Opinions

News

Sports

Business

Entertainment

GhanaWeb TV

Africa

Country

Organisational learning and knowledge management

Sun, 25 May 2014 Source: Abagulum, Fidelis

.... and implications for

structural adjustment of Ghanaian businesses with particular reference to

construction firms.

By Fidelis Abagulum

28th February, 2014

Scotland, Glasgow-UK

Structural transformation of the Ghanaian economy calls for policies that would

enable businesses to increase productivity and contribute to the growth of

Gross Domestic Product (GDP). This would involve, among other things, the

adoption of new technologies and efficient management of facilities as the

disposal of individual firms. It also requires strategies for skill formation and

the diffusion of acquired skills across the industrial spectrum.

There is general consensus that organisational learning is crucial for business

development. But this is contingent up for local firms to acquire business and

institutional knowledge to develop long term capabilities that would give them

the competitive edge they would need to survive and grow. Organisational

learning helps firms to adapt to the dynamics of the market.

The Ghanaian economy at the production level can be broadly set into three

categories: government sector, business (private) sector and household sector.

However, the public sector dominates the production of goods and services yet

with limited skilled man power development. As at present, most of the service

in terms of GDP is attributable to the public sector. This is because

dysfunctional existing economic structural system has not helped in any

meaningful way. Insofar, and over the past 25 years after independence, the

current system has squeezed businesses out of the national structural system

(isolation from the national system) that contributes to NGDP. This means the

role of private sector players is squeezed to the margins. Private enterprises

have not received the required policy support and have not, therefore, thrived

to realise their full potential. What then are the strategies that would set the

economy on the path of sustainable development?

There are many ways to address this problem. However, the aim here is to show

how organisational learning could be implemented as a strategy for promoting

and support industrialisation and economic growth Ghana needs. In order to fill

up the gap organisational learning requires a complete new design system that

will promote some kind of network between organisations (the three production

levels that include government sector, business and households) by embedding

them together enabling trust to be realised among players. As both these

players engaged in the wider but integrated system and nurturing the value of

social capital (trust, norms and network), network learning from the experiences

of corporate actors among other entrepreneurs can be developed thereby

promoting skills, innovation as a benefactor to growth in total GDP. Other

opportunities that will emerged as a result in the longer term is that enterprises will extend their experiences gain from institutions such as universities etc

globally which would in fact, serve as a feedback loop back to the larger

economy. To conclude, as the national system stands now, there is no linkage

between Ghana government, private sector and household. To justify this there

are several empirical evidence thus, trust between local government and

businesses lags, difficulties arising from government to track for example

housing productions and to be able to control market prices including goods

and services in the wider market. The whole economic structure plus the three

sector of the economy is supposed to function as a whole together. To illustrate

this in detail I have been making arrangement with Metro TV to pass on the idea

to the public which I believe will be in the larger interest of the people of

Ghana.

PhD (student), MBA, MSc. Fidelis Abagulum

Email: Fidelis.Abagulum@strath.ac.uk

Supervisors: Dr. Girma Zawdie; Dr. Michael Murray

David Livingstone Centre for Sustainability

Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering

University of Strathclyde

Graham Hills Building

50 Richmond Street

Glasgow G1 1XN

United Kingdom

Tel. 0044 7977235016

Columnist: Abagulum, Fidelis