Monday, August 17, 2015

South African History and Economics

This will be my final blog entry from South Africa, I am actually already in Peru by the time I send this and my focus will be there moving forward.

After a little more than three weeks I would hardly qualify myself as an expert on South Africa but I have learned some things and formed some opinions on how the country works. One of the things really highlighted for me was the economic differences in South Africa, not just with the United States and Europe but within the country as well.

In some ways I feel a bit guilty as the U.S. dollar buys a lot here and things that are considered expensive to the average South African are very cheap to me. Foreigners are seen as rich here and I can see why. 100 Rand is considered a lot to most here but to me that amounts to about $8.50. A used surf board can easily be purchased here for 1200 to 1500 Rand. I am not sure what boards cost in the United States but I am sure a good used board is a whole lot more than $100 to $125 dollars. I paid almost that much for the wet/dry bag to keep my clothes.
Me with the board donated to the surfing project

In the more rural area of Limpopo Provence to the far north (where the Madi a Thava lodge is located and I visited while in Botswana) you still see donkey carts, which I did not really expect. They tend to be home made things, cobbled together from wood and spare car parts and pulled by very sad and ratty looking donkeys. Additionally at every little town there seems to be street vendors in ramshackle buildings along the side of the road where everything is hawked. You could get all sorts of stuff, fruit and vegetables, live chickens, car parts and repairs, haircuts, clothing, and so on.

Cape Town in the Western Cape Provence by comparison does not have the road side markets, at least not the areas I have been to. But there are a lot of bazar type shops that appear in the city like the Parade Grounds and Green Market Square. These differ however, as the Cape Town markets are more organized and they tend to sell more goods to tourists than the random stuff I saw in Limpopo.

 
In the rural area of Limpopo they have poor areas where there are a lot of little government houses called IDC houses. They are essentially two room houses the size of a small apartment in Chicago that the government puts up and sells for about 15,000-18,000 Rand, or $1,250-$1,500 U.S. dollars. I am guessing the cost of a surf board in the U.S. It is essentially a form of subsidized housing and they are modest but well-built with a plot of land for a garden. Many of the residents put up and rent out tin sheds to refugees from Zaire for about 200 Rand a month. The sheds are very sketchy but after having seen the townships in and around Cape Town I have to agree that they are a far cry better.

Cape Town has many of the same problems you see in most every major city. Homeless people live under the bridges and along the train tracks. Then there are the townships, which are worse than anything I saw in Limpopo. Some of them are huge with a very dense population and I was told the one by the airport has a million people or more living in it, but nobody knows for sure. While the rural areas can be fairly bad, the townships around the major cities are worse and built from whatever is handy. Corrugated tin roofing, shipping pallets, shipping containers, whatever people can get their hands on. The homes are right on top of one another with very little space in between for anything like a garden.

In both the rural areas and townships the trash is everywhere. There is no or not a lot of regular trash pick-up so the residents just dump it into empty lots or drive it to the edge of town and toss it on the side of the road. Plastic bottles and bags, food waste, old tires, clothing, construction material, and so on.

Video of the township at Mzoli's Braai space. Don't know if it will actually work.

There is a lot of corruption in South Africa and, like Illinois, it seems to be more or less expected. However the people of South Africa seem to take a greater offense to it than they do in Illinois. At least in the Chicago area where it seems to be ignored to a large extent. While I have been here there have been any number of stories about politicians taking money from this or that project and either giving it to their friends or nobody really knows where it has gone. The president of the country apparently even openly admits that he has taken money and rather dares anybody to do anything about it. All the judges and prosecutors who might go after him are already in his pocket and they don’t want to step off the money train by filing charges against the president.

The infrastructure here also suffers, quite possibly due to the corruption. Things don’t get fixed in a timely manner. For example a stop light in Muisenberg has been totally out the entire time I have been here and I was told it has been for months now. Roads don’t get timely repairs and things have a tendency to break. There are also high parking fees, speed cameras all over the country, and what sounds like ever climbing electronic tolls. Sounds just like Chicago and Illinois because it is. The extent seems to vary by Provence but one thing that all South African’s have in common is “Load Shedding”. Load Shedding occurs over the entire country and is where the power is turned off to large areas for two hours at a time in order to save electricity and protect the system from overload. It starts at 10:00 am and rolls to a new neighborhood every two hours right through 10:00 pm. Think of it like planned rolling blackouts but nobody knows in advance when their area will go black or not. It is not just residential areas but business areas that get hit by Load Shedding too and if you have a restaurant or other business, you are just out of luck for the two hours if your power goes out and you have to close. The hours the power is off and the days constantly change too so it is really like playing the lottery as to who is going to be in the dark and when.

Apartheid ended a little over 20 years ago and before that the black and colored populations were not allowed to own business or property. And for the black population, movement around the country was restricted. It is hard to believe that in this day and age things like this went on as recently as 1990 but it was only until heavy international pressure was brought that South Africa reversed course in 1993 or 1994.

South Africa has a long history of racial segregation going back to the colonial days, but things like the passbook law came about largely after the 2nd World War. The passbook law said that if you were black or colored you had to carry this book on you at all times as a form of identification. It would say where you were allowed to go, when you could be there, where you had been assigned to live, and so on, and if you did not have it on your person, it would result in immediate jail time. It is rather ironic that soon after defeating the Nazis in WWII, an allied country would start to implement similar laws as were made for Jews. Real protests against the law began in the 1950’s.

Areas could also be declared for whites only and there has been a history of both black and colored South Africans losing their place to live overnight when it was declared white land only. One infamous example was District Six in Cape Town. This area was the predominate area where black or colored people lived in Cape Town. There was an entire community built up in the area which is just off where the Cape Town Train Station is today and ran south. In the late 1960’s the area, which has become the center of life for black and colored populations going back to the turn of the century, was declared white only and everybody was forced to move out in a form of racial cleansing. People lost homes and businesses and much of the area was bulldozed to make way for big homes and shopping centers.


District Six museum
Derek did not seem to want to talk about it but this includes my host’s family who were displaced. Today reparations are starting to be paid out for this but it is a very long and difficult process to prove you owned a home or business in this area as records were often not kept afterwards and it may come down to old family photos to prove you once live in one place or another.

Re-appropriation of farm land and business is occurring elsewhere as well and at at Madi a Thavha lodge in Limpopo, we were told as much as 99% of the businesses in that area have been ruined by this because the people who got them had no idea what to do with them. Or the simply stripped it for what they could and leave what is left to rot. One example was a private wildlife preserve near the lodge that used to be one of the nicest in South Africa. Six months to a year after it was turned over the locals had stripped anything of value and shot and killed all the animals. Things were just turned over without any kind of training or help to run it essentially it often became a hand out from the government that was simply used to immediately strip whatever value was in it. In that region things have started to change some but it had taken a younger generation to break habits and get educated on how to run things before the area has started improving.

I am not sure what much of the younger generation thinks but I did have several older people tell me that things ran much better and less corruptly during the Apartheid days and that they miss this. The police were a lot less corrupt than today, there was less violence and crime, and the infrastructure was in much better shape. The people who have told me this may not be whom you expect either, as it was always black or colored people who told me this. I think it is safe to say, however, that they don’t miss or wish a return to the injustices of the Apartheid days but miss a time when the government was much more efficient and less corrupt than what South Africa has today. The younger generations seem to equally dislike the corruption issues but seem to have a better overall outlook for the country in the long term. So perhaps it takes a generation or two before people’s attitudes and outlooks really begin to change. If that is the case than South Africa should start to emerge into more of an economic powerhouse in the next decade or two.

No comments:

Post a Comment