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Books > Business & Economics > Economics > Financial crises & disasters
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Money from nothing - Indebtness and aspiration in South Africa (Paperback)
Loot Price: R368
Discovery Miles 3 680
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Money from nothing - Indebtness and aspiration in South Africa (Paperback)
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Loot Price R368
Discovery Miles 3 680
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Credit, and its flip side, debt, emerges as a fundamental lens to
understand the workings of both social mobility and economic
disenfranchisement, precariously inter-twined in the New South
Africa. James makes complex theory accessible, combining it with
page turning ethnography - utterly captivating! - Dinah Rajak,
Senior Lecturer in Anthropology, University of Sussex and author of
In Good Company: An Anatomy of Corporate Social Responsibility
South Africa's national project of financial inclusion aims to
extend credit to black South Africans as a critical aspect of
abolishing apartheid's legacy. Money from Nothing explores the
contradictory dynamics inherent in this project, and captures the
lived experience of indebtedness for many millions who attempt to
improve their positions (or merely sustain existing livelihoods) in
this complex economy. Deborah James shows the varied ways in which
access to credit is intimately bound up with identity and
status-making. The precarious nature of aspirations of upward
mobility and the economic relations of debt which sustain people is
revealed by the shadowy side of indebtedness and potential for new
forms of oppression and exclusion which can accompany projects of
upliftment. She reflects on the apparent absurdity of a situation
where consumers' borrowing is, on the one hand, checked by being
blacklisted with the credit bureaux, yet borrowers clamour for a
`credit information amnesty' while lenders continue to lend with
impunity. James concludes that the paternalism of a system in which
consumers' bank accounts are under `external control' intensifies
the `advantage to creditor' principle that has long underpinned
South African consumer law.
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