South Africa

Still a Country of Two Nations

Authors

  • Roland Ngam Rosa Luxemburg Stiftung

Abstract

Thirty years into the democratic dispensation, South Africa is still a country of two nations as former President Thabo Mbeki once famously described it. The dream of economic freedom post-Apartheid is deferred indefinitely. The challenge of poverty remains, to borrow the famous words of the eminent African American scholar William Edward Burghardt Du Bois “the problem of the color-line”. The rural countryside also looks and feels cast adrift. It is dominated by pervasive Apartheid geography with a preponderance of informal settlements. Municipalities are struggling under the yoke of corruption and poor service delivery and because municipalities are struggling, hospitals, public transport, schools, and security are struggling. A key priority of the national question, i.e. the long-promised land reform and a demand of the 1955 Congress of the People is yet to be delivered. In the face of this anger, the ANC is confronted with one tough question:  reform or die slowly. This essay delves into the ANC-led attempts at creating a South Africa that works for all. It critically examines why the Freedom Charter’s resolution - “the People Shall Share in the Country's Wealth” - is still an aspiration three decades into Black majority rule. Finally, it posits that that many fundamental aspects of the national question, especially land and the economy, have been postponed for too long and that in order to get the rainbow nation project back on track, these issues must be attacked frontally and with a sense of renewed urgency.

Published

03-08-2024

How to Cite

Ngam, R. (2024). South Africa: Still a Country of Two Nations . New Agenda: South African Journal of Social and Economic Policy, 93(1). Retrieved from https://epubs.ac.za/index.php/newagenda/article/view/2198

Issue

Section

Section 1: Economic development in the Global South