Precarious Asia assesses the role of global and domestic factors in
shaping precarious work and its outcomes in Japan, South Korea, and
Indonesia as they represent a range of Asian political democracies and
capitalist economies: Japan and South Korea are now developed and mature
economies, while Indonesia remains a lower-middle income country.
With their established backgrounds in Asian studies, comparative
political economy, social stratification and inequality, and the
sociology of work, the authors yield compelling insights into the extent
and consequences of precarious work, examining the dynamics underlying
its rise. By linking macrostructural policies to both the mesostructure
of labor relations and the microstructure of outcomes experienced by
individual workers, they reveal the interplay of forces that generate
precarious work, and in doing so, synthesize historical and
institutional analyses with the political economy of capitalism and
class relations. This book reveals how precarious work ultimately
contributes to increasingly high levels of inequality and condemns
segments of the population to chronic poverty and many more to
livelihood and income vulnerability.