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Letter To the Editor
Why Cameroon mangers fail
Written by By SNOWSEL ANO-EBIE   
Sunday, 22 November 2009 15:09

When one critically looks at the Cameroonian society since November 1982, it is not immediately clear whether the citizens have doubted 27 years of benefits or whether their leaders have benefited from 27 years of doubt. One way or the other, there has been benefits and doubts. A dispassionate examination of the business and organizational leadership sectors in the country clearly points to 27 years of managerial failure.

One can consider management as the ability to plan, organise, and coordinate an organisation’s financial, human, material and other resources in order to achieve its objectives. You don’t need to study the management classics, or delve into “Scientific Management” by Frederic W. Taylor, “Management as a Profession” by Mary Parker Follett, or “The Manager’s Job: Folklore and Fact” by Henry Mintzberg, in order to identify managerial failure in Cameroon.

Over the years, Cameroon has been plagued by many problems like corruption which is now a national culture, crippling youth unemployment, ethnocentric calculations that breed tribalism, inability to attain a two digit growth rate and break lose from the grip of the economic crisis, a hideous debt burden, and many other challenges that can all be blamed on mismanagement.

It is the inability to plan, lead, organise, and control, hence the failure of managers, that a country like Cameroon can boast of 50 years of independence, with 27 of those years under the “New Deal”, but the most pressing needs of the citizens have not been addressed.

It is ignorance of the planning processes in management as expounded by management scholar Henri Fayol, and the inability to engage in the kind of long-range planning described by Peter F. Drucker that Cameroon has been deprived of “an express train” between Douala and Yaounde, the “Trans Cameroon Railway” has not been extended from Ngaoundere to Maroua and Kousséri, the hydro electric potential of Menchum Falls has not been tapped to solve the country’s energy needs and even export electricity to countries like Nigeria, the Limbe deep Seaport has stagnated; and the Ring Road, the Kumba-Mamfe Road, and paved roads leading to all divisional headquarters in Cameroon have remained tools of political blackmail.

The failure of Cameroon ’s managers can be seen in the reluctance to create technical universities in the country, in the much heralded democratic process that is aborted in its embryonic stage, and in the wanton lack of recreational and sports infrastructure even though “the fighting Lions’ spirit” is exploited for political capital.

Those who have sat in Management classrooms, studied Management Courses, and taken time off to master the Management Classics, know that effective managers rely on two things; the ability to manage, and the opportunity to do so. Unfortunately, in Cameroon , those who have been saddled with the opportunity to manage national organisations and institutions have for the most part been overtaken by their glaring deficiency in managerial skills. It is very difficult, and almost impossible to find any Cameroonian parastatal or state corporation where the managers do not squander opportunities, waste resources, and kill the talents of the people who have been entrusted into their care. The resultant consequence of managerial failure is mismanagement which can aptly be described as one of Cameroon ’s greatest nightmares alongside absentee leadership.

There are many reasons why Cameroonian managers fail and the most obvious is poor education. The greater majority of people who lord it over Cameroonian organisations don’t have a management education. All those managing directors, general managers, and chief  executive officers, who preside over billions of CFA Francs of tax payers money, have not been trained in the “Principles of Management”, Managerial Economics, Finance, and Accounting. Why would they not fail?

In Cameroon , many managers are technocrats who are appointed up the rungs of the organisation from service heads or first line managers to directors or middle managers and finally to general managers or top management. The disadvantage of this system is that while such managers may succeed with the operational aspects of the organisation, they woefully fail in the functional aspects like budgeting, financial reporting, accounting, and human resource allocation. When one expects teachers, medical doctors, engineers, journalists, lawyers, and other professionals to get academic training in order to become efficient and effective, people who aspire to occupy management positions or ramble into the management field by some struck of luck, desperately need to undergo training in order to speak the language of management and avoid the kind of ignorance that nurtures failure.

Even managers who claim to have training in their CVs are for the most part talking of their stay in the National School of Administration and Magistracy ENAM in Yaounde. For a long time, to qualify as a manager in Cameroon one was required to be a civil administrator trained at ENAM. Graduates from this “prestigious” school of administration have imposed themselves on state owned companies and organisations. Administration has been erroneously equated to Management. The negative results in terms of failed policies, companies that have been brought down and driven out of existence, cumbersome organisation charts, squandered opportunities, and misplaced priorities are there for everyone to see. Unfortunately, the ENAM myth is still considered a prerequisite for top managers in Cameroon .

Another reason why Cameroonian managers fail is because they are selected through a system of appointments whose underlying motive is to reward political allies and their “God children”, punish Regions of the country that are politically hostile to the present dispensation, and perpetuate a reign of ethnic and tribal hegemony.

The other risk is that appointments are at the discretionary mercy of the person making them, and many unqualified and inexperienced people get appointed, some of them directly from school into top management. Managerial failure can only be the logical outcome.

It is indeed unfortunate that a Developing country like Cameroon has not adopted the MBA or Masters in Business Administration as a standard qualification for all top managers. In other African countries foreign and locally trained MBAs have already taken charge of the economy and national institutions but this is not the case in Cameroon .

Management by political appointments and management by “trial-and-error” have failed Cameroon . Only a logical system based on merit, a sound education, and a solid experience, can turn the tides of managerial failure in Cameroon around.
 
Has Biya given up on Anglophones?
Written by Franklin S Bayen   
Sunday, 22 November 2009 14:59

Eugene N. Nforngwa, CEO and editor of this newspaper, ran a similar front cover headline weeks ago, commenting on President Biya’s frequent and prolonged foreign trips: “Has Biya given up Cameroon?”

Now, I have cause to wonder if the president has given up on Anglophones, seeing his 27th anniversary letter to Cameroonians and CPDM militants published only in French language newspapers. It looks like Biya has given up trying to market himself to Anglophone masses, unsure of finding any sympathetic ear there. Else, why would a head of state, so desperate for every bit of sympathy – if not support – in the face of mounting challenge from within his own ranks, afford to limit, in such blatant manner, his SOS to only a part of his people?

The president’s letter, a well-paid commercial announcement, I’m informed, was published on Thursday, 5 November only in the four French language dailies and two nominal bilingual papers – Cameroon Tribune and L’Action – both of which are read mainly by Francophones, plus a few regime Anglophones who for the most part are already Biya stalwarts. Even the French language papers published both the English and French versions.
English language newspapers that tried to obtain the insertion were rudely turned away and later offered it at ridiculously cheap rate. Some turned down the offer. Most of those now printing it are doing so on “patriotic grounds”.

L’Action (the CPDM paper) No. 688 du 5 Novembre 2009, in a page 11 article titled “INEDIT” (UNPRECEDENTED or first of its kind) explains that Biya’s letter would later be published in other weeklies (obviously including those in English). But, seeing there are no dailies in English yet, won’t they have been the wiser to have placed the president’s letter in the English language weeklies (and bi-weeklies) at the same time as the French language dailies, even if only to show some equity?

Brutus

Now to the substance of the president’s letter.

It all looks like Biya’s manifesto for a third “septenat”. But he comes across more desperate than passionate.  Like in the 1992 presidential election when he saw red, Biya is once more resorting to the Lion analogy (“the fighting Lions spirit”, just like Rigobert Song’s “Hemle Nje”), though this time around, the threat seems to be coming more from disgruntled regime men than from the opposition. As if to warn his young friends scheming against him that they won’t have their way without seeing the incisors and claws of a vexed lion.

If any iota of doubt remained whether Biya would seek another term, here is proof that at nearly 90 minutes of fulltime play, exhausted though he may appear, he is asking for extra time and demanding a vital pass to net in.

The president’s letter came as La Nouvelle (No. 043 du Lundi 9 Novembre 2009), the French language weekly often proven right in its inside regime stories, reported the emergence of a new group, “Brutus”, supposed to be scheming to knock out Biya (remember Brutus’ fatal trick on Cesar?). After G11 or Generation 2011 who came to light in 2006, this “new group” is supposed to be a click including Marafa, Laurent Esso, Fame Ndongo, Gregoire Owona, Fai Yengo, Suzanne Mbomback, Charles Metouck, etc, some of them former G11.

Football politics

If that were true, the poor man should now find himself in the crossfire of a succession fight within his own walls that shows even his most trsuted lieutenants are already in battle gear. Having G11 in his prisons and Brutus in his ministries, plus the Banjul Verdict to grapple with, might have pushed Biya to resort to the masses. His choice of words, evoking peace and unity, is telling.

His own government and CPDM party no longer trustworthy, and knowing how much passion football victories generate in Cameroonian masses, especially with World Cup qualification in view, Biya is, by alluding to the fighting Lions spirit, showing the Indomitable Lions are now his most trusted “political party” and Lions fans, the only “militants” he now counts on; his last resort.

With their qualification for the World Cup, you cannot deny that Biya staked on the Lions and won the bet. Can you?