Neoliberalism and Resistance in South Africa: Economic and Political Coalitions
In: Contemporary African Political Economy Ser.
Intro -- Preface -- Contents -- List of Figures -- 1 Financialization as a New Regime of Accumulation: Business, Apartheid, and the Neoliberal Transition -- 1.1 Introduction -- 1.2 The Shifting Political Economy of Segregation, Autarky, and Liberalization -- 1.3 Financialization of the Post-apartheid Economy -- 2 Bureaucratic Fragmentation, Cash-Transfers, and Financial Markets: Policymaking in the Post-apartheid Neoliberal Landscape -- 2.1 The South African Bureaucracy, Economic Development, and Global Financial Markets -- 2.2 The Fiscal Policy and Income Redistribution: Political Consequences of Financial Liberalization -- 2.3 Financialization and Intergovernmental Conflict: Policy Fragmentation and Treasury Dominance -- Appendix: A Primer on Bonds and Yields -- 3 Political Resistance to Neoliberalism: Cracks in the Post-apartheid Corporatist Arrangement -- 3.1 The Tripartite Alliance: Origins, Cracks, and Implications for Policymaking -- 3.2 The Marikana Massacre and Labour Unrest -- 3.3 New Political Resistance to the Neoliberal Growth Model -- 3.4 Zuma's Initial Ascension to Power and the Left-Wing Political Coalition -- 4 Early Forms of State Resistance to Neoliberalism: The International Monetary Fund in South Africa -- 4.1 The Policy of the International Financial Institutions in South Africa During Apartheid -- 4.2 The IMF: Evolution and Involvement in South Africa -- 5 Forging a Developmental State in Post-apartheid South Africa: A Comparative Analysis of the Structural and Political Barriers to Industrialization -- 5.1 State-Led Industrialization in the Global South: Policy Divergence Among the Late-Industrializers -- 5.2 Attempting to Forge a Developmental State in Post-Apartheid South Africa: Minor Successes Amid Institutional Failures.