
Uncover the Invisible: Home-workers in Micro-Small-Medium Industries Based on“Putting-out” System (The Case Study of the Batik and Batik Convection Industry in a Sragen-Surakarta-Sukoharjo Cluster of Indonesia) Arianti Ina Restiani Hunga, Satya Wacana Christian University Salatiga, Central Java, Indonesia Abstrak Micro-small-medium-scale industries (MSMsI) based on the “Putting-out” System (POS) with home- workers (HWs) have long existed in Indonesia, but recently show significant and prominent growth that is complex and different from POS in general. The POS works through decentralisation of production, where the largest part of the production processes are taken out from factory to the HWs and their families. This strategy that MSMsI employ to enhance efficiency and competitiveness, and which –at the same time marginalises the HWs– has not been exposed. This obscured POS phenomenon is the drive of this research. Accordingly, the research includes the following characteristics: the strategies applied include case-studies in gender-perspective; the commodity is batik (not general garment); applying cluster approach; the actors are entrepreneurs and HW; and gender analyses. The analyses focus on the dialectical relationships between capitalism logic and patriarchical values as shown in three-level relational dimensions, which are entrepreneur-HW, among HWs, and HW – family. It covers a literature discourse that describes ‘invisibility’ of POS and HW- based MSMsI and uncovers it. It is argued that the HW integration to the global market has contributed to the fundamental POS transformation processes, which differentiate it from the common POS. The transformation impacts generally push HW to take strategic roles in supporting the existence of the industry, but also push aside and marginalise female HW in particular. The POS transformation happens through deconstruction and reconstruction processes which maintain the exploitative and gender-biased relationships. Keywords: industry, home-workers, “putting-out” system, capitalism, gender. Introduction Since the monetary crises struck Indonesia at the end of 1997, the micro, small, medium-scale industries (MSMsI) have been receiving increased attention and become an interesting topic for research, as they play a role in absorbing work opportunities for the communities. Generally, researches in Indonesia show that they have a tremendous resistance against the impacts of economic crisis, and in particular, some that are export-oriented, immune against those impacts of crisis. The same assertion was made by Cameron, Rustanto, Thamrin, and Sandee (in Sandee, 2000); Sandee (eds., 2001), and Rutten and Sandee (2002). MSMsI are considered a strong economic power in time of crisis, although empirically there is no improvement in their performance and quality of life at a micro level, especially workers in this sector (Manning and Dierman, 2000; Kian Wie, 2004). The endurance of the industry has been well documented, but the actual phenomenon of MSMsI is still systematically difficult to explain. The industries have many variations1; there are MSMsI whose activities are based in the company and others outside the companies or their workers’ houses. The current definition of MSMsI is mostly directed to company-based ones. It means that most of MSMsI whose activities are at their workers’ houses or based on the putting-out 1 There are some terminologies for MSMsI, among others: 1) based on legal formal indicator, consists of formal and informal; 2) based on known characteristic of activities and places; rural and urban industry; 3) based on place of activities – company based industry and home based industry of which the latter frequently wrongly interpretated as home-industry; and 4) based on market orientation – export and import oriented industry. 1 system (POS) and whose workers are known as home-workers (HW2), are not yet recognised or understood in the researches of the field. This paper describes the POS phenomenon in Indonesia context, and explains the transformation in POS and its impact on the changing roles of HW, by discussing: 1) The literature that describes the “invisibility” of POS and HW-based MSMsI; 2) the “uncovering of the invisibility” of POS and HW-based MSMsI in Indonesia which can be distinguished from POS in general. Conclusion The particular POS phenomena may be explained as follows. POS has been experiencing a transformation process that impacts on structural and systemic changing that support all activities in it, from which it is getting more important strategic for economy. POS reorganization that follows production decentralisation impels changes in the system and structure in it. However, they are still flexible and informal in nature. HWs play more strategic role, though informal, and are stratified. The employer can perform work interaction to each of HWs’ strata in different form of interactions. Global capitalism joined with patriarchal values may continually uses this system by making changes on it through deconstruction and reconstruction processes. This can be done by starting from value basis and material basis attaching to commodities, places, actors, and types of work that tend to reflect gender bias and are dominated by men. Besides, the government policy mediates and legitimatises this transformation process. Meanwhile, the existing economic crisis develops as momentum pushing the POS transformation process. The transformation generally impacts on pushing HWs to take strategic roles in supporting the existence and endurance of the industry. On the other hand, it also pushes aside and marginalise in particular female HWs. POS is no longer dominated by women. 2 Home-workers are often mixed up or wrongly percepted as home-based workers. In Bahasa Indonesia, they are translated as pekerja rumahan. The author’s experience in several scientific discussions show that there are discourses that pekerja rumahan connotated as domestic helper. 2 References Asean Development Bank, (2005). JALAN MENUJU PEMULIHAN Memperbaiki iklim investasi di Indonesia. Stok Publikasi No. 020305. Asean Development Bank. Economics and Research Department. Development Indicators and Policy Research Division Beneria, Lourdes and Martha Roldan, (1987). The Crossroads of Class and Gender. Industrial Homework, Sub-Contracting, and Household Dynamics in Mexico City. The University of Chicago Press. Chicago. Boris, Eileen., (1996). Sexual Divisions, Gender Construction. The Historical Meaning of Home- work in Western Europe and The United States in Prugl,E., 1999. The Global Construction of Gender. Home-Based Work in The Political Economy of The 20 th Century. Columbia University Press. New York. Hartmann, Heidi. (1976). Capitalism, Patriarchy, and Job Segregation by Sex. Source: Signs, Vol. 1, No. 3, Women and the Workplace: The Implications of Occupational Segregation (Spring, 1976), pp. 137-169 Published by: The University of Chicago Press Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/3173001 (December 15, 2009) Castells, M. (1996). “The Network Enterprises: The Culture, Institutions, and Organizations of The International Economy” and “The Information Age: Economy, Society, and Culture”, in The Rise of The Network Society. Volume I. Blackwell Publishers. Pp. 151–164 and 190–200. Christensen, Kathleen. E. (1988). The New Era of Home-Based Work. Boulder & London, Westview Press. Dangler, Jamie Faricellia. (1994). Hidden in The Home. The Role of Waged Home-work in The Modern World-Economy. State University of New York Press. Harding, S. and Hintikka,M.(eds.), (1983). Discovering Reality: Feminist Perspectives On Epistemology, Metaphysic, Metodology and Philosophy Of Science. Boston: Reidel Publishing Co. Hsiung, Chun Ping, (1996). Living Room as Factories. Class, Gender, and the Satellite System in Taiwan. Temple University Press Philadelpia. Hunga, A.I.R. (2000). Marginalisasi Tenaga Kerja Rumahan Perempuan dalam Industri Kecil- Menengah dalam Perpsektif Gender di Jawa Tengah. Thesis, Postgraduate Program: Studi Pembangunan Universitas Kristen Satya Wacana Salatiga ----------. (2005). “Transformasi Sistem Putting-Out untuk Meningkatkan Kinerja Industri Kecil- Menengah dan Pekerja Rumahan Industri Batik dan Garmen Batik di Jawa Tengah: Kasus Batik Tulis”. Riset Andalan Perguruan Tinggi dan Industri (RAPID). Dikti-Depdikbud. ---------- (2005). “Transformasi Sistem Putting-Out untuk Meningkatkan Kinerja Industri Kecil- Menengah dan Pekerja Rumahan Industri Batik dan Garmen Batik di Jawa Tengah: Kasus Batik Semokan dan Tolet”. Riset Unggulan Kemitraan (RUK). Kementrian Riset dan Teknologi Indonesia. ----------. (2005). Marginalisasi Tenaga Kerja Rumahan Perempuan dalam Industri Kecil-Mengah Batik: Studi Kasus Kabupaten Sragen, Jurnal Penelitian Sosial Cakrawala. Fakultal Ilmu Sosial Politik UKSW. Volume 2, Nomer1. ISSN 1963 – 6248. -----------. (2005). The Growing Importance of The “Putting-Out” System in The Development of Batik Industries (a Case Study at Sragen Regency- Central Java). Proceeding: The International Conference on Crisis And Social Change in Indonesia: Local Comparative and Historical Dimensions. Institute of Social Studies The Hague, The Nederkand, KNAW – Nederland, and The Center for Population and Policy Studies Gadjah Mada University. ---------- (2009). Transformation POS: Home-workers in Putting-out System-based Micro-Small- Medium Industry (The Case Study of Batik and Batik Convection Industry In Sragen Surakarta-Sukohardjo Cluster). The International Graduate Students
Details
-
File Typepdf
-
Upload Time-
-
Content LanguagesEnglish
-
Upload UserAnonymous/Not logged-in
-
File Pages4 Page
-
File Size-