Home

Research Trail

Research Log: South Africa's Post-Apartheid Social and Economic Problems

A public record of the questions, source selection, rejected evidence, decision criteria, and update conditions behind this article.

Research Log: South Africa’s Post-Apartheid Social and Economic Problems

Environment

Research Instruction

  • issue: #32
  • title: 民主化後の南アフリカの社会経済問題を調査する
  • publishable request summary: Investigate South Africa after apartheid with emphasis on inequality, unemployment, land, safety, corruption, the electricity crisis, and the changing ANC order. Separate what democracy improved from what structural inequality remained, organize B-BBEE, land reform, education, and urban space, explain how Eskom’s crisis and political corruption affect daily life, and confirm the latest election result and party balance.
  • scope constraints:
    • Prefer official statistics, international organizations, government and parliamentary bodies, and major wire services.
    • Use numbers only when they clarify the argument, because definitions vary across labor, crime, and land data.
    • Keep publishable investigation notes, source inventory, and uncertainty notes in the same article directory.
    • Synchronize the Japanese article, English article, and MIX alignment at the same time.
  • inferred deliverable: A public report rooted at articles/report/post-apartheid-south-africa-social-economy/ja/index.mdx, plus the English article, source notes, research logs, and mix-alignment.json.

What Was Checked

1. What improved after democratization

I confirmed that the post-1994 state expanded political rights, social protection, and access to public services, but not automatic job or asset redistribution.

2. What structural inequality remained

I used the World Bank South Africa overview and apartheid history material to frame the issue as a two-track economy organized around land, space, education, transport, and labor access rather than a single income metric.

3. B-BBEE, land reform, education, and urban space

I checked the dtic’s official B-BBEE description and treated it as a redress framework for ownership, procurement, skills, and enterprise access. I used AP coverage of the 2025 Expropriation Act to show that land reform remains legally active but politically difficult. For education, I used The Guardian’s reporting to separate enrollment from actual learning outcomes.

4. Power, safety, and corruption

AP reporting on World Bank support helped confirm that blackouts still hit mining, auto manufacturing, jobs, and output. For safety and corruption, I relied on AP coverage of police leadership suspensions, corruption allegations, and the Zondo Commission’s state-capture record to show that the problem is partly about state capacity.

5. The latest election and ANC change

I confirmed that the ANC lost its parliamentary majority in 2024 and that GNU politics now shape implementation through coalition bargaining. The 2025 budget dispute over VAT was used as a concrete example of coalition constraints.

Main Sources

Rejected Material

  • I did not rely on social media or anecdotal crime/outage stories because they are not durable evidence.
  • I avoided collapsing inequality into one statistic, because that would hide spatial and educational differences.
  • I avoided unsupported accusations against specific firms or people.

Limits

  • The latest unemployment and land-ownership numbers can change with the release calendar, so the article favors structure over exact ratios.
  • GNU stability remains contingent on coalition bargains around budgets, VAT, land, and police reform.
  • B-BBEE’s effect on productive capacity still needs sector-by-sector analysis.

Effect on the Article

The final report is organized around the interaction of land, labor, education, power, safety, and coalition politics rather than as a pure history or macroeconomics piece. That lets the article explain why South Africa is politically democratic but still socially and economically split.