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Africa: Subsaharan
Is South Africa the Next Zim*BOB* we?
2004-12-26
Severely edited for length
In South Africa, virtually all the poor people are black. It does not follow that all black South Africans are poor, but the South African government has for the past 10 years acted as if the two words were interchangeable. Any program whose stated aim is to uplift those who were crushed by apartheid is assumed, ipso facto, to be a good thing. This has culminated in something called "Black Economic Empowerment," a process whereby white-owned firms are encouraged to surrender large dollops of equity to black businessmen. This is "voluntary," but firms that stay white cannot win government contracts, and many assume that if they do not yield now, they will end up being nationalized, Mugabe-style, in a decade or two.
Well, South Africa may well wind up a sh*thole like Zimbabwe, but at least blacks are given white folks stuff. That's a good thing, right? Read on...
Fretting about the color of one's shareholders is a distraction from the humdrum task of making things that people might want to buy. But at least it's giving a leg-up to poor blacks, right? Wrong. Since the aim, as far as business is concerned, is to placate the government, the blacks who have been "empowered" have largely been senior members of the ruling African National Congress. The bulk of the "empowerment" seems to involve just four very rich men, three of them contenders for the presidency in 2009, when Thabo Mbeki stands down.

"Black empowerment" has become such a naked carve-up that several of the ANC's traditional allies have started to complain. Labor unions are threatening to obstruct the most egregious deals, and Archbishop Desmond Tutu has lamented that black empowerment was benefiting only "a small elite." Mr. Mbeki responded with a furious rebuttal, in which he accused the archbishop of being ignorant and untruthful.

South Africa matters, because if it fails, the rest of Africa hasn't a prayer. Yet if it booms, it could do for the poorest continent what Japan did for East Asia. It has Africa's most sophisticated economy, by far. The roads are smooth, ATMs work and, most importantly, it is the only sizeable country south of the Sahara where the rule of law prevails. Its relatively peaceful transition from apartheid to multiracial democracy was rightly hailed as a miracle. The white minority gave up power without a civil war. The ex-guerrillas who took over in 1994 have governed quite well ever since. Rather than seek revenge for the old regime's atrocities, they have sought to reconcile black and white. Most impressively, the new ruling party has ditched the Marxism it used to espouse and pursued the soundest macroeconomic policies in living memory.
...snip...
Instead, the focus is on redistribution. And not the conventional sort, from rich to poor, but from white to black, which is not the same. South Africa has embarked on probably the most extreme affirmative action program anywhere. Private companies above a certain size are obliged to try to make their workforces "demographically representative" (i.e. 75% black, 50% female, etc.) from factory floor to boardroom. This is not a minor irritant, like affirmative action in the U.S. The group which must be given preference constitutes a large majority. But because, under apartheid, blacks were deliberately deprived of education, there is a gaping shortage of blacks with commercially useful skills. Less than 2% of chartered accountants, for example, are black.
You'd think South Africa would focus on education instead of government-sponsored/enforced race-based theft...
This can only be fixed by improving schools. But the ANC's first impulse, when it came to power, was to try to raise the proportion of teachers who were black, by paying a large number of the most experienced white teachers to retire. Scandalously, black pupils' exam results got worse in the early years after apartheid ended. They have since recovered, but still, barely 1% of black high school students pass higher grade math, and very few opt for tough subjects at university, such as science or engineering.
They got rid of qualified teachers because of their race. What they have now is well deserved.
Unlike private companies, the government finds it easy to hire by race rather than merit, because it has no competitors and cannot go bust. This is nice for the blacks it employs, but less good for the much larger number who depend on the state for health care, water, roads and pensions. The state does not even try to deliver these services cost-effectively. Black-owned contractors can charge more and still win public-works contracts, so poor blacks get fewer clinics than they otherwise would have. Legions of white managers have been pushed out to make way for inexperienced blacks, and then hired back as expensive consultants to tell their replacements how to do their jobs.
The end result will be more dead poor blacks, presumably the obverse result of the policy.
The most insidious effect of the new racial laws has been to provide a cloak for the sort of cronyism that has wrecked the rest of Africa. The black tycoons who made fortunes by parlaying political connections into a share of someone else's business actually believe they are helping to "de-racialize" the economy. They regard themselves as role models for black youth, and magazine covers reinforce this delusion. The idea that wealth needs to be created is little aired.
That is because South Africa's political leadership drink daily from Old Bob brand of Marxism.
The new backlash against "black enrichment" may curb the four biggest black tycoons, but there is no serious talk of a South Africa where all are equal before the law. It is perhaps worth noting a parallel with Malaysia, another place where affirmative action is aimed at a large majority. Malays are now richer in Singapore, where they do not receive preferences, than in Malaysia, where they do.
Posted by:badanov

#3  In Rhodesia, tyranny flourishes because of an almost leftist-liberal willingness to surrender everything, instead of resisting, by those Mugabe wishes to steal from. Resistance can come in many forms, but unless you show some, any, backbone, you Darwinistically determine your fate. But the white (and colored) SAs are not so inbred, squishy and homogeneous. They can, and I suspect, do, resist in many and manifold ways. Be they the British, the Boers, the Jews, the Indians, and the Colored, they all can cooperate, as needs be, and resist in their own fashion, instead of just being raped. Certainly, their little cabal of corrupt leaders steal, but even in the multi-millions it is the petty theft of the small-minded. And by forcing the economy to educate, where the government has failed, it may force private enterprise to take what are essentially iron age peasants and force them to modernize. This will utterly crush their culture of backwardness and poverty, and again Darwin wins.
Posted by: Anonymoose   2004-12-26 9:43:40 AM  

#2  What I fail to comprehend is why whites stay in South Africa when the endgame is so obvious it's right next door.
Posted by: Mrs. Davis   2004-12-26 9:40:17 AM  

#1  IIRC, there was a joke among the white South Africans about Rhodesia Zimbobwe:
Q. What is Zimbobwe?
A. South Africa in about 10 to 15 years.

Like a lot of jokes about the world lately, it seems more like prophecy than humor.


Posted by: N Guard   2004-12-26 9:34:52 AM  

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