BOOK REVIEW
WORKING WOMEN & TRANSNATIONAL TRANSGRESSIONS Women Workers and
Global Restructuring Edited by Kathryn Ward Cornell University ILR Press,
1990. 258 pp., $14.95 Reviewed by Holley Knaus WOMEN WORKERS AND GLOBAL
RESTRUCTURING, a collection of sociological and economic essays, explores
the effect that laboring for multinational corporations has on the lives
of women workers in developed countries and in the Third World. The authors
examine the role of paid work in women's lives, the ways in which it enhances
or marginalizes their socio-economic position within the household, and
the methods used by women to gain a measure of control over their lives
at home and in the workplace as they move from under the authority of fathers
and families into industrial plants that have male managers and limited
advancement opportunities for female laborers. Ultimately, the book challenges
arguments that multinational corporate-led development increases economic
opportunities for women and frees them from patriarchal constraints of
the household and local community. While multinationals do sometimes create
new work opportunities for women, these jobs do not provide women with
the means for long-term empowerment. Multinationals are attracted to countries
with low operating costs, where the bargaining power and earning potential
of laborers is restricted. In order to minimize wages and the threat of
unionization, many of these corporations bring costs down further by subcontracting
work to informal factories or home-based laborers. It is usually women
who labor in unregulated factories or at home-based production. The essays
argue that informal labor does not enhance the position of women economically
or socially. Women are paid up to 50 percent less than male counterparts
and are usually expected to remit their wages to their husbands or families.
Corporations justify paying women below-subsistence wages by claiming that
they are only secondary wage earners, adding to the primary income earned
by the men of the household . That rationalization is buttressed, the essays
show, by many women all over the world who define themselves as secondary
wage earners, even if their husbands or fathers are unemployed and theirs
is the sole family income. In an essay on the garment industry in Greece,
Joanna Hadjicostandi disputes claims about the empowering potential of
home-based production work. She finds that the picture of a home-based
laborer with the autonomy to acquire resources and maintain control over
her profits while staying at home and caring for her children is a rarely
realized ideal. Home-based laborers usually have to bear much of the infrastructure
costs for their work, including machines and electricity. The work isolates
them from other workers and demands a tremendous amount of their time.
Many women reported having to work 10 to 14 hours a day in order to make
a living from their labor. The inflexibility of the traditional family
structure also limits women's ability to achieve a measure of autonomy.
Home- based work is often considered by the husband to be just an extension
of other home duties, so the additional responsibilities taken on by the
woman do not change the household division of labor. For the most part,
women do not control their earnings, and their wages are again considered
supplemental to those of their husbands. Women workers in many of the countries
studied are also constrained from realizing economic and social independence
by the state. Larry S. Carney and Charlotte O'Kelley report that opportunities
for women in Japan are restricted by forced early retirement, limited education
and training and a legal system that does not enforce (newly enacted) laws
against discrimination. Jean Pyle shows that the Irish government, responding
to constitutional mandates that ensure women's primary roles as wives and
mothers, seeks to attract multinational corporations to Ireland that agree
to hire a predominately male work force. While none of the women studied
were involved in unions or any other formal organizations to improve their
socio-economic position, they did engage in various, more subtle means
of resistance to their employers. Resistance among women workers in California's
Silicon Valley offers a striking example. Karen Hossfeld found that the
division of labor within California's microelectronic-based industry is
dramatically skewed according to gender and race: the lower the skill and
pay of the job, the higher the percentage of Third World women employed.
Management justifies this segregation by resorting to "traditional popular
stereotypes about the presumed lack of status and limited abilities of
women, minorities, and immigrants." Women workers, however, use these stereotypes
to their own advantage: playing off male managers' misconceptions about
"female troubles," workers take several "hormone breaks" a day; when members
of the same language group were forbidden to sit together in order to keep
them from talking and presumably to speed up work, Chinese women laborers
told the supervisor that if they were not "chaperoned" by other Chinese
women, their families would not permit them to work; for a short period
of time, one woman was able to avoid working with chemicals that made her
sick by claiming that they would ruin a manicure for her sister's wedding;
many women admit to feigning a language barrier in order to avoid taking
instructions. Hossfeld argues, however, that these tactics are double-edged.
In "using the prejudices of the powerful to the advantage of the weak,"
they "play up feminine frailty [to] achieve short-term individual goals
at the risk of reinforcing damaging stereotypes about women, including
the stereotype that women workers are not as productive as men." Most of
these women are too concerned with their daily struggle to make ends meet
and to care for their families to worry about the long term implications
of their resistance strategy: "For women and minority workers, the need
for short-term gains and benefits and for long-term equal treatment is
a constant contradiction," Hossfeld concludes. Women Workers and Global
Restructuring is both a useful introductory overview of different ways
women are brought into the industrial sector and a substantive addition
to a growing body of research and analysis on the effect of the global
economy on the lives of women laboring to serve multinational corporate
interests.