From: Paul Zarembka (zarembka@BUFFALO.EDU)
Date: Thu Jul 06 2006 - 16:44:51 EDT
Paul C., Do you know where one can get the data to investigate the numbers of persons who are wage-laborers (of course, with all the problems of defining wage-laborers kept in mind) at the world level and over time? Or can we do it only for the large population countries as a more delimited task? Paul Z. *************************************************************** THE HIDDEN HISTORY OF 9-11-2001, P.Zarembka, ed, Elsevier, 2006 http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/PZarembka/volume23.htm -- "a benchmark in 9/11 research", reviewer *************************************************************** On Thu, 6 Jul 2006, Paul Cockshott wrote: > This I believe is a factor of decisive significance > for the balance of class forces internationally. > > Based on UN projections the section of the chinese > population between the ages of 16-55 who are the > most economically vigorous will peak sometime > between 2010 and 2020. Since the latent reserve > army in peasant agriculture is some way from being > exhausted, the exploitable population will continue > to rise for a short while after that. For how long > it grows depends on the accumulation rate. > > An accumulation rate approaching 50% of GNP which > is quite extraordinary can eat up population supplies > fast. > > Rakesh says it is not yet critical but one should > be wary of being too short term in ones perspective. > For historical materialism it is the broad long term > trends of a mode of production that are decisive. > In this context the year 2006 is significant. It is > the first year in which more than half the world > population is urban. This puts the world as a whole > at the same stage of capitalist development as > Britain was when Engels and Marx arrived there > and started and started their analysis of it with > ' The condition of the working class in England'. > > By my reckoning the strategic shift in class forces > brought on by demographic transition was evident here > by 1900. From then on the tendancy was for the working > class to grow in strength relative to the bourgoisie > producing a series of restructuring crises. > > In China the process will be accelerated by several > factors: > > 1. The rate of capital accumulation is an order of > magnitude higher than it was in the 19th century. > > 2. The productivity differential between agriculture > and industry is much higher, this is what temporarilly > allows such a rapid rate of accumulation. > > 3. Whereas Britain could seize an empire that was much > larger than its domestic population to offset the > decline in the rate of profit, this is not possible > for the most populous nation on the planet. > > This means that the inherent tendancies of capital accumulation] > to self dissolve the capitalist mode of production will be > more marked in China than they were in Europe a century > ago. > > > -----Original Message----- > From: OPE-L on behalf of glevy@PRATT.EDU > Sent: Sat 7/1/2006 2:48 PM > To: OPE-L@SUS.CSUCHICO.EDU > Subject: [OPE-L] China: Labor Power Shortage Looms > > I saw this on Globolist. With all of the talk of "over-population" > in recent decades, this article raises some important issues. Given > the age distribution of the population in certain regions in China, will > it face a labor-power shortage? If so, how will that affect its terms of > trade and manufacturing costs? How might it be overcome? (e.g. by > internal [wrom where?] or external migration?) Will manufacturing shift > to other regions in search of lower labor costs? Is the "boom" in > Shanghai about to end? > > In solidarity, Jerry > > ============================================================ > NY Times, June 30, 2006 > As China Ages, a Shortage of Cheap Labor Looms > By HOWARD W. FRENCH > > SHANGHAI, June 29 - Shanghai is rightfully known as a fast-moving, > hypermodern city - full of youth and vigor. But that obscures a less > well-known fact: Shanghai has the oldest population in China, and it is > getting older in a hurry. > > Twenty percent of this city's people are at least 60, the common > retirement age for men in China, and retirees are easily the fastest > growing segment of the population, with 100,000 new seniors added to > the rolls each year, according to a study by the Shanghai Academy of > Social Sciences. From 2010 to 2020, the number of people 60 or older is > projected to grow by 170,000 a year. > > By 2020 about a third of Shanghai's population, currently 13.6 million, > will consist of people over the age of 59, remaking the city's social > fabric and placing huge new strains on its economy and finances. > > The changes go far beyond Shanghai, however. Experts say the rapidly > graying city is leading one of the greatest demographic changes in > history, one with profound implications for the entire country. > > The world's most populous nation, which has built its economic strength > on seemingly endless supplies of cheap labor, China may soon face > manpower shortages. An aging population also poses difficult political > issues for the Communist government, which first encouraged a > population explosion in the 1950's and then reversed course and > introduced the so-called one-child policy a few years after the death > of Mao in 1976. > > That measure has spared the country an estimated 390 million births but > may ultimately prove to be another monumental demographic mistake. With > China's breathtaking rise toward affluence, most people live longer and > have fewer children, mirroring trends seen around the world. > > Those trends and the extraordinarily low birth rate have combined to > create a stark imbalance between young and old. That threatens the > nation's rickety pension system, which already runs large deficits even > with the 4-to-1 ratio of workers to retirees that it was designed for. > > Demographers also expect strains on the household registration system, > which restricts internal migration. The system prevents young workers > from migrating to urban areas to relieve labor shortages, but officials > fear that abolishing it could release a flood of humanity that would > swamp the cities. > > As workers become scarcer and more expensive in the increasingly > affluent cities along China's eastern seaboard, the country will face > growing economic pressures to move out of assembly work and other > labor-intensive manufacturing, which will be taken up by poorer > economies in Asia and beyond, and into service and information-based > industries. > [...] > India, the world's other emerging giant, also stands to benefit, with > low wages and a far younger population than China. > > Even within China, Mr. Zuo said, many foreign investors have begun > moving factories away from Shanghai and other eastern cities to inland > locations, where the work force is cheaper and younger. > > Full: > <http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/30/world/asia/30aging.html? > hp&ex=1151726400&en=92530c7ed24b728e&ei=5094&partner=homepage> > > >
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