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Globalization and labor market integration in late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century Asia

Research in Economic History

ISBN: 978-0-7623-1370-9, eISBN: 978-1-84950-459-1

Publication date: 18 December 2007

Abstract

This chapter uses new data sets to analyze labor market integration between 1882 and 1936 in an area of Asia stretching from South India to Southeastern China and encompassing the three Southeast Asian countries of Burma, Malaya, and Thailand. We find that by the late nineteenth century, globalization, of which a principal feature was the mass migration of Indians and Chinese to Southeast Asia, gave rise to both an integrated Asian labor market and a period of real wage convergence. Integration did not, however, extend beyond Asia to include core industrial countries. Asian and core areas, in contrast to globally integrated commodity markets, showed divergent trends in unskilled real wages.

Citation

Huff, G. and Caggiano, G. (2007), "Globalization and labor market integration in late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century Asia", Field, A.J., Clark, G. and Sundstrom, W.A. (Ed.) Research in Economic History (Research in Economic History, Vol. 25), Emerald Group Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 285-347. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0363-3268(07)25006-2

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2007, Emerald Group Publishing Limited