CHAPTER ONE
INTRODUCTION
1.1 BACKGROUND OF
THE STUDY
In his
theory of evolution, Charles Darwin sought to explain the nature of the
relationship that exists between organisms and their environment. The theory
“suggested that environmental change forces each species to incremental, but
continuous, mutation or transformation. Through such a change, a living entity
can adapt to its environment and survive. A specie that cannot conform to its
environmental requirements is doomed, eventually becoming extinct” (Wright et al,
1996:7). This theory emphasizes that animals evolve as time
goes on and that the direction of this evolution depends on the nature of the
environment in which the animal lives. When life was purely aquatic, animals
evolved features that enabled them to live in water; when life moved from water
to land, the amphibians that effected the transition evolved features that
enabled them to survive in both land and water, and when life became
terrestrial, terrestrial animals developed features suited for life on land. Darwin’s
theory also postulates
that the ability of any given specie to survive in its environment for long
will depend on the ability of such specie to adapt to changes in its
environment.
On closer
examination, the theory of evolution itself seems to be an exposition of a
primordial universal law that manifests with an uncanny similarity in biology
and in the corporate world. For instance, in management literature, coevolving
refers to the corporate strategic process by which business organisations
“routinely change the web of collaborative links among businesses to exploit
fresh opportunities for synergies and drop deteriorating ones .” The links
could be in the form of exchange of information, shared business assets and
strategies, etc. Only organisations that master this process are able to
synergize. But the term co-evolution is
an aspect of the general theory of evolution and therefore has its origin in
biology and “it refers to successive changes among two or more ecologically independent
but unique species such that their evolutionary trajectories become intertwined
over time; as these species adapt to their environment, they also adapt to one
another. The result is an ecosystem of partially interdependent species that
adapt together……(Eisenhardt and Galunic, 2001: 111-138 ).
Management
and organizational theorists have been significantly influenced by this
perspective of evolution;
As a result they believe that
organisations are influenced by the environment; that environmental change is
gradual, requiring concomitant organisational change; and that effective
organisations are those that conform most closely to environmental
requirements. Firms that cannot or do not adapt to gradual external change
eventually find themselves outpaced by their competitors and forced out of
business.
Organisations
are systems. The Oxford English
Dictionary defines a system as a set or assemblage of things connected, or
interdependent, so as to form a complex unity; a whole composed of parts in orderly
arrangement according to some scheme or plan. Systems can be considered to be
either closed or open. A system is regarded as open if it exchanges
information, energy or material with its environment as happens with biological
or social systems; otherwise it is regarded as closed (Koontz et al, 1981:19).
Researchers have long discovered that organisations are open systems that
constantly interact with their environment and in the process affect and are
affected by the environment. According to Hicks and Gullet (1987:70), an
organisation does not exist in a vacuum but exists in an environment that
provides resources and limitations. If it is to remain prosperous, an
organisation must continually adapt to its environment which is constantly
changing. They also believe that failure to adequately adapt to the environment
is a major cause of organisational failure.
The
environment in which organisations operate in Nigeria as in other parts of the
world is dynamic and is becoming increasingly so. As the environment changes,
there is the need for organisations to change in order to adapt to such
environmental changes. Organisations that are unable to adapt eventually die or
fold up. The increase in the rate of change, complexity as well as level of
competition in the Nigerian business environment can be attributed to a number
of factors. First among such factors is globalization. Propelled by accumulated
developments in transportation and information technology, globalisation has
transformed the economies of the world into one global market where local
market boundaries to a large extent have been effaced. This simply implies that
a firm in Nigeria is not
just competing with other firms in its industry in Nigeria but with every other firm
in the same line of business anywhere in the world. Globalisation therefore
spells intense competition and for firms in developing countries like Nigeria,
this poses a big threat. Of course, it also increases the range of
opportunities open to each individual firm.
This calls for some level of flexibility among firms if they are to
remain competitive.
Commenting
on the importance of organisational flexibility, Blyton (1998:57) states that
greater market uncertainty and changes in technology and production processes
are widely associated with giving added significance to organisational
flexibility and that other factors include growth in international trade and
competition stemming from the increased activities of Japan and other
industrialised nations, expansion of multi-national corporations, increase in
cross border trade due to liberalisation and the collapse of the east-west
divide in Germany. Blyton believes that this growth in competition and
expansion of multinationals into a wider range of markets have made the markets
more volatile and less dependable for individual companies and that this has in
turn heightened the need for organisations to increase their responsiveness and
consequently to develop greater flexibility.
Another
factor that has increased the level of turbulence in the Nigerian business
environment is the extensive and comprehensive economic reform programme which
the federal government has for some time been implementing. This reform
initiative involves among other things the privatisation and commercialisation
of government owned companies (NEEDS, 2004). This has introduced competition
into economic sectors that hitherto were monopolies and has also expanded the
scope of business opportunities available to operators in the private sector.
There is also the recapitalisation requirement for the banking and insurance
sub-sectors which has led to the consolidation of that sector through mergers
and acquisitions. Globalisation and the economic reform programme by the
government together comprise what Kazmi (2005: 108) refers to as the LPG
(liberalisation, privatisation and globalisation) of the business environment.
Combine this with the constant changes occurring in all the other aspects of
the business environment especially government policies and it becomes clear
that any organisation that remains unresponsive is doomed to failure.
Organisational
performance is a multi-dimensional concept that generally indicates how well an
organisation is managed and also the quality of corporate governance of such
organisations. There are so many measures of organisational performance. Some
of them are quantitative while the others are qualitative. Quantitative
measures of organisational performance exist for the determination of specific
aspects of organisational performance mainly in the areas of profitability,
liquidity, activity and efficiency. Profitability measures tend to be the most
popular to researchers in the area of organisational management and this may be
due to the fact that profitability is often the grand objective of business
organisations and also, profitability somewhat sums up the other measures of
performance. However, the Central Bank of Nigeria, the Manufacturers
Association of Nigeria and most researchers also use capacity utilization in measuring the performance of the
manufacturing sector (CBN, 2004: MAN, 2008: Aluko et al, 2004).
Nigeria
is ranked as one of the poorest nations in the world where the citizens survive
on about one dollar per day. There is a very strong correlation between unemployment
and poverty and consequently if the level of employment in the country improves
significantly, poverty level will drop and the standard of living of the
citizens will improve. The manufacturing sector of Nigeria by virtue of its sheer size
and the nature of its operations is in a very good position to significantly
reduce the level of unemployment in the country and consequently the problem of
poverty and crime. If Nigeria
is to make progress towards achieving the millennium development goals (MDGs),
in particular, the target to halt poverty by 2015, it needs renewed
industrialization (BOI, 2004).
The
manufacturing sector is noted as one of the engine of growth, an antidote for
(un)employment, a creator of wealth and the threshold for sustainable development
but it seems to be facing more challenges than any other sector in our economy.
The inability of the sector to cope with the challenges is reflected in its
dismal performance over the years. All the indices of performance for the
sector are negative.
Capacity
utilization, for instance, which is a very good measure of performance for the
sector, has been alarmingly low over the years. As at 1977, capacity
utilization in the sector stood at 78.8 percent; but by 1996, it was down to an
all time low of about 29.3 percent and as at 2004, it was 45 percent (CBN,
2004:292-296). Although this indicates a significant change from the 1996
figure, it is still far below expectation. It has been observed that one of the
greatest problems facing the Nigerian economy is that of low capacity
utilization in the manufacturing sector and this problem became more pronounced
and aggravated by the structural adjustment programme and more recently by
globalisation and all that accompanied it (Aluko et al, 2004: 120).
The
Nigerian manufacturing sector has not been able to contribute significantly to
the economic development of the country as indicated by its contribution to the
nation’s GDP. In 2007, its contribution to GDP was a paltry 7.4 percent (MAN,
2008:35). There is a school of thought that argues that a strong manufacturing
base is not all that important to the health of an economy and that strong
modern economies do not seem to require a dominant manufacturing sector
(Nahmias, 2001:5-6). World Bank (2005) statistics on the output profile of the group of seven industrialized (G7)
countries seem to support this line of argument because it indicates that for
these countries, the service sector contributes an average of 65 per cent of
the gross domestic product (GDP) while the manufacturing sector contributes an
average of about 19 percent (see appendix). However, even going by these
figures, it is obvious that the Nigerian manufacturing sector is not
contributing as much as it should to the economy because there is a wide gap
between what the sector is currently contributing and the average contribution
for the G7 countries.
The high
rate of mortality in the sector clearly highlights the inability of the sector
to cope with its challenges. According to Jide (2006), over 750 firms in the
sector have closed down in the recent past (in 2000, MAN was made up of about
2000 member companies) and many more face the prospect of imminent collapse in
the near future. As at 2006, a survey by
MAN shows that 30 per cent of the industries were classified as closed down, 60
per cent were classified as ailing while only 10 per cent of the firms in the
sector were classified as operating at sustainable level (MAN, 2006:49).
Over the
years, the problem highlighted by the Manufacturers Association of Nigeria
(2008:36, 2006:49) as being responsible for the poor performance of the sector
had been basically the same and they include;