Economic Justice

SACSIS promotes the principle of just economies. We are opposed to economic development that violates social and economic rights and increases inequalities in the pursuit of economic growth.

The Farm Workers' Strike: It's Far From Over

Picture: socialsoundsystem.com Anna Majavu - The mines and the farms are two enduring symbols of old white colonial theft, of the minerals and land. Because of the monopoly of the National Union of Mineworkers, whose leaders and officials have long preferred compromise and co-determination over worker control, it has been difficult for mineworkers to strike – until the Marikana massacre. It has possibly been even harder for farm workers to strike. Human Rights Watch estimated recently that less than 3% of South African farm...

The Strike Wave and New Workers' Organisations: Breaking out of Old Compromises

Picture: Banksy artwork courtesy oliverlindberg/Flickr Leonard Gentle - Over the past weekend, the striking mineworkers of Amplats gathered at a mass rally in Rustenburg and howled their defiance of a series of ultimatums issued by the company. At De Doorns, farm workers are on a wildcat strike - the latest of a series that has become a feature of the South African landscape over the last three months, knocking Mangaung off the front pages. Something is stirring from below…and it is time we got beyond the fear and trepidation that have become the stock...

Tweaking the Old or Building Something New? Dealing with the Troubled Political Economy of Mining in SA

Picture: Pouring gold courtesy The Puzzler/Flickr Saliem Fakir - In many respects “Marikana” represents our own ‘Arab Spring’. After the massacre the wave of wildcat strikes in other sectors outside of the platinum industry, had they gotten much wider popular support, could have fundamentally shaken government as well as the complacent and disinterested business community. This is not the first time that miners have turned against an oppressive system of rent. It’s happened many times before in our country -- the most...

Mangaung Versus Marikana: COSATU Chooses Sides

Picture: Adapted by SACSIS from various sources. Leonard Gentle - In the run up to the September COSATU Congress, the media began to float the story that Zwelenzima Vavi’s position as General Secretary was going to be challenged by NUM, NEHAWU and SADTU because of his perceived opposition to Jacob Zuma. A subtext to this was the idea of the congress as some kind of debating forum where workers would reflect seriously on critical issues facing the labour movement and where there would be the rough and tumble of debate and contestation. But two...

The Smashing of a Strike

Picture: Gillian Schutte Gillian Schutte - It was with utter disbelief that we witnessed, on national television, yet another brutal assault from the police force on the Marikana community who were still reeling from the massacre, which took place less than a month earlier when more than 34 miners were mowed down with live ammunition in what can be described as a snuff movie for public consumption. This second major assault happened on Saturday, September 15, on the eve of the Cosatu Congress, when police moved into the community...

The Productivity Debate, Marikana and the Struggle to Create an Inclusive Economy

Picture: United Nations Saliem Fakir - Sometimes economic speak merely arranges the technical as a substitution for the moral. The technical itself becomes slanted by a polemic of legitimation. The debate as to whether South Africa’s economy is productive or not often has a convenient scapegoat - the problem of the unproductive worker.  Workers don’t work hard enough for the wages they earn, so they shouldn’t expect more because there is always somebody else willing to work for a lower salary, is the...