https://doi.org/10.1177/0020715220946074
International Journal of
Comparative Sociology
1–17
© The Author(s) 2020
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DOI: 10.1177/0020715220946074
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IJ CS
Spinners or sitters? Regimes
of social reproduction and urban
Chinese workers’ employment
choices
Yige Dong
State University of New York at Buffalo, USA
Abstract
Despite China being the world’s factory, its labor market is now primarily service-based with a high level of
informality. When formal manufacturing and informal service sectors co-exist, how do workers make their
choices? While existing literature focuses on rural migrant workers’ experience in the Chinese labor system,
this study extends the analytical scope to low-skill urban workers. Drawing on archival, interview, and
ethnographic data in a large industrial city in central China, I compare urban women’s different trajectories in
textile manufacturing and informal domestic service. Building on labor regime studies and Social Reproduction
Theory, I develop a framework called “regimes of social reproduction” to explain workers’ job choices. I
argue that China’s post-socialist industrial restructuring has given rise to a public–private hybrid regime of
social reproduction, which keeps workers’ pension and healthcare schemes in the public domain and pushes
childcare, elderly care, and domestic work to the private sphere and then marketizes them. For urban
workers, when choosing between formal manufacturing and informal service, it is their position within the
regime of social reproduction that plays a decisive role. Their position is assessed along the following two
dimensions: (1) the degree of a worker’s dependency on the employment-based welfare provisions and
(2) the degree of demand for reproductive labor in a worker’s family. Challenging the conventional view
that formal manufacturing jobs are more desirable than informal service jobs, I conclude that under the
current regime of social reproduction, the booming informal service market may provide some best earning
opportunities for low-skilled urban workers. However, the same regime has also set significant limits on
such opportunities as these urbanites’ availability to work is highly contingent on (lack of) demand for
reproductive labor from their own family.
Keywords
Care work, China, informal work, manufacturing, social reproduction, social welfare
Introduction
Since the mid-1970s, industrialized countries have witnessed the weakening of the Fordist work
regime and the rise of precarious, informal work. While earlier scholarship focused on the novelty
Corresponding author:
Yige Dong, Department of Sociology, State University of New York at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY 14260, USA.
Email: yigedong@buffalo.edu
946074COS 0 0 10.1177/0020715220946074International Journal of Comparative SociologyDong
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