labor Organization: The Caribbean and Central America Compared.” Caribbean Review 14, no. 2 (Spring): 14–17, 42.Google Scholar
Cheng, Lucie, AND Gereffi, Gary 1994U.S. Retailers and Asian Garment Production.” In BONACICH ET AL., EDS., 1994, 6379.Google Scholar
COHA (COUNCIL ON HEMISPHERIC AFFAIRS) AND THE INTER-HEMISPHERIC EDUCATION RESOURCE CENTER 1990 National Endowment for Democracy: A Foreign Policy Branch Gone Awry? Albuquerque, N.M.: Resource Center.Google Scholar
Dunn, Leith 1987 Report on Women in Industry: A Participatory Research Project on Garment Workers in Jamaica. Kingston: Joint Trade Unions Research Development Centre and CUSO.Google Scholar
Dunn, Leith 1991 Women Organising for Change in Caribbean Free Zones: Strategies and Methods. Sub-series on Women, History, and Development: Themes and Issues, no. 4. The Hague, the Netherlands: Institute of Social Studies.Google Scholar
Dupuy, Alex 1989 Haiti in the World Economy. Boulder, Colo.: Westview.Google Scholar
Figueroa, Hector 1996In the Name of Fashion: Exploitation in the Garment Industry.” NACLA Report on the Americas 29, no. 4 (Jan.–Feb.):3440.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
French, Joan 1994Hitting Where It Hurts Most: Jamaican Women's Livelihoods in Crisis.” In Mortgaging Women's Lives, edited by Sparr, Pamela, 165–82. London: Zed.Google Scholar
Green, Cecilia 1990 The World Market Factory: A Study of Enclave Industrialization in the Eastern Caribbean and Its Impact on Women Workers. St. Vincent and the Grenadines: Caribbean People's Development Agency (CARIPEDA).Google Scholar
Green, Cecilia 1991Trade Unions and Women Workers in the Eastern Caribbean.” Voices of the African Diaspora (CAAS Research Review) 7, no. 2:30–34.Google Scholar
Green, Cecilia 1995Export-Processing Industry and the New Peripheralization of the Commonwealth Caribbean.” 21st Century Policy Review 2, no. 4 (Spring-Summer):5191.Google Scholar
Green, Cecilia 1996aTransplanting Free Enterprise.” Against the Current, no. 62 (May-June):1012.Google Scholar
Green, Cecilia 1996bAt the Junction of the Global and the Local: Transnational Industry and Women Workers in the Caribbean.” In Human Rights, Labor Rights, and International Trade, edited by Compa, Lance A. and Diamond, Stephen F., 118–40. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.Google Scholar
Grunwald, Joseph, Delatour, Leslie, AND Voltaire, Karl 1985Foreign Assembly in Haiti.” In The Global Factory, edited by Grunwald, John and Flamm, Kenneth, 180205. Washington, D.C.: Brookings Institute.Google Scholar
Hoffman, Kurt, AND Rush, Howard 1988 Micro-Electronics and Clothing. New York: Praeger.Google Scholar
Hong Kong, Labour Department 1968 Joint Consultation: A Guide to Its Introduction and Operation. Hong Kong: Government Printer.Google Scholar
Hyett, Catherine 1993The Impact of the CBI on Barbados, Jamaica, and Grenada: An Assessment.” In BAKAN ET AL. 1993, 5978.Google Scholar
JAMPRO 1991The Textile and Apparel Industry.” Kingston: Apparel and Sewn Products Unit, International Operations, JAMPRO.Google Scholar
JCTU (JAMAICA CONFEDERATION OF TRADE UNIONS) 1994 Jamaica: A Policy for Trade. Kingston: JCTU.Google Scholar
Kelly, Dan 1989 Report on Enquiry into the Terms and Conditions of Employment in the Garment Industry. Kingston: Ministry of Labour, Government of Jamaica.Google Scholar
LATIN AMERICAN MONITOR (CARIBBEAN) 1995Dominican Republic: NAFTA Causes Job Losses.” Latin American Monitor 12, no. 12(1995):9.Google Scholar
LATIN AMERICAN MONITOR (CARIBBEAN) 1997Jamaica: Help For Textiles Industry.” Latin American Monitor 14, no. 1 (Jan.):3.Google Scholar
Lau, Ho-Fuk, AND Chan, Chi-Fai 1994The Development Process of the Hong Kong Garment Industry: A Mature Industry in a Newly Industrialized Economy.” In BONACICH ET AL., EDS., 1994, 105–25.Google Scholar
Moonilal, Roodal 1994Structural Adjustment, Union Busting, and the Future of Trade Unions.” In Structural Adjustment: Public Policy and Administration in the Caribbean, edited by Guerre, John La, 130–55. St. Augustine, Trinidad and Tobago: School of Continuing Studies, University of the West Indies.Google Scholar
Mort, Jo-Ann 1988Return of The Sweatshop: Déjà Vu in the Garment Industry.” Dissent 35 (Summer):363–66.Google Scholar
Munroe, Trevor 1994The Industrial Relations Culture: Perspectives and Change.” In Jamaica: Preparing for the Twenty-First Century, edited by Lewis, Patsy, 121–31. Kingston: Ian Randle.Google Scholar
NLC (NATIONAL LABOR COMMITTEE EDUCATION FUND IN SUPPORT OF WORKER AND HUMAN RIGHTS IN CENTRAL AMERICA) 1992 Paying to Lose Our Jobs. New York: NLC.Google Scholar
NLC (NATIONAL LABOR COMMITTEE EDUCATION FUND IN SUPPORT OF WORKER AND HUMAN RIGHTS IN CENTRAL AMERICA) 1993 Haiti after the Coup: Sweatshop or Real Development? New York: NLC.Google Scholar
NLC (NATIONAL LABOR COMMITTEE EDUCATION FUND IN SUPPORT OF WORKER AND HUMAN RIGHTS IN CENTRAL AMERICA) 1995Urgent Action Alert/Request for Immediate Solidarity.” Circular on the subject of Mandarin International, El Salvador, 18 May.Google Scholar
NLC (NATIONAL LABOR COMMITTEE EDUCATION FUND IN SUPPORT OF WORKER AND HUMAN RIGHTS IN CENTRAL AMERICA) 1996 The U.S. in Haiti: How to Get Rich on 11¢ an Hour. New York: NLC.Google Scholar
Pantojas-Garcia, Emilio 1994Mexico: Specter of the North American Free Trade Agreement.” Caribbean Perspectives, Premiere Issue (Dec. 1994):1621.Google Scholar
Parsons, Carol 1988The Domestic Employment Consequences of Managed International Competition in Apparel.” In The Dynamics of Trade and Employment, edited by Laura D'Andrea Tyson, William T. Dickens, and Zysman, John, 113–55. Cambridge, Mass.: Ballinger.Google Scholar
Preeg, Ernest H. 1988Haiti and the CBI: A Time of Change and Opportunity.” In The Haitian Crisis: Two Perspectives, 1–50. Miami, Fla.: Institute of Interamerican Studies, Graduate School of International Studies, University of Miami.Google Scholar
Ramnarine, Devanand J. 1993The Political Logic of the CBI.” In BAKAN ET AL. 1993, 79116.Google Scholar
Rothstein, Richard 1989 Keeping Jobs in Fashion. Washington, D.C.: Economic Policy Institute.Google Scholar
Safa, Helen I. 1993The New Women Workers: Does Money Equal Power?NACLA Report on the Americas 27, no. 1 (July-Aug.):2429.Google Scholar
Sklair, Leslie 1989 Assembling for Development: The Maquila Industry in Mexico and the United States. Boston, Mass.: Unwin Hyman.Google Scholar
Steele, Peter 1988 The Caribbean Clothing Industry: The U.S. and Far East Connections. Special Report no. 1,147 London: Economist Intelligence Unit.Google Scholar
Stone, Carl 1985A Political Profile of the Caribbean.” In Caribbean Contours, edited by Mintz, Sidney W and Price, Sally, 1353. Baltimore, Md.: Johns Hopkins University Press.Google Scholar
Tirado De Alonso, Irma 1992Industrialization and Trade in the Dominican Republic and Haiti.” In Trade Issues in the Caribbean, edited by De Alonso, Irma Tirado, 4569. Philadelphia, Pa.: Gordon and Breach.Google Scholar
Tucker, Stuart, AND Hylton, Lori L. 1991 Global Textile and Apparel Trade: A Policy Unraveled. Policy Focus no. 4 (pamphlet). Washington, D. C.: Overseas Development Council.Google Scholar
U.S. CONGRESS, OFFICE OF TECHNOLOGY ASSESSMENT 1987 The U.S. Textile and Apparel Industry, a Revolution in Progress: Special Report. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office.Google Scholar
U.S. GAO (GENERAL ASCCOUNTING OFFICE) 1993 Foreign Assistance: U.S. Support for Caribbean Basin Assembly Industries. Washington, D.C.: GAO and National Security and International Affairs Division (NSIAD).Google Scholar
USITC (U.S. INTERNATIONAL TRADE COMMISSION) 1995 Industry and Trade Summary: Apparel. USITC Publication no. 2,853. Washington, D.C.: Office of Industries, USITC.Google Scholar
USITC (U.S. INTERNATIONAL TRADE COMMISSION) 1996 Production Sharing: Use of U.S. Components and Materials in Foreign Assembly Operations, 1991–1994. USITC Publication no. 2,966. Washington, D.C.: USITC.Google Scholar
USITC (U.S. INTERNATIONAL TRADE COMMISSION) 1997a Production Sharing: Use of U.S. Components and Materials in Foreign Assembly Operations, 1992–1995. USITC Publication no. 3,032. Washington, D.C.: USITC.Google Scholar
USITC (U.S. INTERNATIONAL TRADE COMMISSION) 1997b Annual Statistical Report on U.S. Imports of Textiles and Apparel, 1996. USITC Publication no. 3,038. Washington, D.C.: USITC.Google Scholar
Vega, Bernardo 1985The CBI Faces Adversity: Lessons from the Asian Export Strategy.” Caribbean Review 14, no. 2:1819, 43.Google Scholar
WAC (WOMEN'S ACTION COMMITTEE) 1990 Rights as well as Jobs for Women in the Garment Industry. Kingston, Jamaica: Women's Action Committee and CUSO Caribbean.Google Scholar
WAC (WOMEN'S ACTION COMMITTEE) 1993 Participatory Research: A Tool for Organising Women. Booklet prepared by Dunn, Leith. Kingston, Jamaica: WAC.Google Scholar
Waldinger, Roger D. 1986 Through the Eye of the Needle. New York: New York University Press.Google Scholar
Willmore, Larry 1993 Export Processing in Jamaica: Ownership, Linkages, and Transfer of Technology. Caribbean Development and Cooperation Committee (CDCC), Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC).CrossRefGoogle Scholar