TY - JOUR
T1 - Pension Systems and Labour Resistance in Post-socialist China and Vietnam
T2 - A Welfare Regime Analysis
AU - Chan, Chris King Chi
AU - Hui, Elaine Sio Ieng
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors thank City University of Hong Kong, the Research Grants Council of Hong Kong (CityU 11616115, Comparing Labour Activism and Workplace Relations in China and Vietnam: The Role of Market, State and Civil Society), and Chiang Ching-kuo Foundation for International Scholarly Exchange (RG003-A-17) for their financial support. The research project that resulted in this article has six collaborators–Anita Chan and Jonathan Unger (Australian National University), Hongzen Wang (Sun Yat-sen University, Taiwan), Kaxton Siu (Hong Kong Polytechnic University) and the two authors. We thank our collaborators for their input in this project and useful comments on our article. Thanks are due to Do Quynh Chi for her help. This article was presented in the Association for Asian Studies Conference in 2019. We thank Willian Hurst, Dorothy Solinger and Mark Sidel for their helpful feedback.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Journal of Contemporary Asia.
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - Situated within the literature on welfare regimes, this article investigates workers’ contestation of pension arrangements in post-socialist, authoritarian China and Vietnam, and considers the effects of their actions. Scholars have highlighted economic, cultural, political regime type and political institutions as factors crucial to understanding the welfare regimes of China and Vietnam. However, the “labour factor”–that is, how worker resistance and mobilisation shape welfare provisions–has been under-explored. Focusing on pension provisions in China and Vietnam, this article contends that a labour perspective can deepen knowledge of pension systems and welfare regimes in these two countries. Based on case studies of two notable strikes, interviews and documentary research, this article illustrates that, against the background of transitioning from state socialism to market-Leninism, pension provisions and welfare regimes in China and Vietnam have been constantly contested by workers. It also shows that labour resistance has influenced welfare arrangements at various levels in both countries, and that the Vietnamese state was more accommodating to workers’ pension demands than the Chinese state, because of its more strongly redistributive orientation and, relatively, a less controlling political system.
AB - Situated within the literature on welfare regimes, this article investigates workers’ contestation of pension arrangements in post-socialist, authoritarian China and Vietnam, and considers the effects of their actions. Scholars have highlighted economic, cultural, political regime type and political institutions as factors crucial to understanding the welfare regimes of China and Vietnam. However, the “labour factor”–that is, how worker resistance and mobilisation shape welfare provisions–has been under-explored. Focusing on pension provisions in China and Vietnam, this article contends that a labour perspective can deepen knowledge of pension systems and welfare regimes in these two countries. Based on case studies of two notable strikes, interviews and documentary research, this article illustrates that, against the background of transitioning from state socialism to market-Leninism, pension provisions and welfare regimes in China and Vietnam have been constantly contested by workers. It also shows that labour resistance has influenced welfare arrangements at various levels in both countries, and that the Vietnamese state was more accommodating to workers’ pension demands than the Chinese state, because of its more strongly redistributive orientation and, relatively, a less controlling political system.
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U2 - 10.1080/00472336.2021.2016246
DO - 10.1080/00472336.2021.2016246
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85125256995
SN - 0047-2336
VL - 53
SP - 233
EP - 252
JO - Journal of Contemporary Asia
JF - Journal of Contemporary Asia
IS - 2
ER -