Neue VeranstaltungshinweiseEs wurden keine neuen Veranstaltungshinweise in der letzten Woche veröffentlicht Here Comes Bourgeois Socialism – Again 03:18 Apr 28 3 comments The US-Turkey stand-off in context: the US and the weaponisation of global finance 19:04 Sep 13 0 comments Fuel Price Hikes Hammer South Africa’s Working Class 17:53 Sep 20 1 comments The Davos Blind Eye: How the Rich Eat the Poor and the World 18:07 Jan 26 0 comments Riflessioni sullo stato di crisi del capitalismo 06:41 Dec 24 0 comments mehr >> |
Recent articles by Lucien Van Der Walt
Modes of politics at a distance from the state 1 comments Should the Anti-Capitalists Contest Elections? 4 comments Anarchism's Relevance to Black and Working Class Strategy 1 comments Recent Articles about Southern Africa EconomyFuel Price Hikes Hammer South Africa’s Working Class Sep 20 17 2017 South African Budget Speech: No Pravin, it was not progressive no... Feb 26 17 Sud Africa - Finanziaria 2012: una manovra fatta dalla classe al poter... Mar 06 12 Saving jobs in South Africa in the crunch: 'engage' or revolt?
southern africa |
economy |
opinion / analysis
Monday April 20, 2009 20:48 by Lucien Van Der Walt
Learning from workers in Korea and France One of the great weaknesses of SA unions - or at least their leaders - is the notion that unions should actively aim at restructuring the economy through policy engagement. This idea is often labelled 'strategic unionism' or 'radical reform', and centres on a politics of cooperating with capital and the state to effectively restructure "South African" industry for global competition. This is summed up in the phrase that "business is too important to leave to management". The same idea - the so-called "progressive competitive alternative" - rests on the belief that there is a working-class-friendly "high road" to the global economy (in contrast with the low-wage-high repression "low road" of China et al, the idea here is workers via unions can suggest ways to restructure that will lead to high wages, job security and co-determination). It can be seen in the abortive (union-initiated) Reconstruction and Development Programme of the early 1990s, the unions' follow-up, "Social Equity and Job Creation", in the more recent "Sector Job Summits" process, and the recent presidential meetings on the global crisis. It is at the heart of COSATU's deep commitment to - indeed, entanglement in - NEDLAC and other corporatist structures. The disgraceful record of the economy over the last four decades no doubt fosters the notion that "business is too important to leave to management", but (in claiming the problem is "management" rather than the system and its ruling class, or is "bad" capitalism rather than "good" efficient capitalism) it draws exactly the wrong conclusions (unions effectively seeking to manage exploitation, rather than abolish it). If the economy is "too important to leave to management", why collaborate with that management? Why try and fix its problems? Why not, in short, fight to dethrone it permanently through working class counter-power? The problems with the unions' approach are obvious:
- centralisation and bureaucratisation: policy engagement of this sort generates within the unions a need for a layer of highly trained technocrats, and shifts focus from militant struggle (by the grassroots) to technical talks about "policy" (by the technocrats and their state and capital equivalents). It pushes union leaders and advisors into what the syndicalist De Leon called the role of "labour lieutenants of the capitalist class" Current struggles demonstrate there is a serious alternative means to save jobs as the crisis bites: occupation and the refusal to be retrenched. This model, seen spectacularly in action in the heroic and for the time successful occupations struggles at the Daewoo plants - and general strikes - in South Korea in 2001, is again on the agenda, as the following report from France shows: such measures are not a complete solution - more a holding action and a training ground for the key task of taking and holding the factories - but absolutely vital. |
HauptseiteSupport Sudanese anarchists in exile Joint Statement of European Anarchist Organizations International anarchist call for solidarity: Earthquake in Turkey, Syria and Kurdistan Elements of Anarchist Theory and Strategy 19 de Julio: Cuando el pueblo se levanta, escribe la historia International anarchist solidarity against Turkish state repression Declaración Anarquista Internacional por el Primero de Mayo, 2022 Le vieux monde opprime les femmes et les minorités de genre. Leur force le détruira ! Against Militarism and War: For self-organised struggle and social revolution Declaração anarquista internacional sobre a pandemia da Covid-19 Anarchist Theory and History in Global Perspective Capitalism, Anti-Capitalism and Popular Organisation [Booklet] Reflexiones sobre la situación de Afganistán South Africa: Historic rupture or warring brothers again? Death or Renewal: Is the Climate Crisis the Final Crisis? Gleichheit und Freiheit stehen nicht zur Debatte! Contre la guerre au Kurdistan irakien, contre la traîtrise du PDK Meurtre de Clément Méric : l’enjeu politique du procès en appel Southern Africa | Economy | en Fri 06 Dec, 19:33 Sorry, no stories matched your search, maybe try again with different settings. 2017 South African Budget Speech: No Pravin, it was not progressive nor redistributive Feb 26 0 comments On Wednesday, the Minister of Finance of South Africa stood up in the circus that passes itself off as a National Parliament and without any sense of irony what-so- ever declared that the South African state’s budget for 2017 was redistributive and progressive. If the Minister was to be believed, therefore, the budget was aimed at making a dent in the substantial class and racial inequalities that exist in the country. To back this up, supporters pointed out that the tax rate on top earners was raised marginally in the budget and people receiving dividends from shares would have to pay 5% more on these in tax. Despite this, one word could sum up the idea that the budget presented was redistributive and progressive: bullshit. Rather the budget presented by Minister Pravin Gordhan was yet again another attack on the working class. What the budget did was to favour corporations at the expense of the poor. In doing so, it remained based on the neoliberal dogma that has defined South Africa’s post-apartheid politics. In other words, the budget was a vivid demonstration of how the state is an instrument and weapon of the ruling class that functions to benefit that class. This can be seen throughout the budget, including how the state plans to raise money and how it plans to spend it. The 2012 budget: by the ruling class for the ruling class Mar 02 0 comments Once again much media fanfare has broken out in aftermath of the South African state’s budget speech. The budget, however, is yet more proof of the ANC’s ruling class agenda: free markets, budget cuts for the poor and subsidies for the rich. From the budget and other utterances it is clear the ANC has, despite media hysteria, no interest in nationalisation. The state will, therefore, try and deal with the global economic crisis largely through business-as-usual. ZACF Statement on Cosatu Strike, Electricity Crisis and Food and Fuel Prices Aug 06 0 comments The Zabalaza Anarchist Communist Front (ZACF) expresses its solidarity with the rank and file workers of the Congress of South African Trade Unions (Cosatu), as their national campaign of rolling mass action against the electricity crisis culminates in a national strike and stayaway throughout the country on Wednesday, 6th August. BEE Debate Shows Nature of Post-Apartheid SA, and Limits Of "Left" Critique May 11 0 comments Recent debates in the press around the issue of "Black Economic Empowerment," or BEE, bring key features of the post-apartheid dispensation into stark relief. They also show the limits of much of what is considered to be "progressive" or left-wing politics in South Africa. BEE is about creating an elite of Black capitalists, something that underlines the class agenda of the ANC. Sorry, no press releases matched your search, maybe try again with different settings. |