“…57 To take a different example, the colonial legacy of the institution of the chieftaincy in South africa, while 'politically conditional' , allows for a quasi-monopoly of access to valuable platinum reserves. 58 This is also apparent in the financialisation of production, where manufacturing logics are shaped by financial ones, or in supermarket retail which, at first glance, is most obviously commercial capital, simultaneously combines the class functions of modern landed-property vis-à-vis suppliers who pay ground-rent to access the supermarket shelf, industrial capital vis-à-vis employees to maximise the rate of exploitation of their labour, and finance capital in relation to the use of cash flow to fund banking and insurance activities vis-à-vis consumers.…”