The Economics of the Colour Bar by WH Hutt | Economic Origins and Consequences of Racial Segregation

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Condition
Secondhand
Location
South Africa
Product code
Wendy B41 LG
Bob Shop ID
614477623
The Economics of the Colour Bar: A Study of the Economic Origins and Consequences of Racial Segregation in South Africa 
by WH Hutt
Long before the international climate of opinion made South Africas system of legalized racial discrimination untenable, it was under attack from within. A tiny part of that struggle was waged on moral grounds by decent South Africans both white and nonwhite. The much larger part of the war was waged not on moral grounds but on the economic battlefield where the stakes were profit and losses. As W. H. Hutt so aptly points out, the major disadvantages of apartheid were borne by South Africas nonwhite population, but the disadvantage was shared by whites as well. As such it produced widespread tensions leading to resistance, evasion, contravention, and modi-fication of apartheid law. Often evasion and contravention of apartheid law was led by the very people who shared the ideology of white supremacy. The final abolition of apartheid law may indeed reflect a change in heart by South African whites but the coup de grace was, as Hutt put it, the liberating forces released by what is variously called the free market system, the capitalist system, or the profit system.

Binding: Hard cover with dust jacket

Book Condition: Fairly good. Some wear to the top of the dust jacket spine.

Edition: 1964

Pages: 189


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