I just returned from a trip to South Africa, where I was able to play a couple of nice courses (I'll submit a report on one in a separate topic) in the Cape Town area. As an aside, Cape Town is as fine a city as I have ever seen, and I would recommend everyone to take a trip there once in your life if you haven't already.
One of the courses I played (Erinvale GC, where they play the South African Open) was rated in the top 20 courses in South Africa, but I found myself thinking, "Nice course, but if it were in my hometown of Austin, Texas it would barely crack the top 5 in the area!" Looking at the rest of the list, only Durban CC has seemed to garner any international attention for its architecture (and not all that much).
In fact, I can think of no other country that has produced so many world-class golfers, with so few world-class golf courses. In fact, it could be argued that South Africa has no world-class courses.
But with apartheid now a thing of the past, and a whole country full of potential sites to explore, it seems that South Africa would have the ability to become a great golf destination, hopefully with its own version of St. Andrews, Royal Melbourne, or Cypress Point waiting to be found and built.
With places like New Zealand and Tasmania now being put firmly on the golfing map, when will it be South Africa's turn?