African Management Development Institutes Network (AMDIN) conference,
Midrand
30 August 2007
Ladies and gentlemen
Today, virtually to the day, two years ago the African Management
Development Institutes' Network (AMDIN) was launched in Sandton, Johannesburg.
Many of you were present on that historical day where you adopted your first
constitution, and elected the leadership team for the first term to steer the
organisation through its first two years, a period we all know can be
challenging but are of immense importance for the longer term effectiveness of
an organisation.
I am happy to admit here today, that there was a period that we were worried
that the AMDIN child was going to be short-lived when the first 15 months
passed with very little progress to show. However, true leadership was shown
when from within the team at the helm of the organisation some critical
questions were asked, checking within the ranks on what needs doing, better,
smarter and faster. When resources, however limited, were committed to the
process because we believed in the organisation, we have seen how commitment,
dedication and energy, backed up by some financial resources can quickly show
results. We are now a mere nine months after that process of introspection.
AMDIN has clearly turned the corner and is now stronger with more potential
than ever before. Within the range of initiatives that the Ministers'
conference have spawned during the past four years, I would argue that AMDIN is
now one that shows significant potential of turning into a true legacy
initiative.
I must acknowledge all those who have contributed to this progress, but in
particular the Deputy Chairperson, Professor Sheikh Abdullay, Doctor Mark Orkin
and Ms Hanlie van Dyk, Robertson.
The training of an expert cadre of trainers under the five year Japan
International Co-operation Agency (Jica) funded programme is well-underway.
AMDIN has been strongly networked within the public administration knowledge
community, both on the continent, but also further a field internationally. The
AMDIN name and concept is one that is becoming more familiar and events such as
this conference will greatly aid in terms of raising the profile of AMDIN.
The importance of the launch of AMDIN in August 2005 was not necessarily in
what the network constituted at the time, but rather how a number of the
approaches we believe are of fundamental importance in the development and
reconstruction of the African continent came together. Amongst these approaches
were the commitment to African ownership of the network and its initiatives;
sharing among one another our limited material resources, but generous in the
ideas and thoughts; acknowledging the importance of public administration for
development and above all, a burning desire for continuous improvement. It
mirrored the very real commitment evident in many of the African Union (AU) and
the New Partnership for Africa's Development (Nepad) programme's documents, a
desire and determination, a necessity for Africa to extricate herself form the
malaise of underdevelopment and the invidious position she finds herself in, in
terms of the globalising world.
Here, I must acknowledge the presence of Professor Firmino Mucavele, the
Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of the Nepad Secretariat. Your presence here
today is very important to this process.
Consequently, it was the potential of what the network stood for, the vision
we had for it, that was really important.
The launch of AMDIN, although flowing from an organic process from within
the ranks of the MDIs, most notably the Development Policy Management Forum
(DPMF) based in Ethiopia at the start of the 21st century, was not a
development that stood loose from the overall concern we had on a political
level about the very pressing need we have for raising the overall performance
of African public and civil services, and particularly the management cadre, if
we are to make headway in Africa's development.
However, at the third and fourth Pan-African Conference of Ministers of
Public Service, African Ministers of Public Service recognised and reaffirmed
the importance of MDIs and the need to support them. The Windhoek
declaration
"�(re)affirmed the crucial role played by the national public administration
schools and institutes and the need to develop and strengthen their ability to
prepare the public servants of the future to deal with the challenges of
globalisation."
At this Conference the Ministers agreed to a continental partnership
programme on Governance and Public Administration, to be championed and
implemented within the fold of the New Partnership for Africa's Development
(Nepad). There is now explicit recognition that MDIs need to be aligned with
the government's service delivery agenda.
The nexus between the development of human resource and organisational
capacity in the public sector of African countries and Africa's ability to lift
itself from poverty and become a player in the global economy has been
irrefutably established.
Some evidence for this position has been generated by both the United
Nations and the World Bank.
"�in order for the institutions of governance to perform their functions
efficiently and effectively they must be endowed with the appropriate
capacities. Good governance is a development issue with capacity-building
ramifications."
United Nations Economic Commission for Africa, African Governance Report
2005, page 197, ECA, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
"Clearly, there are capacity implications for implementing an MDG-based
development strategy in relation to the ability of countries to manage the
scale-up needed to achieve the goals in the time left before 2015, while at the
same time expanding the delivery of essential services. From public sector
management and administration, to human resources and infrastructure, the is a
need to strengthen the ability of countries to absorb additional resources and
at the same time build their own national and local capacity has never been so
important to achieving sustainable development outcomes." Kermil Dervis
"Today's critical challenge: building capacity to achieve the MDGs" World Bank
Development Outreach, September 2005.
It is therefore undeniable that AMDIN is seen as an extremely important
vehicle to assist in developing the necessary capacity for us to catapult our
respective public services out of their traditional bureaucratic comfort zones,
into high-performing institutions. MDIs are the strategic capacity development
agencies of the public service that have the responsibility and opportunity to
transform the hearts and minds of public servants to produce the results that
they are committed to.
But how does this future African public service look in the very broadest of
terms that AMDIN should assist in creating:
The 21st Century African public service has to be a learning organisation, a
learning organisation in which people at all levels, individually and
collectively, are continually increasing their capacity to produce results they
really care about, where the organisation encourages new ways of thinking,
where the collective vision of creating the best is liberated, and where
everybody continuously learns how to learn together. If the African Public
Service is to lead Africa to attain its commitments to the Millennium
Development Goals, new ways of doing business and continuously solving problems
is essential.
Driven by the vision of commitment to service to citizens shared across
public service, the philosophy of Batho Pele in South Africa, Results for
Kenyans and Namibia's slogan of 'we care' attest to the recognition of the
centrality of service to citizens as the main driver of public service
performance. It is no longer organisations in which performance is defined in
relation to inputs and processes of government no matter its impact or lack of
it on the citizens. The people in the public service must transform their
systems and processes to place citizens and results at the centre of their
performance.
Strong, visionary and ethical leadership is central. Leaders lead by example
through diligence, honesty and commitment to succession. Where we have
experienced challenges in terms of effective service delivery or even corrupt
practice there is often a leadership vacuum or lack of leaders who 'lead by
example' leaders who continuously inspire the entire public service.
Systematic and continuous planning across the public service, planning that
recognises changing scenarios both internal and external rather than
blueprints. These planning practices respond to and keep up with extremely
rapidly changing situations. In some of South East Asia for example strategy
and planning is built around probable scenarios that change every three years
or so necessitating regular review. Such planning is followed up by such rapid
implementation initiatives that after two years changes in approach and plans
are evident. The 21st Century Africa public service must inculcate
evidence-based planning and policy making to ensure relevance to citizens.
If MDIs have to bring about such public services on the African continent,
they themselves need strengthening and developing. And I believe in this
respect AMDIN can play an immensely powerful role.
In general, the track record of MDIs in Africa has not been outstanding.
Many MDIs derailed their real value-add by not supporting the core service
delivery and policy imperatives of government, but allowed themselves to get
side-tracked into other activities, setting in motion a vicious
self-destructing process. High level government support for MDIs steadily
waned. The challenges that MDIs in Africa face are frequently shared, with the
following common challenges emerging:
Leadership challenges
Many MDIs have experienced a combination of high turnover among senior
leadership and poor quality leadership.
Financial sustainability
Many MDIs have undergone changes in their resource base and funding
environment. For example, MDIs have been subjected to the conflicting
directives of having a market orientation and, at the same time, delivering
programmes to an under-resourced public sector.
Reputation and capabilities
It has been difficult for many MDIs to retain and/or establish a reputation
for excellence, partly due to their historical turbulences.
Institutional sustainability and staff turnover: many MDIs have struggled to
sustain, grow and change the institution at the same time. High staff turnover
and lost institutional memory are key stumbling blocks.
Competition and marketisation
Many MDIs are subject to increased competition from privately established
MDIs and from foreign competitors.
One of the key things that need happening is that MDIs must become a central
driver again of far reaching Public Service transformation on the
continent.
Public Service Transformation for effective service delivery assumes a
certain level of knowledge and skills, specific values and attitudes, "ethos",
morality, common vision and consensus on development goals. This is rarely the
case. The key question to be addressed by MDIs, whose mandate it is to
facilitate transformation, what are the necessary and sufficient conditions for
transformation to take place and be sustained in each country context.
Important points to note
* Alignment of the MDIs with your government's programme of Action, MDIs
require knowledge and thorough understanding of the agenda of government.
* Underlying assumptions about efficient, effective and accountable delivery of
services can actually wreck some of the best intended initiatives.
* Identification of what constitutes the key positive feedback loops between
MDIs, Public Service Training Institutes and the Public Service to be effective
agents for service delivery.
* Understanding the cause and effect relationships of problems and their
solutions.
To drive change MDIs should facilitate consensus building on key points of
leverage for transformation of the public service. More than simply passing on
knowledge and skills MDIs need to facilitate a common vision on development
goals and strategies to achieve them. To have common vision, there are specific
values and attitudes, mindsets to align to those goals.
Management Development Institutes carry the statutory mandate to contribute
to the enhancement of the capacity of the state by delivering through human and
institutional development. For example, in South Africa SAMDI is mandated to
play a leading role in implementing the Human Resources Development Strategy
for the public sector. In addition to focusing on the HRD Strategy, the MDI
role has to go beyond that to cultivate and nurture the new leadership to drive
the capability agenda of the government. They should also contribute to
improving the system of intergovernmental relations and the integrity of the
systems of government as well as the processes h which governments use to
deliver services.
In order to drive the Public Sector Reform Agenda it is necessary for MDIs
to develop certain capacities including the ability to rigorous analyse
government's performance. They must have capacity to assess the efficacy of
governance and service delivery institutions; and they should further have the
ability to develop and enhance the relevance and productivity of human
capital.
Above all, MDIs are responsible to inculcate a culture of change, learning
and continuous improvement. At its apex of government, Singapore has an
innovative programme called PS21, Public Service of the 21st century with a
philosophy that encourages public servants to anticipate and embrace change in
their work. PS21 encourages innovative ideas from public servants that can
solve a particular problem related to their effectiveness.
Organisations are products of the way the people in them think and interact.
To change organisations for the better, one must give people the opportunity to
learn new ways to think and interact. Given the choice, very few people would
not elect to be part of a team where there is excitement, commitment,
perseverance, and willingness to experiment, genuine appreciation of one
another's gifts and limitations and the ability to effectively tackle complex
issues.
I believe AMDIN's biggest challenge is to create the space, and
simultaneously move into the space where we can fundamentally change the hearts
and minds of first those in your member institutions, and they in turn passing
that change on to the public servants and their managers at large.
It is with great interest that I am watching AMDIN growing for the next two
years and beyond and starting to show significant fruit.
Mr Chair, I wish you the very best with this conference and the work that
will flow from it.
I thank you.
Issued by: Department of Public Service and Administration
30 August 2007