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• Europe had a society rich in human resources including an educated and skilled labour<br />

force.<br />

• It did not set down the nature <strong>of</strong> the pre-conditions for growth. Thus as a predictive<br />

model, it is not very helpful.<br />

• It never looked at why societies in developing countries like South Africa were unable<br />

to save and invest.<br />

• It assumed that development is a stage which is reached rather than ongoing.<br />

In spite <strong>of</strong> its popularly acclaimed stance in Europe over time, this study exercises caution in<br />

the application <strong>of</strong>the Rostow model to the growth and development <strong>of</strong>Ulundi in view <strong>of</strong>the<br />

abovementioned weaknesses.<br />

3.3.3 The structuralist model<br />

In essence, structuralism is a philosophical position which advocates the existence <strong>of</strong>common<br />

hidden patterns, implicit rules and underlying dynamics that structure various areas <strong>of</strong> human<br />

activity and spatial development, be it social, political, cultural, economic or industrial<br />

[http://www.uk.encarta.msn.com.encvclopedi1!. (2007)]. It was towards the end <strong>of</strong> the 1960s<br />

that structuralism entered into general public and scholarly awareness in Western countries.<br />

where its period <strong>of</strong> greatest dominance was the I970s. In other situations, the structuralist<br />

model explains how labour moves in a dual economy. A dual economy is where you have<br />

large differences between a developed section and a developing one.<br />

In this model. industrial growth drives economic growth and is made possible by<br />

government's investment in industry. Industry draws on surplus labour from rural areas so<br />

that benefits trickle dm.vn to those in rural areas. Structuralists have suggested that<br />

developing countries needed their governments to finance their own manufacturing industries<br />

in order to develop a modern economy where a higher percentage <strong>of</strong> people live in cities and<br />

are employed in an increasing number <strong>of</strong>industries. They believed that governments needed<br />

to impose high taxes or tariffs on imponed goods in order to protect and develop the country's<br />

own manufacturing sector.<br />

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