Land expropriation is not a silver bullet (quick fix) for poverty alleviation –Â Anthea Jeffery
The debate on land expropriation has centred on the premise that poverty among black South Africans is the result of white domination of land ownership.
The debate on land expropriation has centred on the premise that poverty among black South Africans is the result of white domination of land ownership.
Earlier, the cabinet announced that Public Enterprises Minister Pravin Gordhan is mandated to negotiate with Andre de Ruyter to take up his position earlier.
Advocate Mark Oppenheimer warns that âpeople have been duped into believing that expropriation without compensation only refers to rural farming landâ.
Chuck Stephens warns that the Guptas could be âgreasing the palms of government officialsâ and says it may be time for a South African boycott of Dubai.
As the worldâs climate is changing; the tip of the African continent has experienced normal rainfall in only one of the last five growing seasons.
The decision to place SAA under business rescue puts the country in unfamiliar territory â politically, economically and legally.
Not that long ago, South African commentators sympathetic to the Democratic Alliance (DA) were celebrating coalitions as the wave of the future.
While an improvement on 2018, the time it will take to close the gender gap narrowed to 99.5 years in 2019, according to the World Economic Forum.
Job seekers often spend hours online researching employers and polishing their applications and résumés. Then they hit send. And they hear nothing. Ever.
Many South Africans are considering whether they should not look for a future elsewhere; it dominates conversations around the braai.