- 【Updated on May 12, 2025】 Integration of CiNii Dissertations and CiNii Books into CiNii Research
- Trial version of CiNii Research Automatic Translation feature is available on CiNii Labs
- Suspension and deletion of data provided by Nikkei BP
- Regarding the recording of “Research Data” and “Evidence Data”
Development of <i>Pribumi</i>-Owned Small-scale Weaving Industry in Rural Indonesia:
-
- Mizuno Kosuke
- Area Studies Department, Institute of Developing Economies
Bibliographic Information
- Other Title
-
- インドネシア農村におけるプリブミ資本織布小工業の展開
- インドネシア農村におけるプリブミ資本織布小工業の展開--西ジャワ・マジャラヤ地方の産地における小営業
- インドネシア ノウソン ニ オケル プリブミ シホン ショクフ ショウ コウギ
- ――西ジャワ・マジャ ラヤ地方の産地における小営業――
- Petty Commodity Production in the Community Based Industry at Majalaya, West Java
Search this article
Description
Indonesia's rural weaving industry, which had developed into a factory production system in the mid-1960s, declined rapidly from the end of the 1960s because foreign companies and Chinese-Indonesian capital invested massively in the textile industry. <br> Faced with crisis, the rural weaving industry in the area surveyed created a new division of labor in the survey village in the mid-1970s. Cheaper products made of lower quality thread were channeled by village traders to low income strata in urban and rural areas across the country. Former factory managers became traders who organized a sub-contracting system with weavers by supplying them with thread, and petty traders now buy weaving products. All weavers in the village are now petty commodity producers. <br> The dominance of petty commodity production in place of the factory production system can be explained firstly by the preference of low strata households who wish to be economically independent and self-employed rather than simple waged laborers. More important, however, is the fact that the factory production system cannot be maintained economically. Faced with the difficulty of securing abundant cheaper thread and enough working capital, the traders can operate more flexibly than the factory managers, whose fixed costs are too high. <br> The division of labor in the village is based upon the economic differentiation of the villagers. Weavers who are landless and near-landless continue to weave with minimal working capital, and have a multiplicity of occupations, consisting of petty commodity production and wage labor, including labor in the urban informal sector.
Journal
-
- Japanese Journal of Southeast Asian Studies
-
Japanese Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 31 (3), 222-254, 1993
Center for Southeast Asian Studies, Kyoto University
- Tweet
Details 詳細情報について
-
- CRID
- 1390001205109110528
-
- NII Article ID
- 110000200626
-
- NII Book ID
- AN00166463
-
- ISSN
- 24241377
- 05638682
-
- HANDLE
- 2433/56499
-
- NDL BIB ID
- 3556148
-
- Text Lang
- ja
-
- Article Type
- departmental bulletin paper
-
- Data Source
-
- JaLC
- IRDB
- NDL Search
- CiNii Articles
-
- Abstract License Flag
- Disallowed