South Africa is facing growing socio-economic gaps, despite 20 years of democracy.
 The metal workers' union, NUMSA, recently broke ranks with the ANC, writes Hickel [Reuters]
 The metal workers' union, NUMSA, recently broke ranks with the ANC, writes Hickel [Reuters]
April 27 marks the 20th anniversary of  South Africa's first democratic elections. Most of us remember those  iconic images of citizens queuing up in long, snaking lines to vote  Nelson Mandela and the African National Congress (ANC) into power. It  was an extraordinary moment, replete with hope and pregnant with  expectation, enough to supply years' worth of the jubilant narrative  that many have grown accustomed to hearing about South Africa.  
This narrative finds its apogee in celebratory Hollywood films like Invictus, which features more than its fair share of jubilant people dancing in the streets, but it is equally prevalent  at an institutional level. The World Bank and the IMF have long praised  South Africa for its accomplishments since 1994, even if it only comes  down to the country's record on economic growth and friendliness toward  foreign direct investment.
What is most interesting about this triumphalism  is that it is so flagrantly contradicted by reality, to the point where  it begins to appear almost as a form of propaganda. Many things have  improved in South Africa since 1994, to be sure. State racism has ended,  and the country now boasts what some have described as the most progressive constitution in the world. People have rights,  and they know that there are institutions designed to protect and  uphold those rights. Still, everyday life for most South Africans  remains a struggle - a struggle that is infinitely compounded by the  sense of disappointment that accompanies it, given the gap between the  expectations of liberation and the state of abjection that the majority  continues to inhabit.
South Africa's unemployment rate in 1994 was 13 percent - so bad that most were convinced it could only get better. Yet today it is double that, at about 25 percent. And that's according to official statistics; a more reasonable figure, according to most analysts, is probably closer to 37 percent. The situation is particularly bad for young people. The Economist recently reported that "half of South Africans under 24 looking for work have none. Of those who have jobs, a third earn less than $2 a day."
Besides its dismal record on employment, South  Africa also boasts a reputation for being one of the most unequal  countries in the world. Not only has aggregate income inequality  worsened since the end of apartheid, income inequality between racial groups has worsened as well. According to the 2011 census, black households earn only 16 percent of that which white households earn. About 62 percent of all black  people live below the poverty line, while in the rural areas of the  former homelands this figure rises to a shocking 79 percent. 
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In 2006, still 70 percent of South Africa's land was under the control of whites, who constitute a mere 10 percent of  the population. The ANC's Black Economic Empowerment programme has  succeeded in minting new black millionaires (South Africa has 7,800 of them now), but can't seem to manage the much more basic goal of eliminating poverty.
A hijacked revolution
How could things have gone so wrong? Much of it  has to do with what happened during the negotiated transition of the  1980s and early 1990s. The apartheid National Party was determined that  the transition would not undermine key corporate interests in South  Africa, specifically finance and mining. They were willing to bargain  away political power so long as they could retain control over the  economy. And so they did.  
The ANC was forced to retreat from its position on nationalisation and an IMF deal signed just before the transition deregulated the financial sector and  clamped down on wage increases. The central bank, left in the hands of  the old apartheid bosses, was insulated from democratic politics and its  mandate limited to targeting inflation instead of employment or growth.
The National Party only managed to extract these  concessions because they had successfully divided the resistance  movement between moderate elites, such as Thabo Mbeki, who had spent  many years in exile, and the more radical activists who were at the  forefront of the struggle within South Africa itself. The latter were  largely unrepresented in the economic negotiations, while the former  enjoyed a sort of royal treatment, including a now infamous series of  secret meetings in the United Kingdom with major figures in mining and  finance. Mbeki, a self-proclaimed Thatcherite, was easy to convince.  
He already believed in the basic neoliberal  principles that the National Party were hoping to instantiate. For him,  the route to prosperity for the new nation depended not on  nationalisation and redistribution, but on global market integration and  foreign investment, which would supposedly grow the economy and trickle  down to the poor.
Still, when the ANC assumed power in 1994 it  implemented a progressive policy initiative known as the Reconstruction  and Development Programme (RDP). The RDP was designed to promote  equitable development and poverty reduction, mostly through public  investment and the mass rollout of social services to connect millions  of people to housing, electricity, water, and clinics. 
 Despite its successes, this policy framework was  abandoned a mere two years later. Mbeki and then Finance Minister Trevor  Manuel held clandestine discussions with World Bank advisors toward  drafting a new economic policy known as GEAR (Growth,  Employment, and Redistribution, even though it accomplished precious  little of the latter). It was implemented in 1996 despite significant  resistance from within the ranks of the unions that had given such force  to the anti-apartheid struggle. Known by its detractors as the "1996  class project", GEAR amounted to a sort of neoliberal shock therapy:  more privatisation, lower trade barriers, and looser financial  controls. 
When the ANC came to power with a landslide vote  in 1994, they did so on the promises of the Freedom Charter. Penned in  1955, the Freedom Charter expressed  South Africans' demands for the right to work, housing, freedom of  movement, and - most radically - economic justice. "The national wealth  of our country, the heritage of South Africans, shall be restored to the  people," the Charter reads. "The mineral wealth beneath the soil, the  Banks and monopoly industry shall be transferred to the ownership of the  people as a whole, [and] all other industry and trade shall be  controlled to assist the wellbeing of the people." 
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Most South Africans agree that these promises have  been horribly betrayed. South Africa's mineral wealth, including some  of the richest seams of gold, platinum, and coal in the world, remain in  the hands of corporations such as British-owned Anglo American. The  finance sector, which has ballooned to a dangerously large 21 percent of the country’s GDP, remains mostly monopolised by four white-owned conglomerates.
Protest nation
Given these contradictions, it's no wonder that  South Africa is ablaze with discontent, earning it the title of "protest  capital of the world". It seems that every year authorities report that  the number of protests has reached the highest levels since the end of  apartheid. And, indeed, the figures are staggering: Early this year  some 3,000 protests occurred over a 90-day period, involving more than a million people.  South Africans are taking to the streets, as they give up on electoral  politics. This is particularly true for the young: Nearly 75 percent of voters aged 20-29 did not participate in the 2011 local elections. 
The government's response has been a mix of police  repression - including the recent massacre of 44 striking miners at  Marikana - and the continued rollout of welfare grants, which now  provide a vital lifeline to some 15 million people. The grants are a stop-gap solution to the failure of  trickle-down economics, a way of papering over the contradictions of  South African capitalism; everyone is aware that without them poverty  and inequality would be so unbearable that the country's already tenuous  sense of social stability would come crashing to an end.
So far the protests have been focused on issues  like access to housing, water, electricity, and other basic services,  but it won't be long before they coalesce into something much more  powerful, as they did during the last decade of apartheid. There are  already signs that this is beginning to happen. The Economic Freedom  Fighters, recently founded by Julius Malema, the unsavory former leader  of the ANC Youth League, is successfully mobilising discontented youth  and making a strong push to nationalise the mines and the banks. On a more interesting front, NUMSA, the metal workers union, recently broke ranks with  the ANC in a historic turn that could open the way for a labour-based  opposition to the ruling party for the first time since 1994. 
It seems that the ANC's legitimacy is  beginning to unravel and consent among the governed has begun to thin.  It is still too early to tell, but the death of Mandela may further  widen this crack in the edifice of the ruling regime, as the ANC  scrambles to shore up its symbolic connection to the liberation  struggle. 
In short, the situation in South Africa over the  past 20 years opens up interesting questions about the meaning of  democracy. What is democracy if it doesn't allow people to determine  their own economic destiny or benefit from the vast wealth of the  commons? What is freedom if it serves only the capital interests of the  country's elite? The revolution that brought us the end of apartheid has  accomplished a great deal, to be sure, but it has not yet reached its  goal. Liberation is not yet at hand.
Dr Jason Hickel lectures at the London School of Economics and serves as an adviser to /The Rules.
 
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