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Nelson Mandela Dies.

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Filed: K-1 Visa Country: Yemen
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http://www.nber.org/digest/jan06/w11384.html

Why South African Incomes Declined

"Average incomes of South African men and women fell by about 40 percent between 1995 and 2000, and that there has been little improvement since then."

South Africans are worse off than they were before the end of apartheid, at least as measured by real incomes. In Incomes in South Africa Since the Fall of Apartheid (NBER Working Paper No. 11384), co-authors Murray Leibbrandt, James Levinsohn, and Justin McCrary document that decline and attempt to explain what has happened. They show that average incomes of South African men and women fell by about 40 percent between 1995 and 2000, and note that there has been little improvement since then. These researchers explore income patterns in the South African economy overall and in specific groups, such as men and women, older and younger workers, and whites and blacks. Their focus is on economic well being as measured by income, rather than on other ways of evaluating social welfare, including measurement of political freedom.

The change in income is most pronounced in the lower half of the income distribution and has disproportionately affected younger workers, women, and blacks. For men in the bottom 5 percent of the income distribution, total real income in 2000 was about half the level of 1995. In the tenth through the seventy-fifth percentile, incomes were about one third lower than in 1995. For those in the top 10 percent, incomes declined by about one-seventh. For women, the results are very similar, although above the ninetieth percentile, women fare slightly better than men, with roughly constant real incomes. In 1995, white South African men were paid 98 percent more than black men. By 2000, this discrepancy had grown to 118 percent -- a difference of 20 percentage points. Black and white women saw the analogous gap grow by 40 percentage points.

The decline in income may reflect a slack labor market and skill-biased technical change, the authors explain. Using a variety of statistical techniques and a range of data sources, they show that rather than a change in the "endowments" of workers, such as education and skills, it was the change in returns on these endowments that provides the underlying explanation for declining income.

Skill-biased technical change is generally thought to have contributed to stagnation of real wages for lower skilled workers in other countries around the world in the past decade. But a 40 percent decline in real incomes in such a short span of time is a highly unusual event. In South Africa's case, the effect has been exacerbated by the economy's poor economic performance and the large amount of slack in the labor market, which has put downward pressure on real wages. Unemployment was already high in South Africa in 1994. In 1995-2000, while the number of job seekers rose by 5-6 million, net job creation was only in the range of 1.5 to 2 million. Labor, and particularly lower-skilled labor, has been entering the market faster than it could be absorbed, putting downward pressure on wages. Blacks have suffered because their education levels are lower following the discrimination of the apartheid era.

South Africa's reengagement with the world economy, after relative isolation during the period of anti-apartheid trade sanctions, may have added to the downward pressure on the incomes of lower skilled workers. Younger workers - from 18 to their early 30s - and women have suffered because of lower skill levels and less-established positions in the workforce than older workers and men.

The researchers emphasize that, in spite of these plausible explanations, the drop in South African incomes is not fully understood. But there are some implausible explanations that they can dismiss. They include the notion that high-skilled and high-earning white workers left the country after the African National Congress came to power in 1994, or that the data are somehow faulty. Nor was it the case that the most able workers were no longer among those reporting positive incomes. The controversial nature of the paper's claims emphasizes the need for more research to better understand the declines documented, the authors stress

Of course that article makes no mention of the years of stagflation set in motion by IMF and World Bank economic "prescriptions". ANC fought for unions and a living wage back in the day but quickly sold out the working class for foreign direct investment and fiscal incentives. This backfired as class divides deepened. South Africa is a beautiful country, it is also an unfortunate mess. Mandela was not a perfect leader by any means, but he should be revered for his role in ending apartheid and championing government change and democracy against a regime that fought him and those like him every step of the way. A model to follow, but unfortunately few do.

"If you’re brave enough to say goodbye, life will reward you with a new hello."

- Paulo Coelho

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I kind of thought this was a thread where there would be no disagreement. What was I thinking?

“I have fought against white domination, and I have fought against black domination. I have cherished the ideal of a democratic and free society in which all persons live together in harmony and with equal opportunities. It is an ideal which I hope to live for and to achieve. But if needs be, it is an ideal for which I am prepared to die.” —Nelson Mandela, Rivonia trial, 1964

Edited by B_J

 

 

 

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Filed: AOS (pnd) Country: Morocco
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I kind of thought this was a thread where there would be no disagreement. What was I thinking?

Even the National Review had nice things to say but VJ turns it into drama. Well played. dry.png

9/2011: Met in Morocco

12/2011: Trip to Europe together

1/2012: My trip to his hometown

11/2012: His first trip to USA

1/2014: His second trip to USA

3/2014: Married

Adjusting from a B visa

6/25/2014: Sent AOS package (I-130, I-485, I-765, I-131)

6/28/2014: Package received at Chicago Lockbox

7/2/2014: Text and email notifications

7/2/2014: Checks cashed

7/8/2014: Hard copy NOAs received

7/25/2014: Biometrics appointment

7/25/2014: RFE for foreign birth certificate

7/26/2014: RFE responded to

7/30/2014: RFE response received

8/14/2014: Status changed to "Testing and Interview"

8/29/2014: EAD and AP card production ordered

9/10/2014: EAD and AP card received

9/27/2014: Interview letter received

9/29/2014: SS card applied for

10/4/2014: SS card received

10/28/2014: Interview - approved pending final background check; online status updated that night

11/1/2014: Welcome letter

11/4/2014: GC in hand

ROC

8/13/2016: Sent I-751 Package

8/15/2016: Package received at CSC

8/17/2016: Check cashed

8/19/2016: NOA1

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Can the people who are derailing and spamming this thread be thread banned, please? The trolling is obvious.

If you want to have a little YouTube concert, make your own post in OT. smile.png

You keep forgetting that this type of behavior is ok on VJ. I had an earlier post removed where I told him what I thought of his behavior.

You'll probably get thread banned for going off topic.

R.I.P Spooky 2004-2015

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Filed: K-1 Visa Country: Yemen
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For those who are interested:

Full Text of Speech at Rivonia Trial <- well worth actually reading.

For me, one of the most important acts of the Government of National Unity, other than the installation of more democratic institutions, was the Truth and Reconciliation Commission. The hate between the races even during the decline of Apartheid in the early 1990s was more than palpable. Upheaval seemed imminent. Yet at the end of the day, whites, blacks, and coloreds (ZA term for brown people) still had to live with one another as neighbors and countrymen/women. This system of amnesty and restorative justice helped South Africa move forward together as one nation in peace and forgiveness. I can think of few instances in history more honorable than that.

The Truth and Reconciliation Commission

Edited by Sarah and Adnan

"If you’re brave enough to say goodbye, life will reward you with a new hello."

- Paulo Coelho

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Filed: Lift. Cond. (apr) Country: China
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**Several off topic posts removed and two members thread banned.**

Our journey:

Spoiler

September 2007: Met online via social networking site (MySpace); began exchanging messages.
March 26, 2009: We become a couple!
September 10, 2009: Arrived for first meeting in-person!
June 17, 2010: Arrived for second in-person meeting and start of travel together to other areas of China!
June 21, 2010: Engaged!!!
September 1, 2010: Switched course from K1 to CR-1
December 8, 2010: Wedding date set; it will be on February 18, 2011!
February 9, 2011: Depart for China
February 11, 2011: Registered for marriage in Wuhan, officially married!!!
February 18, 2011: Wedding ceremony in Shiyan!!!
April 22, 2011: Mailed I-130 to Chicago
April 28, 2011: Received NOA1 via text/email, file routed to CSC (priority date April 25th)
April 29, 2011: Updated
May 3, 2011: Received NOA1 hardcopy in mail
July 26, 2011: Received NOA2 via text/email!!!
July 30, 2011: Received NOA2 hardcopy in mail
August 8, 2011: NVC received file
September 1, 2011: NVC case number assigned
September 2, 2011: AOS invoice received, OPTIN email for EP sent
September 7, 2011: Paid AOS bill (payment portal showed PAID on September 9, 2011)
September 8, 2011: OPTIN email accepted, GZO number assigned
September 10, 2011: Emailed AOS package
September 12, 2011: IV bill invoiced
September 13, 2011: Paid IV bill (payment portal showed PAID on September 14, 2011)
September 14, 2011: Emailed IV package
October 3, 2011: Emailed checklist response (checklist generated due to typo on Form DS-230)
October 6, 2011: Case complete at NVC
November 10, 2011: Interview - APPROVED!!!
December 7, 2011: POE - Sea-Tac Airport

September 17, 2013: Mailed I-751 to CSC

September 23, 2013: Received NOA1 in mail (receipt date September 19th)

October 16, 2013: Biometrics Appointment

January 28, 2014: Production of new Green Card ordered

February 3, 2014: New Green Card received; done with USCIS until fall of 2023*

December 18, 2023:  Filed I-90 to renew Green Card

December 21, 2023:  Production of new Green Card ordered - will be seeing USCIS again every 10 years for renewal

 

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