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Walmart in China. Edited by Anita Chan . Ithaca and London: Cornell University Press, 2011. 304 pp. $24.95. ISBN 978-0-8014-7731-7

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 January 2013

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Abstract

Type
Book Reviews
Copyright
Copyright © The China Quarterly 2012 

Walmart in China is that rare bird: a multi-authored volume that benefits from the breadth of its contributors' approaches while still maintaining a tight focus and producing a coherent analysis. Walmart may be a case unto itself – indeed, the book's title and content implicitly suggest as much. And to their credit, the authors do not try to generalize beyond the case of the gigantic retailer. Yet they also point out, quite rightly, that Walmart is such a big player, especially in global labour practices and supply chains, that what it does in China has profound implications for the wider industrial and commercial economy of the country and, indeed, the world.

Anita Chan begins with a most helpful chapter that introduces “Walmartization” – a useful if less than euphonious concept that underscores the specificity of the case at hand. It has three interrelated meanings: the devastating effects of big box stores on local communities; Walmart's low-wage, anti-union labour policy (what might be called “Always Low Pay”); and its capacity to dominate its suppliers. Walmart in China focuses on the latter two, but also on more than that.

An opening section on Walmart's supply chain begins with a fascinating piece by Nelson Lichtenstein on the company's historical and cultural roots in the American south – especially its popular religiosity and abstemiousness. We learn about the personality cult of Chairman Sam and his early commitment to “buy American,” which he dumped once it became too expensive. Xue Hong analyses Walmart's overweening control of its suppliers, who get profit margins as low as one-fifth of what they can make selling to Japanese companies. Yu Xiaomin and Pun Ngai cover Walmart's “corporate social responsibility,” arguing that monitoring is much more effective in promoting a profitable consultancy industry than stopping sweatshops. Anita Chan and Kaxton Siu make a compelling argument that workers benefit far more from time rates than the piece rates favoured by Walmart suppliers.

A second section on “The Walmart Stores” hones in on the labour process and workers' and managers' experiences thereof, based on interviews, workers' own narratives, and participant observation. David Davies examines Walmart's corporate culture, including the cult of Sam Walton and the strong affinities between the Party's expectations for its cadres and Walmart's for its “corporate cadres” and employees. For instance Walmart wants ideological control, not just labour discipline. The subsequent chapters in this section show how Walmart gets what it wants. Davies and Taylor Seeman weave their interviews with a former store manager into a fascinating first-person account. We learn about his relationships with local officials, who demanded all manner of special treatment that he was unable to provide under Walmart's strict corporate code. He expresses frustration at having been “brainwashed” by Walmart's promises of a corporate ladder he could try to climb, and uses the same term to describe how the company gets a great deal of unpaid labour from its workers. Scott E. Myers and Anita Chan present the diary of a shop-floor supervisor that captures the contradictions of Walmart's hegemony over its employees: “democratic yet authoritarian, egalitarian yet hierarchical, voluntaristic yet coercive, creative yet stifling” (p. 154). His “rebellion” first took the form of minor infractions that were “always oriented toward the fulfilment of corporate objectives” (p. 155). After years of trying, though, he couldn't endure working for Walmart any longer, and left while still retaining significant feelings of loyalty. Finally, Eileen M. Otis presents the story of her research assistant who took a job as a cashier and experienced the full brunt of Walmart's “techno-despotism.”

A third section focuses on the curious unionization of Walmart in China. As Anita Chan documents once again, this “unionization” was a state-dominated affair that ultimately produced a form of organization that Walmart could control and with which it still lives happily ever after. Jonathan Unger, Diana Beaumont and Anita Chan show that “unionization” has improved neither wages nor working conditions. Finally, Katie Quan bemoans the unsurprising lack of popular mobilization against Walmart in China compared with the US.

What emerges from Walmart in China is a dystopian aufhebung of capitalism and state socialism. Like state socialism, Walmart is a monopsonist that produces serious economic distortions. It demands souls, not just obedience, and it deploys armies of cadres to achieve as much. Its core values feature abstinence and clean living. It legitimates itself as operating in the interests of the working class. It represents itself as the revolutionary creation of a venerated supreme leader. Yet like capitalism, it presses up against and, indeed, beyond the limits of its workers' physical endurance. It fills all available space, and ruthlessly attacks its competition in pursuit of total domination. It spans the globe. It cannot be controlled. This may not be the transcendence that Hegel or Marx envisioned. But luckily, history isn't yet done with us, or we with it.