Workers and the socialist state: North Vietnam’s stateelabor relations, 1945e1970 Tuong Vu School of International Graduate Studies, Naval Postgraduate School, 1411 Cunningham Road, Monterey, CA 93943, USA Abstract Based on archival sources, this paper examines North Vietnam’s labor regimes during 1945e1970. Soviet and Chinese models are found to be influential there up to the late 1950s. An early emphasis on labor mobilization was gradually replaced by a concern for control to increase economic efficiency and to cope with pressures from workers. As in the Soviet Union and China, a hierarchy based on political criteria was created in the workplace but the state failed to motivate workers to work hard despite intense political campaigns and propaganda. Productivity and labor discipline declined in the 1960s while collusion between state enterprises and the informal sector to steal state resources was widespread. Similar to their counterparts in other socialist states, Vietnamese workers were assertive and able to evade state demands and control. They depended on the state for their food and clothes but the state was not able to count on them for quality labor. The failure of the Vietnamese state seemed to speak not only to workers’ ingenious strategies for survival but also to the inherent limit of Stalinist regimes in creating compliance. Ó 2005 The Regents of the University of California. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. Keywords: Workers; Socialist state; Vietnam; Stateelabor relations; Labor politics E-mail address: thvu@nps.edu ARTICLE IN PRESS DTD 5 Communist and Post-Communist Studies -- (2005) ---e--- www.elsevier.com/locate/postcomstud 0967-067X/$ - see front matter Ó 2005 The Regents of the University of California. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. doi:10.1016/j.postcomstud.2005.06.004