Sophia’s choice: Debt, social welfare, and racial finance capitalism
Abstract
In this article, I examine normative assumptions about cash transfers as public goods and the lived
experience of cash transfers as private debts. Policy makers and social scientists often assume
cash transfers are apolitical, value-neutral monetary instruments, which improve upon inappropriate, top-down, universalizing development projects. Instead, I show how cash transfers introduce their own universals, by imagining liberal sovereign subjects, who use credit and financial
markets to manage their own financial and developmental needs. I argue that this narrative elides
the deep historical and geographical production of racial difference through credit and debt in
South Africa’s Western Cape farmlands. I call this phenomenon racial finance capitalism. First, I
trace how coloured people have been racialized as debtors for the benefit of capital accumulation
across generations. Then, I explore how the contemporary spatial and temporal realities of cash
transfer distribution continue to racialize grantees as debtors and dispossess them of their social
entitlements. Finally, I demonstrate how grantees draw upon transgenerational experiences of
debt to challenge the continued social reproduction of themselves as debtors. Some South
African social grantees demand recognition that they are, and have been, net creditors to the
nation.