Fr. 147.00

Cheap Labour Regime in Platform Capitalism - How Flexible Accumulation Fuels the Super-Exploitation of Gig Workers

English · Hardback

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Description

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This book offers a groundbreaking exploration of platform-based labor in the Global South, with Indonesia as its primary case study. Moving beyond familiar accounts of precarious work, this book addresses a central paradox: Why do millions continue to aspire to become platform workers, despite low pay, poor protections, and grueling conditions?
Drawing on Michael Burawoy s labor regime theory, the author examines how labor is governed and exploited under platform capitalism. Through a rigorous mixed-methods research design the book identifies five structural pillars of the "cheap labor regime": the persistent oversupply of labor, hyper-competition between platforms, neoliberal state complicity, labor processes engineered for maximum surplus extraction, and the erosion of workers bargaining power. Indonesia, with an estimated 5 million platform workers, stands as one of the clearest examples of super-exploitation in the digital economy. This book dissects the mechanisms that normalize such conditions, exposing how labor is commodified and discipline enforced not only through economic necessity but also through the architecture of the platforms themselves.
This book is essential reading for scholars, students, policymakers, labor organizers, and readers interested in critical perspectives on the future of work. It delivers fresh insights into how digital capitalism shapes labor relations, particularly in the Global South offering a powerful framework for understanding resistance, inequality, super-exploitation and the enduring allure of platform work.

List of contents

Platformization of Work and Informality in Global South-Global North.- Labour Regime Theory, Super-Exploitation and The Problem of Platform Capitalism.- The Full Commodification of Labour: Competition, Social Reproduction and the Abundance of the Reserve Army of Labour.- State Intervention and Super-Exploitation in Formal-Informal Workers.- Labour Process and Manufacturing Consent in Platform Capitalism.- Platform Driver Resistance & Platform Company Strategies to Reduce Driver Militancy.- Cheap Labour Regime in Platform Capitalism.

About the author

Arif Novianto is a lecturer at the Department of Public Administration, Faculty of Social and Political Sciences, Universitas Tidar, Magelang, Indonesia, and a visiting researcher at the Institute of Governance and Public Affairs, Universitas Gadjah Mada, Indonesia. His research focuses on the gig economy, platform workers, algorithmic management, labor policy, and working-class movements.

Summary

This book offers a groundbreaking exploration of platform-based labor in the Global South, with Indonesia as its primary case study. Moving beyond familiar accounts of precarious work, this book addresses a central paradox: Why do millions continue to aspire to become platform workers, despite low pay, poor protections, and grueling conditions?
Drawing on Michael Burawoy’s labor regime theory, the author examines how labor is governed and exploited under platform capitalism. Through a rigorous mixed-methods research design the book identifies five structural pillars of the "cheap labor regime": the persistent oversupply of labor, hyper-competition between platforms, neoliberal state complicity, labor processes engineered for maximum surplus extraction, and the erosion of workers’ bargaining power. Indonesia, with an estimated 5 million platform workers, stands as one of the clearest examples of super-exploitation in the digital economy. This book dissects the mechanisms that normalize such conditions, exposing how labor is commodified and discipline enforced not only through economic necessity but also through the architecture of the platforms themselves.
This book is essential reading for scholars, students, policymakers, labor organizers, and readers interested in critical perspectives on the future of work. It delivers fresh insights into how digital capitalism shapes labor relations, particularly in the Global South—offering a powerful framework for understanding resistance, inequality, super-exploitation and the enduring allure of platform work.

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