Polity.org.za offers a unique take on news, with a focus on political, legal, economic and social issues in South Africa and Africa, as well as international affairs. Now you can listen to the top three articles on Polity at the end of each day.
All content for Polity.org.za Audio Articles is the property of Unknown and is served directly from their servers
with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Polity.org.za offers a unique take on news, with a focus on political, legal, economic and social issues in South Africa and Africa, as well as international affairs. Now you can listen to the top three articles on Polity at the end of each day.
Most South Africans want empowerment policy ended, study finds
Polity.org.za Audio Articles
2 minutes 18 seconds
3 weeks ago
Most South Africans want empowerment policy ended, study finds
Most South Africans want empowerment policy ended, study finds
More than half of South Africans want a key policy aimed at addressing racial inequality scrapped and hiring and promotions to be merit-based, according to the Institute for Justice and Reconciliation.
The South African Reconciliation Barometer found that 54% of the country's inhabitants agree that the so-called Broad-Based Black Economic Empowerment rules should be phased out, the Cape Town-based institute said in a report published on its website. Two-thirds of South Africans think that the use of racial categories does more harm than good, the Cape Town-based IJR said.
Mounting scrutiny of the empowerment policy within South Africa is partly due to US President Donald Trump's drive to end affirmative action and government diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives in America, the IJR said. Pretoria-born billionaire Elon Musk, who is seeking to start operating his Starlink internet service in South Africa, has said the laws are racist and unfairly prejudice White citizens.
South Africa introduced empowerment policies after the end of apartheid, compelling companies in industries including banking, mining and telecommunications to sell stakes to Black people who were systematically excluded from the economy during White-minority rule.
Three decades after the end of apartheid, Black South Africans, who account for more than 80% of the country's 63-million people, face a far higher unemployment rate than their White counterparts - 35.8% compared with 8.1%, according to Statistics South Africa. White households on average also earn almost five times more than Black families.
Almost 30-million Black South Africans live in poverty, according to the Democratic Alliance, which opposes the government's empowerment policy, which it says has "entrenched a millionaire class of politically connected insiders." The party found that 1-trillion rand ($59-billion) has been transferred to less than 100 people since apartheid ended in 1994, according to its website.
The IJR study showed that an overwhelming majority of South Africans agree that a racially representative workforce should be a national priority.
"This was relatively consistent among people of different races, although slightly lower among White South Africans," it said. Support among White South Africans for a racially representative workforce was 77%, compared with at least 82% for Black, Indian and mixed-race South Africans, the IJR said.
Sign up here for the twice-weekly Next Africa newsletter, and subscribe to the Next Africa podcast on Apple, Spotify or anywhere you listen.
Polity.org.za Audio Articles
Polity.org.za offers a unique take on news, with a focus on political, legal, economic and social issues in South Africa and Africa, as well as international affairs. Now you can listen to the top three articles on Polity at the end of each day.