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Making Cars in the New India

Making Cars in the New India

Making Cars in the New India

Industry, Precarity and Informality
Tom Barnes, Australian Catholic University, Melbourne
May 2018
Available
Paperback
9781108433792

    Auto manufacturing holds the promise of employing many young Indians in relatively well-paid, high-skill employment, but this promise is threatened by the industry's role as a site of immense conflict in recent years. This book asks: how do we explain this conflict? What are the implications of conflict for the ambitious economic development agendas of Indian governments? Based upon extensive field research in India's National Capital Region, this book is the first to focus on labour relations in the Indian auto industry. It proposes the theory that conflict in the auto industry has been driven by twin forces: first, the intersection of global networks of auto manufacturing with regional social structures which have always relied on informal and precariously-employed workers; and, second, the systematic displacement of securely-employed 'regular workers' by waves of precariously-employed 'de facto informal workers'.

    • Presents the first book on labour relations/labour conflict in the Indian auto industry
    • Based upon field research, interviews and analysis of company reports and government documents
    • Includes maps of all key industrial sites in Indian auto manufacturing and lists of all key companies and their characteristics

    Reviews & endorsements

    ‘In this important book, Tom Barnes cautions against any exaggerated hopes about a high-road development path based on automotive industrialisation in India. Characterised by informal labour, he reveals that car manufacturing has not resulted in high levels of labour standards and employment relations for Indian workers. A must-read, questioning development expectations related to the rise of the BRICS.' Andreas Bieler, University of Nottingham

    ‘Tom Barnes masterfully synthesises global production network analysis with uneven and combined development to debunk not only the view that participation in these networks necessarily leads to development but he also vividly captures why and how India's auto workers, especially in the supplier industry, bear the economic and political costs of an expanding industry.' Anthony P. D'Costa, University of Melbourne

    ‘Barnes' book is a very useful addition to the literature on global production networks in India. More importantly, it joins a new, vibrant and timely literature concerned with the ways in which the process of labour informalisation manifests regionally across the subcontinent, systematically expanding workers' precarity and vulnerability across a rising number of industrial sectors.' Alessandra Mezzadri, School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London

    See more reviews

    Product details

    May 2018
    Paperback
    9781108433792
    278 pages
    227 × 153 × 17 mm
    0.36kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Tables, figures and maps
    • Acknowledgments
    • Abbreviations
    • 1. The limits of industrialisation
    • 2. The auto industry in India today
    • 3. Auto manufacturing and the evolution of industrial policy
    • 4. The transformation of labour relations
    • 5. Auto workers in India's national capital region
    • 6. Work and life at the bottom of the auto supply chain
    • 7. Driving down the 'low road'?
    • Appendix
    • Bibliography
    • Index.
      Author
    • Tom Barnes , Australian Catholic University, Melbourne

      Tom Barnes teaches at the Institute for Religion, Politics, and Society at the Australian Catholic University, Melbourne. He is an economic sociologist, with a background in political economy and development studies. He is working in the Institute's Cities and Successful Societies research stream, which looks at the role of civil society, government and business in the rejuvenation of urban regions undergoing industrial decline. He completed his Ph.D. in political economy at the University of Sydney in 2011, where he lectured until joining the Institute in 2014. He is an expert on urban development, industry and labour markets in India, and has a strong interest in the study of Asian labour movements, particularly Indonesia and China. His book, Informal Labour in Urban India: Three Cities, Three Journeys was published in 2014. He has also published in The Journal of Development Studies and Economic and Labour Relations Review. He is co-convenor of the Sociology of Economic Life group for The Australian Sociological Association (TASA) and a fellow with the Victorian Parliamentary Library. He blogs frequently and is currently writing a book on the development of the Indian automotive industry.