FORDISM

POSTFORDISM

THE PRODUCTION PROCESS

Mass production of homogeneous goods

Small batch production

Uniformity and standardization

Flexible and small batch production of a variety of product types

Large buffer stocks and inventory

No stocks

Resource driven

Demand driven

Vertical and (in some cases) horizontal integration

(Quasi-) vertical integration subcontracting

Functional spatial specialization (centralization/decentralization)

Spatial clustering and agglomeration

LABOR

Single task performance by worker

Multiple tasks

High degree of job specialization

Elimination of job demarcation

Emphasis on diminishing worker's responsibility

Emphasis on worker's co-responsibility

Primary and secondary labor markets: white-collar and unionized labor vs. everyone else

Flexible labor markets: self-programmable vs. generic labor

THE STATE

Regulation

Deregulation/re-regulation

Rigidity

Flexibility

Collective bargaining

Division/individualization, local or firm-based negotiations

Socialization of welfare (the welfare state)

Privatization of collective needs and social security

Centralization

Decentralization and sharpened interregional/intercity competition

IDEOLOGY

Mass consumption of consumer durables: the consumption society

Individualized consumption: "yuppie" culture

Modernism

Postmodernism

Source: Adapted from David Harvey, The Condition of Postmodernity (1989), and Richard Sennett, The Corrosion of Character (2000).