The Professions in Africa
People who live in the more developed States go through their entire lives never thinking about the professions that do so much to maintain their societies in some sort of equilibrium and ensuring that the essential services actually work. We seldom acknowledge the work of architects and design engineers until bridges and buildings collapse. We take for granted the mechanical equipment that provides so much of what we use every day - transport, water, electricity and waste disposal.
If we are lucky, we live in a society of law and order - we trust contracts because they can be enforced, we live confident that our basic rights will be protected by the system of law if they are threatened. We have confidence that if we live lives that are upright and law abiding, that the forces of law will stand alongside us when our rights and liberties are threatened.
Then in business and government we rely on the integrity of the accounting and audit professions to ensure that we are told the truth about our finances and about the state of the organisations we work for.
Although the Rhodesian economy was tiny in global terms, it had an amazing administration - never more than about 70 000 individuals (today we employ 250 000 civil servants), it contained many outstanding and deeply committed individuals. The quality of their work and the high standards of their output set the standards for administrations in Africa and are still used very widely as terms of reference here and elsewhere.
Apart from the civil service, which in itself was an amazing institution, the professions played a critical role in building up what became a diversified, self sufficient economy that gave a reasonable standard of living to the people of this country. In particular the service was almost totally honest - corruption was seldom reported or tolerated.