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The Post-Apartheid Economy
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 August 2021
Extract
The nature of the post-apartheid society is very much on the agenda. In the multitude of publications, conferences and debates on this agenda, the bulk of the attention is given to the need for—and the possible characteristics of—a non-racial political system. Much less attention is given to the nature of the post-apartheid economic system, and to the structural changes necessary to synchronize it with the new political system and to ensure that it will have the fiscal capacity to sustain a truly democratic parliamentary system.
- Type
- Focus: Changing South Africa; Vectors and Visions
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- Copyright
- Copyright © African Studies Association 1990
References
Notes
1. Blumenfeld, Jesmond, “Investment, Savings and the Capital Market,” in After Apartheid —Renewal of the South African Economy, edited by Suckling, John and White, Landeg, Centre for Southern African Studies, University of York, 1988, pp. 112–118 Google Scholar.
2. Fuad Cassim, “Growth, Crisis and Change in the South African Economy,” Ibid., p. 13.
3. Terence Moll, “The Limits of the Possible: Latin America and South Africa,” Ibid., p. 25.
4. Van der Berg, Servaas, “Meeting the Aspirations of South Africa’s Poor through Market and Fiscal Processes,” Colloquium Paper, July 8-13, 1989, Lausanne, Switzerland, sponsored by the Institut des Hautes Etudes en Administration Publique, p. 19 Google Scholar.
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