Publication | Open Access
Economic and political determinants of the South African labour share, 1971–2019
18
Citations
77
References
2021
Year
South African HistoryDevelopment EconomicsEconomic DevelopmentEconomic HistoryEconomic InstitutionsSocial SciencesLabour StudySouth-south CooperationSouth AfricaPolitical EconomyEconomic InequalitySocio-economic DevelopmentAfrican Social ChangeAfrican DevelopmentEconomicsPublic PolicyEconomic ReformEconomic LiberalizationAfrican PoliticsLabor EconomicsSteady DeclinePolitical DeterminantsSociologyBusinessLow Income Developing CountryEconomic ChangeLabour SharePolitical Science
This study examines the drivers of the steady decline in South Africa’s private sector labour share between 1971 and 2019. The focus on South Africa is instructive as its distributional contestation is bounded in a matrix of racial conflict. Crucial reforms on trade, finance and welfare were undertaken since 1994, but the study finds little evidence that the extension of the franchise promoted egalitarianism, since white economic elites invested in de facto political power. This study employs an Unrestricted Error Correction Model to estimate the drivers of the private sector labour share, and the findings suggest that globalisation, financialisation and public spending have decreased the labour share, while the effects of education have been positive but insufficient to halt the decline.
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