1 results
Masters and chiefs: Enabling globalization, 1975-1995
-
- By Tony Lane
- Edited by Richard Gorski, Hetty Berg, J. de Jong, W. Koetsenruijter
-
- Book:
- Maritime Labour
- Published by:
- Amsterdam University Press
- Published online:
- 26 January 2021
- Print publication:
- 03 October 2008, pp 235-257
-
- Chapter
- Export citation
-
Summary
Introduction
In the mid-1970s the shipping companies of Western Europe and Japan were predominant in international seaborne trade, their ships flying the flags and engaging crews congruent with the companies’ national locations. Twenty years later, Western European and Japanese shipping companies were still predominant but far less frequently flew flags signifying the national location of their operational centres. Even less frequently did they employ full crews of own-nationals. By the mid-1990s, after a decade and a half of depressed international trade, European and Japanese shipowners had adopted, in imitation of their North American counterparts, the recourse of flag of convenience ships crewed by seafarers who were neither of the same nationality as their ships’ owners, nor of the nation represented by their ships’ flags. In this new and much larger wave of flagging out companies’ assets (ships) were attached to such ‘offshore’ states as Panama, Liberia, Bahamas, Malta, Cyprus, and Europe's surrogate offshore states in the form of Norway's International Ship Register, the United Kingdom's Isle of Man and Bermuda, France's Kerguelen Islands, and Portugal's Madeira. Operational headquarters mostly stayed ‘at home’ (in the UK, Greece, Germany, Norway, Japan, etc). For their part, seafarers became itinerant workers.
The shipping industry's resort to a new national dress for its ships and the engagement of itinerant labour crews effectively mimicked the expedient adopted by the textile, clothing and footwear industries’ pursuit of significantly lower production costs through a mass exodus to locations abroad in the 1960s and 1970s. As with more recent industrial migrations – the ‘white goods’ industry is a good example – ownership and/or control has remained significantly with companies in Europe and Japan who operate overseas factories, licence local producers, or are quasi-monopoly buyers of output.
When compared with the migrations of other industries, the overseas shift for shipping was simpler and cheaper. The shipping industry did not need to relocate its ‘production units’. Ships were mobile and could therefore be readily ‘located’ to another national site. The signing of documents and the payment of an accompanying fee was enough to re-assign a ship's national identity.