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Preface

In: Debating Economic Policy for South Africa’s Post-apartheid Transition: From Scholarship and Ideology to Policy in Practice
Author:
Ben Fine
Ben Fine
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This is the second of three projected Volumes on the political economy of South Africa. The first was intended to demonstrate the availability of policy alternatives. This Volume focuses upon policy debates. The third is intended to cover the nature and evolving character of the Minerals-Energy Complex (MEC), now willingly terminologically amended to be the Minerals-Energy and Financial Complex (MEFC).

As indicated in the opening Chapter, I have struggled over many years to understand how to conceive policymaking in South Africa, whether economic or otherwise, let alone to explain policies adopted in practice. Preparing this and the previous Volume has allowed and forced me to offer some thoughts. To some degree, however, this represents part and parcel of a bigger question over which I have also been engaged, as have others who have not been in some sort of denial. This is what is the continuing dynamic of the MEFC as South Africa’s system of accumulation (as, in part, a determinant of policy). Some, but probably a decreasing number, have always denied that it has ever had any theoretical or descriptive purchase on the South African economy, so this is not an issue for them. For others, including myself, more favourably inclined to the MEFC conceptualisation, there is no doubt that the MEFC has, at the very least, been profoundly restructured and transformed in the post-apartheid period. But does this mean that it has evolved itself out of existence?

I do not, at time of writing, know what my answer will be to this question. You will have to wait upon the third Volume which is about (debating) the MEFC. I deliberately sequenced these Volumes so that I could deal with availability of alternative policies (not world view challenging), followed by policy debates (needing me to resolve the first question delineated above), with the MEFC issue yet to be resolved. I look forward to reporting on my deliberations.

I have had some wonderful collaborations and relationships whilst working on South Africa. For this Volume, there are a few of my many co-authors involved. So, my thanks, first and foremost, to them, closely followed by all who have contributed to my endeavours.

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Debating Economic Policy for South Africa’s Post-apartheid Transition: From Scholarship and Ideology to Policy in Practice

Critical Reconstructions of Political Economy, Volume 8

Series:  Studies in Critical Social Sciences, Volume: 344
Cover Debating Economic Policy for South Africa’s Post-apartheid Transition: From Scholarship and Ideology to Policy in Practice
E-Book ISBN:
9789004746572
Publisher:
Brill
Print Publication Date:
05 Nov 2025
  • Subjects
    • African Studies
      • Economics & Political Science
    • Social Sciences
      • Critical Social Sciences
      • Sociology & Anthropology
      • African Studies
      • Economics & Political Science
Front Matter
Preliminary Material
Copyright Page
Preface
Figures, Tables and Boxes
Chapter 1 South Africa’s Policy Conundrums
Chapter 2 Post-apartheid Economic Transition as Enigma: The Fate of MERG
Chapter 3 Revisiting Apartheid Political Economy
Chapter 4 The Role and Influence of the IMF on Economic Policy in South Africa’s Transition to Democracy: The 1993 CCFF Revisited
Chapter 5 Context and Contest in South African Education Policy: Comment on Curtin
Chapter 6 “Politics and Economics in ANC Economic Policy”: An Alternative Assessment
Chapter 7 Flexible Production and Flexible Theory: The Case of South Africa
Chapter 8 A Sustainable Macroeconomic Growth Path for South Africa?
Chapter 9 Submission to the COSATU Panel of Economists on “The Final Recommendations of the International Panel on Growth” (the Harvard Panel)
Chapter 10 Rejoinder to “A Response to Fine’s ‘Harvard Group Shores Up Shoddy Governance’”
Chapter 11 Assessing South Africa’s New Growth Path: Framework for Change?
Chapter 12 Chronicle of a Developmental Transformation Foretold: South Africa’s National Development Plan in Hindsight
Chapter 13 The Political Economy of Restructuring South Africa: From MERG to PERSA
Back Matter
References
Index

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