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1931
In 1931, twenty-one years after the founding, or the coming of age of the Union of South Africa in 1910, things looked rather gloomy.
On the economical front things were not going well:
Jan Smuts wrote:
“The country’s economy had never been put to a test of this nature.”
Three crises in particular were identified:
1. white Afrikaners and the English speaking community were not united; the gold-mines had a limited lifespan the manufacturing sector was struggling.
(Problems on the economical front)
2. Farmers were dealing with serious agricultural challenges. The country was caught in a race against time to produce enough food for a fast-growing population.
(Problems on the agricultural front)
3. The black population was growing rapidly. This gave rise to white fears that numbers would eventually play a decisive role. What if the blacks took revenge? Would the blacks not one day bring harm to the whites who subjected them to their power?
(Problems on the racial front)
2006
1. Today white unity is not the issue any more; it is national unity that counts. A recent opinion poll showed that a rift is developing between black and Indians on the one hand, and white and Coloured people on the other. The first group (60%) believe that relations between the two groups in question are improving, while the second group (40%) are disillusioned, especially as a result of:
2. Over the past seventy years the following happened on the economic front:
3. One fear has become a reality, namely that a fast-growing black population would eventually undermine white authority. This happened in the 1990s.
(This information comes from an article by Hermann Giliomee in Die Burger of 10 August 2006.)
Market-oriented Capitalism
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