Indian South Africans as a middleman minority : historical and contemporary perspectives
Abstract
Beginning in the 1940s, a literature on middleman minorities emerged to
demystify the intermediary economic niche that Jews had occupied in medieval
Europe. They were viewed as ethnic entrepreneurs occupying the economic
status gap. In the 1960s, scholars began to apply middleman minority theory to
colonial societies and to American society. More recently, Coloureds in South
Africa have been identified as a middleman minority of another type: semiprivileged
proletarians occupying an economic status gap in labour between
whites and Africans. A political status gap between whites and Africans, both
seeking alliances to achieve hegemony, is also occupied by Coloureds. Among
South African Indians, one finds ethnic entrepreneurs: a small shopkeeping
and trading class from South Asia. But there are also Indian semi-privileged
proletarians who emerged from the indentured labour population in the early
twentieth century. This article employs a historical institutional approach to
analyse political tensions among Indians, and examines the cleavage between
Indians and other races over political rights vis-a vis the South African state.
It also offers a typology contrasting ethnic entrepreneurs with semi-privileged
proletarians in terms of the differing economic status gaps they occupy.
Furthermore, it illustrates how Indians occupy a political status gap in a
complex settler colonial society like South Africa.