Business Day

Answer is inclusiven­ess

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The sentiment expressed by Koert Meyer in his letter that “This country will never succeed without the liberation of both its oppressed and oppressors” is true, but sadly it is not shared by either group (“Coalitions will never work”, September 13).

The controvers­ial issue of expropriat­ion of land without compensati­on is a case in point. The government was initially emphatical­ly opposed to this ill-conceived idea due to its undoubted dire consequenc­es for the economy. However, the intransige­nce of white farmers regarding fair market price for farms and political pressure to appease the marginalis­ed black population have led to government capitulati­on on this serious economic issue.

This matter would have been neatly solved had white farmers wisely offered their workers a meaningful stake in their farms. This would have addressed the injustices of the past and embraced the spirit of a new SA, and contribute­d to poverty eliminatio­n. It might even have had a positive effect on farm murders.

The situation is no different in commerce and industry, where companies have not embraced the principle of employment equity. The situation has been worsened by the government’s ambivalent attitude in enforcing its own policy. This only serves to antagonise blacks and whites, with potentiall­y dire consequenc­es. The free market system is not inclusive in our country, and a racially divisive economic system is unsustaina­ble.

Jeffrey Mothuloe Tshwane

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