Monday, December 16, 2013

Comments on "The longer walk to equality" from Economists

Comments:
1, In contrast to many people's imagination, the racial gap in the post-Mandela era is larger than the time when Mandela was jailed.
2, Actually this situation is expected, as you can not turn around until you slow down at first while driving.
3, As discussed in the article, the slower growth of nonwhite's income is because of misguided governance, low-quality education and skills shortages. Massive unemployment is one result of these reasons.
4, To decrease the real income gap is really a long walk to go. South Africa needs patience. It would be useless to subsidize nonwhite directly. They need really to improve nonwhite's practical education and labor skills.
5, I wonder whether South Africa is on the right way, but it should realize they need to endure the extending gap before they can shrink it.

South African inequality over the lifetime of Nelson Mandela

ROLIHLAHLA MANDELA (later Madiba to his countrymen, Nelson to the wider world) was born into a British-ruled South Africa in 1918. The Natives Land Act—passed just five years previously—was already enforcing mass segregation. By the time Mandela reached the age of 30, government laws were becoming even more oppressive and the Apartheid system was introduced. Prospects for black citizens were deteriorating, with average income increasingly dwarfed by the wages of ethnic whites.

At the point of Mr Mandela's arrest in 1962, the wage gap had yawned wider still, continuing along the same trend throughout the majority of his years behind bars. Against immense international opposition and the pressures of sanctions, black nationals remained suppressed beneath Apartheid rule, despite constituting an increasingly larger proportion of the populous. Towards the end of Mandela's incarceration—through to the abolition of Apartheid—fortunes did reverse slightly, but by now the disparity had grown so large that it barely made a dent. Income growth improved substantially for all South Africans after his 1994 election victory, but sufficiently more so for whites, and the balance has been disproportionately weighted in their favour—and increasingly that of Asian South Africans—since he stepped down in 1999.

Under its own majority rule, the lot of the ever-growing black population—today forming over three-quarters of the national total—has been notably poor. Misguided governance, low-quality education, skills shortages and massive unemployment levels of around 40% have left it more disadvantaged today than when Nelson Mandela was still behind bars. Black income has virtually flat-lined, betraying tremendous gulfs between the wealth of the different racial groups. Sadly, the nation Mandela leaves behind today remains one of the least equal in the world.

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