TIME Magazineさんのインスタグラム写真 - (TIME MagazineInstagram)「On May 8, South Africans are due to vote in the sixth national elections since the fall of apartheid. The African National Congress, the liberation party once led by #NelsonMandela that has ruled since 1994, is expected to return to power. But a quarter-century after Mandela called for the state to be fundamentally reshaped to address the inequalities of apartheid, the world’s most egregious racial divide has turned into its most extreme economic disparity. The World Bank last year deemed #SouthAfrica the world’s most unequal society, estimating that the top 10% owned 70% of the nation’s assets in 2015. And the split is still largely along racial lines. For the past several decades, #inequality has been on the rise in developed and developing countries alike. But in an age of widening divides between rich and poor, South Africa stands out because of its squandered hopes. Mandela’s rainbow nation was supposed to show the world how a new, equitable society could be built out of the ashes of repression and racism, @arynebaker writes in this week's International cover story. But by some measures, inequality in the country today is worse than it was under apartheid. In this photograph: Johannesburg suburbs Primrose (left) and Makause. Read more at the link in bio. Photograph by Johnny Miller (@millefotosa)」5月3日 21時40分 - time

TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 5月3日 21時40分


On May 8, South Africans are due to vote in the sixth national elections since the fall of apartheid. The African National Congress, the liberation party once led by #NelsonMandela that has ruled since 1994, is expected to return to power. But a quarter-century after Mandela called for the state to be fundamentally reshaped to address the inequalities of apartheid, the world’s most egregious racial divide has turned into its most extreme economic disparity. The World Bank last year deemed #SouthAfrica the world’s most unequal society, estimating that the top 10% owned 70% of the nation’s assets in 2015. And the split is still largely along racial lines. For the past several decades, #inequality has been on the rise in developed and developing countries alike. But in an age of widening divides between rich and poor, South Africa stands out because of its squandered hopes. Mandela’s rainbow nation was supposed to show the world how a new, equitable society could be built out of the ashes of repression and racism, @arynebaker writes in this week's International cover story. But by some measures, inequality in the country today is worse than it was under apartheid. In this photograph: Johannesburg suburbs Primrose (left) and Makause. Read more at the link in bio. Photograph by Johnny Miller (@millefotosa)


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