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Class, Race, and Inequality in South Africa

Online ISBN:
9780300128758
Print ISBN:
9780300108927
Publisher:
Yale University Press
Book

Class, Race, and Inequality in South Africa

Published online:
31 October 2013
Published in print:
14 December 2005
Online ISBN:
9780300128758
Print ISBN:
9780300108927
Publisher:
Yale University Press

Abstract

The distribution of incomes in South Africa in 2004, ten years after the transition to democracy, was probably more unequal than it had been under apartheid. The authors of this book explain why this is so, offering a detailed and comprehensive analysis of inequality in South Africa from the mid-twentieth century to the early twenty-first century. They show that the basis of inequality shifted in the last decades of the twentieth century from race to class. Formal deracialization of public policy did not reduce the actual disadvantages experienced by the poor nor the advantages of the rich. The fundamental continuity in patterns of advantage and disadvantage resulted from underlying continuities in public policy, or what the authors call the “distributional regime.” The post-apartheid distributional regime continues to divide South Africans into insiders and outsiders. The insiders, now increasingly multiracial, enjoy good access to well-paid, skilled jobs; the outsiders lack skills and employment.

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