In the early 1970s an intense debate took place in South Africa on economic growth and its relationship to social and political change. The debate polarized into two opposing views. One view suggested that economic growth would break down apartheid. Industrialization would lead to liberalization. This, the ‘conventional’ view as expounded most consistently by O’Dowd, was challenged by the ‘revisionist’ thesis advanced by Johnstone and others which suggested that capitalist development was reinforcing ‘white supremacy’. Although these two views reached opposite conclusions, they started from the same basic premise: an exclusive focus on the dominant institutions and groups in South Africa. Whereas in the first view these groups were seen as more or less inevitable agents of change, the ‘revisionist’ case was that they were more or less irremovable obstacles to change. Neither view recognized sufficiently the possibility of organizations emerging, notably from the black working class, that could take advantage of the contradictions generated by capitalist development to influence the pace and direction of change.
In the post-Wiehahn period the centre of the industrial relations stage shifted unequivocally towards these emerging unions. Drawing largely on unskilled and semi-skilled black, predominantly African workers, these unions have expanded rapidly since 1979. While recruitment has been rapid the total membership is still small at approximately 400 000. Their significance, however, lies in the fact that, for the first time in South Africa, they have laid the foundations of national, mass-based unionism within the core of the manufacturing industry — the metal, motor, textile, food, paper, and chemical sectors — as well as in the retail, mining and transport industries. If we include the 800 000 workers who are members of the established unions, nearly 1200 000 workers (12,2% of the economically active population) now belong to trade unions in South Africa.
An important feature of the emerging unions is their concentration on building shop steward structures in selected workplaces. They now have an organized presence in over 750 workplaces, while in 420 of these formal agreements have been signed between management and the unions representing workers in that plant. Shop stewards, now numbering over 6000, and their committees have become the pivot of the organizational structures of these unions.