Regulating Death in China´s Free Market: The Case of Mining Fatalities

  • Qi Li (Author)
  • Bill Taylor (Author)

Identifiers (Article)

Abstract

Although China has emerged as a major capitalist (or mixed) economy, there is much debate over the ability of the central government to institute a regulatory framework to both promote capitalist expansion and ensure some notion of social justice. This paper uses the case of coal mining accidents to illustrate an incentive structure which neglects workers’ safety. Following a major increase in the number of coal mining accidents, the central government has developed many policies and directives to improve the mine safety record. These initiatives have been both comprehensive and diverse, and the figures are improving. The paper will show, however, a more complex picture, in which incentives create new problems, encourage under-reporting, and are not implemented because they conflate with higher economic priorities. Despite the drive to reduce accidents, the government institutionalises the priority of economic growth over miners’ safety.1 (Manuscript received January 13, 2008; accepted for publication January 28, 2008)

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Published
2020-09-28
Language
English
Contributor or sponsoring agency
GIGA
Keywords
People's Republic of China, Coal mining, Mining, Occupational safety, Workers, Accidents, Accident prevention, Guidelines/regulations, Economic factors, Economic growth, Social justice, Systems transformation