Business Weekly (Zimbabwe)

Race is top factor in world’s most unequal nation, report shows

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RACE plays the biggest role in driving inequality in South Africa, the world’s most unequal country where the richest 10 percent of the population own more than four-fifths of financial assets, according to the World Bank.

More than two decades after the end of apartheid, race’s contributi­on to income inequality amounted to 41 percent, with education at 30 percent, the bank said in a report released Wednesday titled Inequality in Southern Africa. The neighbours of Africa’s most-industrial­ised economy, which comprise the Southern African Customs Union — Botswana, Eswatini, Lesotho, Namibia — are all among the world’s most unequal, making the region the worst globally, it said.

Race “remains a key driver of South Africa’s high inequality through its impact on both education and labour-market outcomes,” the Washington-based lender said. Skilled labour is in short supply in the region, and education levels make the biggest difference in employment outcomes, it said.

The report’s authors used the so-called Gini coefficien­t — a measure of income inequality — to rank the countries. While the report showed the Gini coefficien­t for consumptio­n per capita in the region improved slightly from the 2000s up to 2016, most of the informatio­n in the report pre-dates the Covid-19 pandemic that forced an estimated 3.2 million people in the region into poverty and probably worsened inequality.

At least one-fifth of overall inequality in the SACU is explained by inequality of opportunit­y, according to the 144-page report. In all countries except Namibia, this has increased over the past two decades.

The report only took into account race data from South Africa, as it wasn’t available for the other countries.

Still, race plays a major role in inequality in Namibia at least: 70 percent of Namibia’s commercial farmland is still owned by citizens of European descent in the former German colony.

“In Namibia and South Africa, the story is one of incomplete transition after apartheid,” the authors said. “Political progress in these countries has not been matched by progress in equity and economic fairness.”

Proposed solutions

To help reduce inequality, the World Bank recommende­d four pillars:

◆ The promotion of equality of opportunit­y through strengthen­ing equal access to public services, and improving access to and the quality of early childhood care and developmen­t.

◆ Addressing the highly skewed distributi­on of productive assets through generating jobs by cutting business regulation­s and boosting entreprene­urship. It also recommende­d resolving land inequality and strengthen­ing land rights, while also increasing commercial agricultur­e.

◆ Enhancing the impact of fiscal policy on inequality by improving the targeting and efficiency of public spending on education and health. ◆ Strengthen­ing climate change resilience, especially in mitigating water scarcity. — Bloomberg

 ?? ?? Race remains a key driver of South Africa’s high inequality
Race remains a key driver of South Africa’s high inequality

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