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LABOR PROTECTION (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   118172


Ex Ante due diligence: formation of PTAs and protection of labor rights / Kim, Moonhawk   Journal Article
Kim, Moonhawk Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract Do fair trade PTAs-trade agreements that contain provisions for protection of labor rights-lead to improvements in labor protection in PTA partner states? If so, how do the PTAs bring about such improvements? I argue that trade partner states are likely to engage in ex ante due diligence and improve the protection of labor rights at home before they sign or even enter into negotiations for a PTA. Given that large developed economies have increasingly placed value on strong labor protection, trade partners of these economies act on the belief that, holding other factors constant, having stronger labor protection will increase their attractiveness as a potential or a prospective PTA partner. I test this argument in the context of the United States and its trade partners between 1982 and 2005. The evidence shows that trade partner states indeed are much more likely to improve labor protection (i) prior to the 2002 Trade Act publicizing the importance of labor protection and (ii) prior to signing a PTA with the United States.
Key Words Trade  United States  PTA  Labor Protection 
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2
ID:   170985


Political economy of pneumoconiosis in China’s mining industry / Kerswell, Timothy; Deng, Zihong   Journal Article
Kerswell, Timothy Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Pneumoconiosis is one of the most signicant occupational diseases in China. We argue the key driver behind pneumoconiosis prevalence and consequent limited treatment is a balance of power signicantly favoring capital over labor. The political and economic history of China has included a systematic weakening of the position of labor through unfettered marketization and weak trade unions. This is especially true for the mining secto, where pneumoconiosis is an occupational risk. The changed structure of the mining industry, the lowering standards of labor protection, the decentralization of taxation and associated inequalities between provinces, and the generation of surplus labor associated with the household responsibility system have all played their part in the pneumoconiosis outbreak. Several policy issues have exacerbated the sufferings of pneumoconiosis-stricken workers that we explore in this article. On a grassroots political level, the absence of effective unions in China, including in the mining industry, provides a compelling explanation for why these policy issues
Key Words Decentralization  China  Trade Unions  Taxation  Mining Industry  Labor Protection 
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