Global Commodity Chains & World Income Inequalities: The Missing Link of Inequality and the “Upgrading” Paradox

  • Brewer B
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Abstract

This article links key findings from two major research literatures within contemporary development and globalization studies: global commodity/value chains, and world income inequalities. Forging this missing link exposes what I call the “upgrading paradox” within commodity and value chain analysis. The paradox hinges on the disconnect between the global commodity/value chain literature’s focus on the potential for firms and nations to “upgrade” their position within chains and the roots of the global commodity chain construct in world-systems analysis, a theoretical framework that rejects the potential for widespread and generalizable developmental progress. Findings from the world income inequalities literature do indeed confirm the paradoxical nature of the upgrading discourse, so I conclude by discussing two potential paths for a “post-paradox” commodity chain analysis.

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Brewer, B. D. (2011). Global Commodity Chains & World Income Inequalities: The Missing Link of Inequality and the “Upgrading” Paradox. Journal of World-Systems Research, 308–327. https://doi.org/10.5195/jwsr.2011.423

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