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 National Development Plan will End Poverty in South Africa by 2030 - Really?

Picture: http://www.myspace.com/johanna123 Ebrahim-Khalil Hassen - Mzansi 2030: The clarion call within the ruling party congress is “Masupatsela.” The report from the secretariat is depressing. It tells us that once upon a time, an astute minister with a talented bunch of advisors and bureaucrats dreamed of a South Africa in which unemployment was 6%, no one lived in poverty and the poorest 40% were getting a greater share of total income. Unfortunately, we are not living happily ever after, in terms of its development indicators; South Africa...

The Zombie Zeitgeist

Picture: Sodahead Glenn Ashton - If you have not noticed that zombies are emerging everywhere, perhaps you are one of the undead. Many parts of the world are clearly in the throes of a zombie invasion.  While it may be easy to reject this as not being a hard, serious news story, zombies have been subjects on council meetings and have even been the subject of a warning by the respected US Centre for Disease Control.  Zombies regularly go on walkabouts and even hold conventions. Zombies are everywhere from protests...

Community-Driven Development Makes People More Important than Capital

Picture: Oxfam America Ebrahim-Khalil Hassen - The Reconstruction and Development Programme (RDP) had as one of its core principles the idea of “people-driven development.” This is all about the “social ownership of decision making,” which imagines new ways of development with and for poor communities. People-driven development is, however, contested with a myriad of meanings attached to it. In its most romantic version, people-driven development would see the return of street committees – used so...

Whither Job Creation? Structural Reasons for Unemployment and the Local Solution

Picture: www.marketmixup.com Glenn Ashton - South Africa continues to haemorrhage jobs. This in a country that by the kindest description is already beset by unemployment, with estimates of unemployment varying between an optimistic 23% to a more realistic 35%. What factors underlie our failure to open up employment to more people? Despite improved levels of education and huge resources being poured into job training schemes through the controversial SETA programmes, opportunities for matriculants – and even graduates - to...

The Systematic Erosion of Young People's Dreams Has Fuelled the Emergence of a Global Movement for Economic Justice

Picture: Chris Devers Fazila Farouk - It’s always been understood that the one group with the greatest potential to bring about change is the youth. After all, it’s their future that’s at stake. And this year, young people all over the world have been at the forefront of news making struggles.  The one thing we should not forget about Mohamed Bouazizi, the young Tunisian who set himself alight catalysing the fall of dictatorships throughout North Africa, is that his immediate demand was about direct...

Impact of Global Jobs Crisis on South Africa Further Complicated by Racial Prejudice in Our Job Market

Picture: http://str8talkchronicle.com/ Saliem Fakir - The International Labour Organization (ILO) released a global jobs update at a recent G20 meeting. To date there are 200 million people without work and the problem of long-term unemployment, especially amongst the youth, is disturbingly chronic. Prospects for the next ten years don’t look too good as many developed economies and developing countries are showing double-digit unemployment rates that have been on economic indicator charts for a while. Of late we have gone from one...