美国与中国劳动力市场的结构:社会资本与关系

The Structure of Labor Markets in the US and China: Social Capital andGuanxi

MANAGEMENT AND ORGANIZATION REVIEW · 2018
被引 87 · 同刊同年前 4%
人大 A-ABS 3

中文导读

比较美中两国劳动力市场,发现社会关系在两国求职中均起重要作用,并探讨其机制与理论意义。

Abstract

ABSTRACT Despite the major cultural and political differences between the United States and China, in both countries access to jobs is supposed to be guided by fair and equitable procedures. In the US, there is a presumption of an open labor market in which potential employees compete on the basis of their qualifications, where the fairness of decisions is guided by anti-discrimination laws and normative organizational policies. In China, although there is a history of close relationships that guide the exchange of favors, following the 1949 revolution, Communist Party leaders were given the authority to allocate positions in ways that were supposed to eliminate special privileges of class and background. Yet recent research has suggested that social connections are an important part of getting a job in both the US and China for two-thirds to three-quarters of job seekers. In the US context, such connections are described as social capital. In the Chinese context, connections are defined as guanxi . In this article, we review research on labor market processes in both the US and China to address three important questions: (a) How can we understand the similar functioning of labor markets in such distinct cultural and political systems as the US and China? (b) What are the mechanisms or processes by which people find jobs in the US and China, and how are people able to access these mechanisms or processes in the context of constraining social structures and legal environments? and (c) What are the theoretical implications of the ‘generalized particularism’ that seems to shape labor markets in both the US and China.

劳动力市场社会资本关系比较研究就业机制