Motsepe’s Gift: Or How Philanthropy Serves Capitalism in South Africa
Elizabeth Cobbett () and
Elizabeth Friesen ()
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Elizabeth Cobbett: University of East Anglia
Elizabeth Friesen: Carleton University
Chapter Chapter 9 in Selected Themes in African Political Studies, 2014, pp 113-124 from Springer
Abstract:
Abstract The recent decision by South Africa’s mining magnate Patrice Motsepe to donate half of his wealth to charity is an opportune moment to examine the relationship between capitalism and philanthropy. It is capitalists who are philanthropic. Philanthropy presents the more humane face of capitalism and conceals its penchant for avaricious accumulation. It is particularly germane to ask questions about this relationship within the context of South Africa where the gap between wealth and poverty is constantly widening. Power, for Fernand Braudel, is the product of bringing together the state and capitalism into a common project of development. It is here, at this point of common interest between capitalists and the state, where the unmistakable characteristic of ‘real’ capitalism exists, to gain monopolistic control of the most profitable sectors of the economy. In the case of South Africa, this is the minerals–energy complex. Firstly, we argue that social order in South Africa has kept a small powerful capital class in place while allowing the new black elite to increase its ranks. This integration of blacks has not changed the distribution of wealth in the country; rather it reflects broader patterns of capital accumulation by a minority and growing wealth disparity. Next, we claim that the tradition of philanthropy, employed by magnates such as Motsepe, is considered an appropriate response to growing social economic and political inequalities.
Keywords: Corporate Social Responsibility; Capital Accumulation; World Economic Forum; African National Congress; Material Life (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2014
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:spr:aaechp:978-3-319-06001-9_9
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DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-06001-9_9
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