Why do developing countries adopt the Washington consensus?
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Points covered in this lecture: South Africa’s apartheid system The ANC’s Freedom Charter Why did South Africa adopt free market reform (‘Washington Consensus’)?. Why do developing countries adopt the Washington consensus?. ‘Separateness’ along racial lines
Why do developing countries adopt the Washington consensus?
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Presentation Transcript
Points covered in this lecture: • South Africa’s apartheid system • The ANC’s Freedom Charter • Why did South Africa adopt free market reform (‘Washington Consensus’)? Why do developing countries adopt the Washington consensus?
‘Separateness’ along racial lines South Africa’s multiethnic society: - 20% ‘whites’/’Europeans’ (Afrikaners/ British) - 10% ‘coloureds’ - 70% Africans Apartheid
1913: Land Act (‘Homelands’) 1923: Natives Act 1927: Immorality Act 1936: Land Act Examples of discrimination
1910: Union of South Africa 1948: NP election victory 1960: Sharpville massacres 1976: Soweto uprisings (reaction to 1974 Education Act) Some important dates
1960s-80s: increasing isolation of S. Africa from international community (sanctions, boycotts, etc.) 1994: elections with universal suffrage bring Nelson Mandela to presidency More dates
http://www.anc.org.za/ancdocs/history/charter.html “The mineral wealth beneath the soil, the banks and monopoly industry shall be transferred to the ownership of the people as a whole”. “Restrictions of land ownership on a racial basis shall be ended, and all the land re-divided amongst those who work…”. ANC’s freedom charter (1955)
The post-apartheid government embraced a free-market policy. Why? Does this confirm the ‘race to the bottom’ hypothesis? What happened?
Declining value of the Rand • Indebtedness • Capital flight • Increasing health costs (HIV)
1993: S. Africa borrows from IMF Conditions of loan: • financial liberalization • trade liberalization • Privatization/cuts in budget deficit (The ‘Washington Consensus’) IMF loan and conditionalities
1997: Medicines Act (compulsory licensing) US threatens trade sanctions Pharmaceutical companies’ legal action Did S. Africa contravene TRIPS? HIV and intellectual property
Domestic pressure on Clinton/Gore International awareness of ‘profits-before-life’ policy of US. US compulsory licensing (anthrax) Why did us drop its opposition?
2009: S. Africa’s public debt = 29.5% of GDP. The post-apartheid government inherited a national debt of US$ 20.9bn. Paying it off meant channeling money away from other areas (health, education, housing, etc.) The national debt
Why should the post-apartheid government pays the debts bequeathed to it by its predecessor? Post-apartheid government owed money to international banks, other governments, international organizations (e.g. IMF) who had all lent money to the apartheid regime. Introduction to historical injustice