Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-rdxmf Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-26T02:48:37.826Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Negotiations and Social Democracy in South Africa

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 November 2008

Extract

Whilst the so-called ‘new right’ shrilly proclaims victory for capitalism and liberal democracy in the cold war, quieter voices see in the death agonies of European Stalinism the seeds of socialism more as it was meant to be. I refer not any triumphal Trotskyist depiction of the popular overthrow of bureaucratised ruling classes, but rather to wide-spread searchings throughout Eastern Europe for ‘a third – and better – way’. From this perspective, however much the electoral thaw may give rise to stridently anti-communist, anti-central planning, pro free-market parties, the dynamics of the new situation will virtually require pursuit of a mixed economy featuring selective state intervention.

Type
Review Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1990

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 ‘Is There – and Better – Way?’, in The Guardian Weekly (London), 11 03 1990.Google Scholar

3 Stadler, Alf, The Political Economy of Modern South Africa (Cape Town and Johannesburg, David Philip; London and Sydney, Croom Helm; 1987).Google Scholar

4 A.N.C., ‘The Constitutional Guidelines’, in New Era (Cape Town), 06 1989, and Southall, Roger, ‘Towards the Restructuring of Government and Administration in South Africa's African Rural Areas’, Institute for a Democratic Alternative for South Africa, Conference on the Land Question, Cape Town, March 1990.Google Scholar

5 ‘Parliament with Two Houses the Key to FW's Thinking’, in Sunday Tribune (Durban), 22 04 1990.Google Scholar

6 Owen, Ken, in Eastern Province Herald (Port Elizabeth), 23 04 1990.Google Scholar

7 Ken Owen, ‘Freedom Chained to Harsh Reality’, in ibid. 19 February 1990.

8 MacLennan, John, ‘CP Brinkmanship Poses a Real Danger: spectre of a coup’, in Sunday Tribune, 22 April 1990.Google Scholar

9 John MacLennan, ‘Inkatha–Nat Alliance’, in ibid. 22 April 1990.

10 Eastern Province Herald, 26 April 1990.

11 Ibid. 12 March 1990.

12 Mulholland, Stephen, ‘Why SA Must Opt for Free Enterprise’, in Sunday Times (Johannesburg), 4 02 1990.Google Scholar

13 Owen, Ken, ‘Silly Gesture SA's Answer’, in Eastern Province Herald, 26 March 1990.Google Scholar

14 van Zyl, Johan, ‘Justice for ALL is the Key to Our Post-Apartheid Economy’, in Sunday Times, 18 February 1990.Google Scholar

15 Slovo, Joe, ‘Nudging the Balance from “Free” to “Plan”’, in Weekly Mail (Johannesburg), 30 03-14 04 1990.Google Scholar

16 le Roux, Pieter, ‘The South African Economy: the challenge of democracy’, in Institute for a Democratic Alternative for South Africa, Economic Prospects After Apartheid (Cape Town, n.d.), Occasional Paper No. 27.Google Scholar

17 Ronnie Bethlehem, ‘Economics and Non-Racial Democracy’, in ibid.

18 Alec Erwin, ‘The Post-Apartheid Economy: planning for prosperity’, in ibid.

19 See Southall, Roger J., ‘Post-Apartheid South Africa: constraints on socialism’, in The Journal of Modern African Studies (Cambridge), 25, 2, 06 1987, p. 374.Google Scholar