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Bothanomics
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The term Bothanomics refers to the economic reform program announced by then-State President of South Africa P.W. Botha during his opening address on February 5, 1988, to the Parliament of South Africa in Cape Town.
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The solutions proposed to the severe economic crisis that afflicted South Africa in the late 1980s included the following:
- the establishment of value-added tax to replace the general sales tax;
- the centralization of public finance;
- the privatization of state-owned companies such as the Electricity Supply Commission (Eskom), South African Transport Services (SAVD), Pos en Telekommunikasie (P&T), the steel manufacturer Iron and Steel Corporation (Yskor), and several roads;
- more efficient management of government finances, reduction in government spending, and the repayment of government debt (using the income from privatization sales);
- the promotion and development of infrastructure projects and institutions, and small businesses in developing areas;
- deregulation in favor of black businessmen;
- freezing public service wages and salaries to fight inflation; and
- savings in social welfare spending and a reduction in the standard of certain public services.
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Sources
- "Botha Announces Privatisation Programme." SWB/ME/W0013/A2/2-4, 16 February 1988
- "Botha's New Economic Plan." Front File. Southern African Brief, vol. 2/3 (February 1988)
- Monroe, Richard: "Bothanomics: Sign of SA capitalism's bankruptcy." Inqaba ya basebenzi, No. 26. Available online at www.disa.nu.ac.za.
- Weimer, Bernhard: Das Ende der weißen Vorherrschaft im südlichen Afrika. Baden-Baden: Nomos, 1992.
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