Description
Book Synopsis South Africa was one of the first countries in the Global South that established a financialized consumer credit market. This market consolidates rather than alleviates the extreme social inequality within a country. This book investigates the political reasons for adopting an allegedly self-regulating market despite its disastrous effects and identifies the colonialist ideas of property rights as a mainstay of the existing social order. The book addresses sociologists, political scientists, anthropologists and legal scholars interested in the interaction of economy and law in contemporary market societies.
Trade Review “The book—not an examination of credit and debt, but an account of the contemporary construction of a market—is an important contribution to the study of relationships between credit and debt in an unequal society.” • Africa Today
“I think the book is marvelous, with a fine organization building from meticulous literary scholarship to a broad critique of applying market ideas to the organization of credit.” • Keith Hart, University of Pretoria
Table of Contents List of Illustrations
Acknowledgements
Notes on Transliteration
List of Abbreviations
Introduction
Chapter 1. Borrowing in the South African Consumer Credit Market
Chapter 2. Raising the Storm of a Free Consumer Credit Market
Chapter 3. The Institutional Framework: Implementing a Consumer Credit Market
Chapter 4. Legislator’s Reactions to the Consumer Credit Market Crisis 2012-2014
Chapter 5. The Model of Rational Action in the South African Consumer Credit Market
Conclusion: The Missed Options of the South African Consumer Credit Market
References
Index