Development, Part 4c
China 2013
Samir Amin
is an African revolutionary writer who has recently written comparatively as
between the development path of post-revolutionary China, and that of the
Soviet Union.
On page 2 of our 20-page bookletised version of his article
(“China 2013”, attached), Samir Amin writes that the success of China (and
Vietnam) “is the product of an intelligent and exceptional political line
implemented by the Communist Parties of these two countries.”
South Africa’s problems are far from being identical to
those of China’s at any stage of its development, or to those of the Soviet
Union.
It would seem to follow, therefore, that South Africa will
also require its own, and different, “intelligent and exceptional political
line”.
This does not mean that South Africa can ignore the
experience of others such as the Soviet Union, China and Vietnam. On the
contrary, it means that South Africans need to study as widely as possible the
paths of development that others have followed. Not to copy them, but to get
behind them to the general principles of planning and development.
In particular, we may note that China, the Soviet Union, and
India, have all used the practice of five-year planning as well as longer-term
strategic orientation.
South Africa, at last, has begun to plan. We have our first,
imperfect but nevertheless actually-existing, plan, called the NDP (National
Development Plan).
This very extraordinary article of Samir Amin’s can help us
to reflect on planning and on the results it can have in a person’s lifetime.
- The above is to
introduce the original reading-text: China 2013, Samir Amin.
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