Three Shades of Embeddedness, State Capitalism as the Informal Economy, Emic Notions of the Anti-Market, and Counterfeit Garments in the Mauritian Export Processing Zone

Neveling, Patrick (2014). Three Shades of Embeddedness, State Capitalism as the Informal Economy, Emic Notions of the Anti-Market, and Counterfeit Garments in the Mauritian Export Processing Zone. In: Wood, Donald C. (ed.) Production, Consumption, Business and the Economy: Structural Ideals and Moral Realities. Research in Economic Anthropology: Vol. 34 (pp. 65-94). Emerald Group Publishing Limited 10.1108/S0190-1281_2014_0000034002

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Purpose
This paper furthers the analysis of patterns regulating capitalist accumulation based on a historical anthropology of economic activities revolving around and within the Mauritian Export Processing Zone (EPZ).

Design/methodology/approach
This paper uses fieldwork in Mauritius to interrogate and critique two important concepts in contemporary social theory – “embeddedness” and “the informal economy.” These are viewed in the wider frame of social anthropology’s engagement with (neoliberal) capitalism.

Findings
A process-oriented revision of Polanyi’s work on embeddedness and the “double movement” is proposed to help us situate EPZs within ongoing power struggles found throughout the history of capitalism. This helps us to challenge the notion of economic informality as supplied by Hart and others.

Social implications
Scholars and policymakers have tended to see economic informality as a force from below, able to disrupt the legal-rational nature of capitalism as practiced from on high. Similarly, there is a view that a precapitalist embeddedness, a “human economy,” has many good things to offer. However, this paper shows that the practices of the state and multinational capitalism, in EPZs and elsewhere, exactly match the practices that are envisioned as the cure to the pitfalls of capitalism.

Value of the paper
Setting aside the formal-informal distinction in favor of a process-oriented analysis of embeddedness allows us better to understand the shifting struggles among the state, capital, and labor.

Item Type:

Book Section (Book Chapter)

Division/Institute:

06 Faculty of Humanities > Department of History and Archaeology > Institute of History > Modern and Contemporary History

UniBE Contributor:

Neveling, Patrick

Subjects:

900 History
300 Social sciences, sociology & anthropology

ISSN:

0190-1281

ISBN:

978-1784410568

Series:

Research in Economic Anthropology

Publisher:

Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Funders:

[UNSPECIFIED] Swiss National Science Foundation

Projects:

[UNSPECIFIED] A Global History of Export Processing Zones, 1947-2007

Language:

English

Submitter:

Dr John Patrick Walter Neveling

Date Deposited:

29 Sep 2014 13:41

Last Modified:

05 Dec 2022 14:37

Publisher DOI:

10.1108/S0190-1281_2014_0000034002

BORIS DOI:

10.7892/boris.58909

URI:

https://boris.unibe.ch/id/eprint/58909

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