Friday Nov 07, 2025
Friday, 6 February 2015 00:00 - - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}
This environment has now dawned, though many feared it was unlikely to be ever realised, the way socio-economic and political leadership landscape was carved out by our recent leaders in governance. These recent leaders had almost succeeded embedding their style of governance as an acceptable way of life of the citizens of this nation.
The change must now be given a fair chance to get firmly established. If not, uncertainty, dictatorial governance, and disruptive and underworld forces at play will be the order of the day, resulting before long, in anarchy, economic collapse and social degeneration.
Business as a key stakeholder of society must play a leading catalytic role in facilitating, promoting and sustaining the proposed new environment. They must strive to have this environment to become an embedded culture in society, driven by shared values.
A new business paradigm
A new and recommitted to business paradigm, agreed to by all business leaders and chambers and collectively embedded within the private sector must be the ‘way forward’, to mutually for all in society to benefit from the positive external environment and assure its sustainability.
A committed to new values and management culture
Chambers and business leaders should commit to a 365 day program, which should commence as soon as the new Government’s 100 day program ends. This 365 day program of chambers and business leaders should include the following 12 key values based business commitments, which the business leaders and chambers must collectively strive to have fully embedded within the private sector as a commitment to business culture.
1.Re-commit to core values:
Business leaders and chambers must recommit to the core values of placing the nation and its people first, the private sector second, the core/priority sector interests third and individual business interests fourth.
Business leaders and chambers in this instance, at a time when the new government has committed to such values, must in addition specifically recommit to uphold the supplementary national core values of good governance, rule of law, justice, equity, peace and harmony, meritocracy, integrity, simplicity, promoting international acceptance and commit to create a corruption minimised democratic society. Here management excellence, value addition, quality enhancement, productivity improvement, creativity, innovativeness, human resource development and corporate social responsibility must become associated core values of business.
2.Simplicity, austerity, waste
control and caring CSR culture
The private sector must transform the present businesses to commit to a management culture that assures simplicity, austerity and waste control and one which it directs all such savings and more to optimise value adding corporate social responsibility initiatives, benefiting the lesser fortunate citizens.
3.Transparency, whistle blowing
and right to information culture
In tandem with Government initiatives, the private sector too must embed a management culture that