The structure of the South African labor market, 1970–83 |
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Authors: | Rudolph Daniels |
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Abstract: | The structure of the labor market in the Republic of South Africa over 1970–83 is strongly linked to the Natives Land Act
of 1913, No. 27, which dispossessed blacks of their legal right to land ownership. One of the intended results of this act
was to increase the supply of cheap black labor to South Africa’s predominantly white-owned industry. Thus, over the 1970–83
period, as before, blacks occupied the lowest ends of the educational, occupational, employment, and income distributions
among all races in South Africa. On the other hand, the white minority lived at a standard equal to that of Americans and
Scandanavians. However, even within these constraints, the demographics of South Africa are such that over the next decade
or more, and even in the absence of major political upheaval, blacks may comprise an increasing percentage of the workforce
and occupy positions which have been mainly occupied by whites to date. |
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