Varieties of Global Integration: Navigating Institutional Legacies and Global Networks in India's Garment Industry

Author: Tewari, Meenu

Source: Competition & Change, Volume 12, Number 1, March 2008 , pp. 49-67(19)

Publisher: Maney Publishing

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Abstract:

The ongoing restructuring of the global textile and apparel industry brings renewed attention to processes of industrial upgrading as mechanisms of adjustment to volatile market conditions. This literature has however focused largely on external drivers of adjustment: notably, the 'disciplining' pressures of trade liberalization, insertion of firms within global value chains, the role of foreign buyers, global standards and preferential trade agreements in shaping export performance. I use the case of Indian apparel, and the history of its recent export growth, to highlight the domestic dimensions of export competitiveness. I argue that the role of the state, contradictory institutional legacies of India's Import Substitution Industrialization, contested shifts within local regulatory regimes and the changing structure of the domestic market were of central importance to shaping the incorporation of a shielded industry into the global economy and the nature of its export trajectory.

Keywords: STATE POLICY; TEXTILE AND APPAREL; INSTITUTIONAL LEGACIES; EXPORT COMPETITIVENESS; INDIA; POST-MFA

Document Type: Research Article

DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1179/102452907X264520

Publication date: 2008-03-01

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