Stuck in stabilisation? South Africa's post-apartheid macro-economic policy between ideological conversion and technocratic capture
This article explores post-apartheid South Africa's commitment to macro-economic orthodoxy. Its key argument is that South Africa offers an exemplary case of neoliberal deepening which has entailed three interconnected processes: ideological conversion, a stated focus on poverty and development covering a deep commitment to orthodox macro policies, entailing institutions and a set of practices, and a far-reaching state restructuring involving the emergence and consolidation of a hegemonic treasury. Drawing on an analysis of grey literature, policy documents and a series of interviews with policy-makers, the article first discusses neoliberalism in South Africa, focusing on the 'conversion' of key ANC leaders to neoclassical economic orthodoxy. It then turns to the central, yet under-researched, instrument of neoliberal deepening: the emergence and consolidation of a dominant national treasury with the ability to shape policy-making across all areas of state intervention. The article closes on a call to envisage concurrently ideological conversion and state formation to understand the dynamics of neoliberalism, and its paradoxical resilience in the South Africa case.
Year of publication: |
2013
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Authors: | Segatti, Aurelia ; Pons-Vignon, Nicolas |
Published in: |
Review of African Political Economy. - Taylor & Francis Journals, ISSN 0305-6244. - Vol. 40.2013, 138, p. 537-555
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Publisher: |
Taylor & Francis Journals |
Saved in:
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