Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of tables
- List of figures
- List of maps
- Preface
- A note on terminology, country names, and currency
- 1 Setting the context: South Africa in international perspective
- 2 Seizing the land: conquest and dispossession
- 3 Making the labour force: coercion and discrimination
- 4 Creating the colour bar: formal barriers, poor whites, and ‘civilized’ labour
- 5 Exporting the gold: the vital role of the mineral revolution
- 6 Transforming the economy: the rise of manufacturing and commercial agriculture
- 7 Separating the races: the imposition of apartheid
- 8 Forcing the pace: rapid progress despite constraints
- 9 Hitting the barriers: from triumph to disaster
- 10 Confronting the contradictions: the final crisis and the retreat from apartheid
- Annexe 1 The people of South Africa
- Annexe 2 The land and the geographical environment
- Annexe 3 The labour force and unemployment
- Guide to further reading
- References
- Index
5 - Exporting the gold: the vital role of the mineral revolution
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of tables
- List of figures
- List of maps
- Preface
- A note on terminology, country names, and currency
- 1 Setting the context: South Africa in international perspective
- 2 Seizing the land: conquest and dispossession
- 3 Making the labour force: coercion and discrimination
- 4 Creating the colour bar: formal barriers, poor whites, and ‘civilized’ labour
- 5 Exporting the gold: the vital role of the mineral revolution
- 6 Transforming the economy: the rise of manufacturing and commercial agriculture
- 7 Separating the races: the imposition of apartheid
- 8 Forcing the pace: rapid progress despite constraints
- 9 Hitting the barriers: from triumph to disaster
- 10 Confronting the contradictions: the final crisis and the retreat from apartheid
- Annexe 1 The people of South Africa
- Annexe 2 The land and the geographical environment
- Annexe 3 The labour force and unemployment
- Guide to further reading
- References
- Index
Summary
This chapter begins with what may seem to be a digression, but is actually central to the explanation of how South Africa – and more especially the northern republics of the Transvaal and Orange Free State – escaped from the parlous situation in which the country languished until the 1860s, and was at last enabled to embark on a transition to a dynamic, modern economy.
Models of export-led growth
The really hard part of economic growth is getting the process started, and this is particularly difficult to achieve on the basis of internal demand alone. Undeveloped economies are usually trapped in vicious circles of poverty. Because income is low there is little demand, and consequently very little output other than subsistence production of food. Low levels of output in turn close the circle by perpetuating low incomes. To make matters worse, low incomes mean that there is little possibility of saving and so of making capital investments, with the result that productivity cannot be improved, and there is thus no escape from the low level of income.
The expansion of exports to overseas markets provides one of the best means for a country to break out of this trap and enjoy export-led growth. It is a commonplace of the historiography that gold was the export staple that played this role for South Africa, and provided the basis for rapid economic development.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- An Economic History of South AfricaConquest, Discrimination, and Development, pp. 90 - 112Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2005