
The Quiet Crisis: Why Performative Leadership and Rote Learning Are Failing Societies
From West Africa to Southeast Asia, a growing recognition that visibility without substance and memorisation without understanding are undermining institutions and the next generation.
A curious convergence is emerging across continents. In boardrooms from Lagos to Jakarta, and in classrooms from Dubai to Nairobi, a similar disquiet is taking shape: societies are increasingly rewarding the appearance of leadership and learning over their substance. A Nigerian commentator observes that Africa does not lack leaders, but rather suffers a deficit of presence—the quiet, relational discipline of listening, noticing, and holding complexity without rushing to control it. Meanwhile, a Gulf-based reflection on education warns that when memorisation becomes the primary goal, creativity is pushed to the margins and curiosity gives way to compliance. The pattern is strikingly consistent. Whether it is the executive who masters the performance of certainty or the child drilled to reproduce a passage word for word, the underlying bargain is the same: short-term approval in exchange for long-term depth.
Viewed from Accra, the remedy begins with conviction. A Ghanaian management scholar argues that leadership is not measured by popularity but by the courage to make difficult decisions and accept responsibility for the outcome. Yet conviction, as analysts in Nairobi note, is not merely about communication; it is about understanding power. Stakeholder management, particularly for finance professionals and women in senior roles, requires clarity anchored in data and policy, firm boundaries, and composure under pressure—disciplines that resist the informal influence and behind-the-scenes politicking that can erode governance. American executive coaches add that resistance to change is inevitable, driven by status quo bias and loss aversion, and that leaders must lean into it rather than retreat, keeping even their detractors close while remaining hyper-political and attentive to the hidden conversations that shape decisions.
In Southeast Asia, the conversation turns inward. Indonesian psychologists and religious voices stress that relentless busyness is not a badge of failure but a sign of striving, yet it must be tempered with rest and spiritual anchoring. A Friday sermon circulating in Jakarta urges the faithful to maintain a daily relationship with the Quran even amid crushing schedules, framing it as nourishment for the heart that no amount of worldly productivity can replace. The same sensibility extends to parenting: Indonesian educators advise creating calm, consistent learning environments at home, monitoring progress without taking over tasks, and modelling curiosity—a quiet presence that, much like the leadership described in West Africa, values being over performing.
The forward-looking question is whether institutions and families can recalibrate what they reward. If leadership cultures continue to prize the loudest voice and the quickest answer, organisations will keep mistaking activity for transformation. If education systems persist in measuring recall rather than understanding, the next generation will enter a complex world equipped with stored facts but starved of the creative, critical faculties employers increasingly demand. The quiet work of becoming—the leader who listens before reacting, the parent who guides without controlling, the professional who reads a sacred text not for display but for inner steadiness—may never make headlines. But across Africa, the Middle East and Asia, a growing body of thought suggests it is precisely this unglamorous discipline that will determine whether societies merely perform progress or actually achieve it.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 1 languages
In Africa, leadership is not about loud performance but about quiet presence, deep listening, and creating spaces where people feel seen. True leaders practice reflection, curiosity, and conviction, understanding that influence often flows through informal networks and shared history rather than formal authority.
In Southeast Asia, leadership lessons are drawn from daily life: maintaining spiritual discipline like reading the Qur'an despite busyness, guiding children's learning with patience, and refusing to surrender to exhaustion. True leadership is about perseverance, family involvement, and staying motivated through life's pressures.
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