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by mschuster91
1249 days ago
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> South Africans would be overjoyed to have stable electricity and clean water to the extent that Germans have. Not disputing that - but I fear that allowing private/venture capital to intervene will further solidify existing discrimination issues in the long term, even if it may show quick improvements short term. |
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South Africa's discrimination issues are largely due to the state and not private capital or the private sector.
The private sector on the whole would be happy to hire and provide services to any race or ethnicity, but the state has always aggressively intervened in favor of certain ethnic groups. During Apartheid it was intervening in favor of white people, today it's in favor of black Africans.
Many of the current discrimination issues are a result of the (Apartheid) state actively impeding the economic development of black people.
The current electricity crisis is in no small part due to the current state actively discriminating against skilled white employees (forcing them into early retirement, hiring based on race and not skills, forcing Eskom to procure from black-owned companies who are often just middle-men adding huge markups due to their regulatory capture).