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Why have alternative corporate forms not been pursued more vigorously in South Africa and the Global South at large, with ownership in the hands of customers, employees, and local communities? This edited volume explores this question.
List of contents
Introduction: How to align corporate forms with economic and social goals?
Jonathan Michie and Vishnu Padayachee
Part I: South African business in the transition to democracy
1. South African business in the transition to democracy
Jonathan Michie and Vishnu Padayachee
2. From a developmental to a regulatory state? Sasol and the conundrum of continued state support
Pamela Mondliwa and Simon Roberts
3. The spread and internationalisation of South African retail chains and the implications of market power
Reena Das Nair
4. Surviving in the BRICS: the struggle of South African business in coping with new partners and investors
N. Wenzel, B. Freund and O. Graefe
5. South African manufacturing firms in transition
David Francis, Gareth Roberts and Imraan Valodia
6. The global ambitions of the biometric anti-bank: Net1, lockin and the technologies of African financialisation
Keith Breckenridge
7. Laying the table: the role of business in establishing competition law and policy in South Africa
Jonathan Klaaren
8. Collective counterveilence as a deterrent to entry: A reconsideration of the factors limiting competition in post-Apartheid South Africa
Nobantu L. Mbeki
9. "Volkskapitalisme" in the transition to democracy and beyond
Vishnu Padayachee and Jannie Rossouw
10. Steinhoff collapse: a failure of corporate governance
Jannie Rossouw and James Styan
Part II: Alternative forms of ownership and control in the global south
11. Alternative forms of ownership and control in the global south
Jonathan Michie and Vishnu Padayachee
12. Pitfalls of participation: explaining why a strike followed unprecedented employee dividend pay-outs at a South African mine
Andries Bezuidenhout, Christine Bischoff and John Mashayamombe
13. Anglo-American corporation and corporate restructuring in post-apartheid South Africa
Seeraj Mahomed
14. Benefit corporations for Africa? A South African perspective on alternative corporate forms
Jonathan Klaaren
15. Producer collectives through self-help: sustainability of small tea growers in India
Debdulal Saha
16. Board remuneration, directors’ ownership and corporate performance: the South African evidence
Tesfaye T. Lemma, Mthokozisi Mlilo and Tendai Gwatidzo
17. The Uberisation of work: the challenge of regulating platform capitalism. A commentary
Edward Webster
18. Why did the ANC fail to deliver redistribution? A Review of Shadow of Liberation by Vishnu Padayachee and Robert van Niekerk (Wits University Press: Johannesburg, 2019)
Jonathan Michie
About the author
Jonathan Michie is Professor of Innovation and Knowledge Exchange at the University of Oxford, where he is President of Kellogg College. He is an Honorary Professor in the School of Economics and Finance at the University of the Witwatersrand. He Chairs the Universities Association for Lifelong Learning.
Vishnu Padayachee is Distinguished Professor and Derek Schrier and Cecily Cameron Chair in Development Economics, in the School of Economics and Finance at the University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg. His books include Shadow of Liberation: Contestation and Compromise in the Economic and Social Policy of the ANC, with Robert Van Niekerk.
Summary
Why have alternative corporate forms not been pursued more vigorously in South Africa and the Global South at large, with ownership in the hands of customers, employees, and local communities? This edited volume explores this question.