STATE & MARKET IN POST APARTHEID SOUTH AFRICA [electronic resource]

This book argues that South Africa experienced extensive periods of trade liberalisation in the 1970s and 1980s. It discusses the libertarian analysis of state failure, particularly the libertarian argument that market failures are less serious and less extensive than was once thought.

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Bibliographic Details
Online Access: Full Text (via Taylor & Francis)
Other Authors: Lipton, Merle (Editor), Simkins, C. E. W. (Charles Edward Wickens) (Editor)
Other title:State and market in post apartheid south africa
Format: Electronic eBook
Language:English
Published: LONDON : ROUTLEDGE, 2019.
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Table of Contents:
  • False antithesis: the dispute about the market and the state / Kenneth Hughes
  • Should South Africa further liberalise its foreign trade? / Trevor Bell
  • Should South African parastatals be privatised? / W. Duncan Reekie
  • Should the state attempt to reshape South Africa's corporate and financial structures? / Jos Gerson
  • The role of the state in promoting industrialisation: selective intervention, trade orientation and concessionary industrial finance / Anthony Black
  • Macroeconomic policy in turbulent times / Terence Moll
  • Basic needs and social policy: the role of the state in education, health and welfare / Andrew R. Donaldson
  • State, market and urban development in South Africa / Charles Simkins
  • Restructuring South African agriculture / Merle Lipton
  • Black small farmers in the homelands: economic prospects and policies / Norman Bromberger and Francis Antonie.