The God Complex of our politicians
We need leaders who can say "I don't know" or "I was wrong" and that's okay.
In his book his new book, "Adapt: Why Success Always Starts With Failure", Tim Harford, an economist, argues that; the world has become far too unpredictable and complex for today's challenges to be tackled with ready-made solutions and expert opinions. Instead, Harford suggests that, we need to learn to embrace failure and to constantly adapt, to improvise rather than plan, to work from the bottom up rather than the top down.
He comes up with a term called the "God complex" which is practiced by most individuals in leadership positions when they pretend that they know all the solutions. Looking at the state of Zimbabwe today, one is inclined to agree with this gentleman.
There unfortunately is a "God complex", where some leaders in our government or public sector including opposition political parties, believe that because they have a "position" or a "title", they therefore possess the monopoly of wisdom and solutions to the complex social problems we face.
What this has done, is to create a culture of worshiping of our leaders, while alienating those who may have viable alternative solutions or ideas, simply because of their rank in the party or their position in an organization. The result is that, wrong solutions are often implemented, simply because the leaders say so, or bully those around them, using rank to push their inappropriate ideas.