The “Object of Control” Frame Work - Merchant and Van der Stede Flashcards

1
Q

What is Management Control (MC)?

A
  • The process of ensuring that employee’s behaviour is aligned with organisational goals through the use of financial and non-financial information and monitoring mechanisms
  • Influencing behaviors in desirable ways
  • MC is internally focused whereas strategic control in more concerned with the external positioning of the firm.
  • Financial Services illustrate the importance of MC as poor control systems have seen the miss selling of PPI, tax evasions and interest rate manipulation in the finance sector. UBS fined £29.7 M by FSA over rogue trader. Reputation as a “most valuable asset”.
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2
Q

Under the broad area of management what are the three processes discussed?

A

• Objective setting - the prerequisite for any purposeful activity and MCS, important in determining success.
• Strategy formulation – define how organisations will use their resources in order to meet their objectives
• Management control – focuses on execution. Are our employees likely to behave appropriately?
1. Understand Expectations
2. Pursue objectives in line with strategy
3. Capability

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3
Q

Why is there a behavioural emphasis?

A
  • People make things happen and businesses rely on people e.g. cost reduction
  • People can work against or around systems
  • If employees could always be relied on their would be no need for a MCS but are sometimes unable or unwilling to act in the organisations best interest so managers must take steps to guard against the occurrence of undesirable behaviour and encourage desirable.
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4
Q

What problems should management controls address?

A
  • Lack of direction – Due to lack of clarity about organisational goals and instructions for how to meet them. 81% of senior managers understands the value drivers of their business strategy and 13% believe non-management understand them. Employees set goals based on their own views rather than direction from leadership.
  • Motivational problems – occurs because the individual vs firm objective do not coincide (individual self-interest). Frederick Taylor’s scientific management says individuals work slowly on purpose. Revenue losses due to surfing internet and fraud. “Every single person in your business is trying to steal from you”. Motivation should be the primary focus of MCSs
  • Personal limitations – occurs when a person lacks aptitude, training, stamina, experience or knowledge of the tasks at hand. Promotions to positions above competence. Poor job design. Limits in facing new problems, remembering facts and processing information properly.
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5
Q

What are the mechanisms for control problem avoidance?

A
  • Activity avoidance – Subcontracting, licencing and divestment. Also lose profits. Deutsche bank. Cloud computing. Can increase transaction costs.
  • Automation – the use of computers, robots and expert systems to rid human problems of dishonesty, disloyalty, inaccuracy and lack of motivation. Bank trading digital lower risk. Limitations of feasibility and cost. Exposed to programme errors and fraud. Self-serve kiosks in all super markets.
  • Centralisation- lower level employees making bad decisions “McDonaldization of things”. Not fashionable and creates “red tape”
  • Risk sharing – Insurance!
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6
Q

What are results controls and what determines their success?

A

• Systems built around the definition of relevant dimensions for performance measurement, setting of performance targets and provision of performance-related rewards.
• Traditionally focused on financial performance but increasingly incorporating both financial and non-financial performance dimensions (e.g., the Balanced Scorecard).
• Results controls work best when there is:
- Goal clarity
- Controllability
- Measurability

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7
Q

What type of organizational structure do results controls facilitate?

A
  • Decentralized - Entrepreneurial model
  • Corporate managers can judge the effectiveness and efficiency of each entity whilst leaving the execution of operations to those responsible for the performance of the decentralized entities. Ideal with professionals in businesses with fast changing environment.
  • DuPont strategic business units – responsiveness
  • It can lead to increased complexity, transaction costs, inefficiencies and inconsistencies – Johnson and Johnson
  • It can further lead to corruption – French Carrefour in china
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8
Q

How do results controls eliminate control problems?

A
  • Lack of direction – well defined results inform employees as to what is expected of them and direct employees focus to certain objectives e.g. sales
  • Motivation Problems – the result controls reduce motivational problems if the performance targets are effective and incentive for achieving results furthers employees personal benefits
  • Personal limitation - result controls promise rewards for good performers which helps organizations attract and retain employees who are confident in their abilities.
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9
Q

What are the four steps in implementing results controls?

A
  1. Defining the relevant dimension(s) which results are desired
  2. Measuring performance in the chosen dimensions
  3. Setting performance targets for employees to attain for each of the measures
  4. Providing rewards for target attainment to encourage behaviours.
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10
Q

What are some of the problems with results controls?

A
  • You are what you measure – unprecise metrics can achieve undesired performance
  • Jean Tirole showed how they can skew efforts and encourage excessive risk taking we saw in the financial crisis with short term annual Bonuses.
  • Public sector – police department human trafficking neglected to solve higher volumes of easy crimes – ill-defined performance targets
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11
Q

What determines the effectiveness of performance measurements?

A
  • Precision – the amount of randomness in the measure - e.g. social responsibility hard to measure - Imprecise measures increase the risk of misevaluating performance
  • Objectivity – free from judgemental bias – independent and audited
  • Timeliness – minimal time lag for motivation (deferred bank bonuses) and intervention before the issue worsens causing more harm
  • Understandability - what they are held accountable for
  • Cost efficiency!
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12
Q

When is the use of results controls not appropriate?

A

• In situations where there are many, significant, uncontrollable influences which affect the available result measures, results controls are not effective.

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13
Q

What is an action control?

A
  • A type of control which involves ensuring that employees perform (do not perform) certain actions known to be beneficial (harmful) to the organization.
  • Although action controls are commonly used in organizations, they are not effective in every situation.
  • They are feasible only when managers know what types of actions as un(desirable) and have the supervisory ability to ensure that these types of actions (do not) occur.
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14
Q

What are behavioural constraints and give an example?

A
  • They are 1 out of the 4 basic forms of action controls
  • Behavioural Constraints are “negative” and a constraining form of action controls
  • They make it impossible, or at least more difficult, for employees to do things they should not do. These can be applied physically or administratively.
  • Physical – locks, ID card scanners, Passwords etc retail inventory shrinkage – staff stealing – CITV, observation mirrors and tip lines! Data protection “Honey Pots”
  • Administrative – limits employee’s ability to perform all or a portion of tasks/actions. Whether they can approve expenditures and to what amount. This is dependent on managers doing their jobs. Separation of duties making it impossible for one person to complete the whole task.
  • Poka-yokes are combination and physical and administrative designed to make a system fool-proof
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15
Q

What are Pre-action reviews and give an example?

A
  • Pre-action reviews involve the scrutiny of actions plans. Reviewers can approve or disapprove the proposed actions, request modifications, or ask for a more carefully considered plan before granting approval.
  • Budget setting, NHS Business Cases and NHS Journals
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16
Q

What is action accountability and give an example?

A
  • Holding people responsible for their actions (rather than their results)
  • Defining, communicating, observing, rewarding/punishing
  • Policy’s, contracts or codes of conduct
  • Monitoring and supervision – GPS truck drivers
  • Nurse Check List
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17
Q

Which action controls prevent and which detect?

A
  • Prevent – behavioural constraints (locks, badges), pre-action reviews, redundancy
  • Detect – Action Accountability, all info needs to be gathered before harm can be spotted
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18
Q

Action controls are only effective when:

A
  • Organisations can determine what actions are un(desirable) – need to be up to date, well defined and not too tight.
  • Organisations are able to ensure that un(desirable) actions (do not) occur. – Management override – AllFirst Finance – FOREX. Fraud survey, 1/5 could have been prevented if management had done a sufficient job of reviewing. Another 1/5 could have been prevented had there not been an override of management controls. Hard to measure – length of calls but what if the customer is difficult?
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19
Q

What are personnel controls and what do they do?

A
  • Personnel controls build on employees natural tendencies to control or motivate themselves
  • Clarify expectations, they help ensure each employee understands what the organization wants
  • Personnel controls help ensure each employee is able to do a good job; that they have all the capabilities (experience, intelligence) and resources (information and time) needed to do the job.
  • Some personnel controls increase the likelihood that each employee will engage in self-monitoring a force which pushes most employees to want to do a good job, natural commitment.
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20
Q

Give three examples of personnel controls

A

Selection and Placement
• Organizations devote considerable time to it and there is much literature surrounding how to do it best.
• Selection - referencing checking increases after fraud increases, skills match to job requirements. Home Depot – computer system pre-screened candidates with correct skills and experience. Social Media.

Training
• A common way to increase the likelihood that employees will do a good job. Provides good information about what actions and results are expected.
• Positive motivational effects as it give a greater sense of professionalism.
• It can be formal (classroom) or informal (mentoring)

Job Design and Provision of Necessary Resources
•A well designed job to make sure motivated and qualified employees have a high probability of success. Some organisations do not give their employees a chance to succeed.
• Employees need a particular set of resources in order to do a good job; information, equipment, staff support or freedom from interruption.
• In large organizations particularly there is a strong need for transfers of information to maintain coordination of well timed, efficient actions and decisions.

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21
Q

What are cultural controls and what do they do?

A
  • Cultural controls are designed to encourage mutual monitoring; a powerful form of group pressure on individuals who deviate from group norms and values.
  • In some collectivist cultures such as Japan, incentives to avoid anything that would disgrace oneself and one’s family are paramount.
  • Cultures are built on shared traditions, norms, beliefs, values, ideologies, attitudes and ways of behaving. These cultural norms are embodied in written and unwritten rules that govern employee’s behaviours.
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22
Q

Give examples of cultural controls

A

Codes of Conduct
• These are formal written documents which provide broad, general statements of organisational values, commitments to stake holders, and the ways in which mgmt. would like the organisation to function.
• Messages should be reinforced in formal training sessions and informal discussions
• 4/5 FTSE 100 companies had explicit code of conduct in 2010
• Value based approach to drive ethical decision making and improve the organizations reputation.
• E-learning modules, ethics hotlines and whistle-blowing mechanisms.
• Surveys show that pressure to obtain results, systems that reward results over means, fear of job losses and general cynicism towards the code of conduct contributes to realised misconduct

Group Rewards
• Providing rewards or incentives based on collective achievement also encourages cultural control. E.g. Profit Sharing or Gain Sharing. Encouraging employee stock ownership with effective corporate communications to keep employees informed and enthusiastic encourages employees to think like owners. Culture of ownership and engagement to the mutual benefit of organizations and their employees. Employee engagement is a critical aspect of the organizations overall financial success.
• Group rewards can encourage – on the job training of new employees, teamwork and the creation of peer pressure on individual employees to exert themselves for the good of the group.
• UK Fast, instead of individual cash rewards the money is pooled into a team event. These create shared memories, help team bonding, increase appreciation of people’s different personalities and reinforce the company’s values of being supportive.

Other Approaches To Shape Organisational Culture.
• Intra-organisational transfers or employee rotation – help to transmit culture by improving the socialization of employees throughout the organisation, giving them a better appreciation of the problems faced by different parts of the organization.
• Physical arrangements (office plans, architecture, and interior décor)
• Social arrangements (dress code, institutional habits, behaviours and vocabulary)
• Silicon Valley – informal cultures, casual dress, open office, delivers messages about innovation and employee quality.
• Disney – employees “cast members” “on and offstage”. A work shift is a “performance” and a job description is a “script”
• Tone at the top – management shaping culture from the top. There actions, behaviours and statements. Listening to whistle-blowers e.g. Sally Masterson Lloyds HBoS victimisation.

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23
Q

Which P/C controls can eliminate lack of direction control problem?

A

• Selection and Placement, Training, codes of conduct, group based rewards, intra-organizational transfers and tone at the top.

24
Q

What P/C controls can eliminate motivation problems?

A

• Selection through hiring highly motivated employees or through work groups to create peer pressure to be motivated.

25
Q

Are P/C controls effective?

A
  • All organisations to some extent rely on their employees to guide and motivate themselves.
  • Dreyer’s Grand Ice-cream “we consider hiring the most important decision we can make”
  • Cultural controls can also dominate MCS. The best chance to create a strong culture seems to be early in an organisations life when a founder can imbue the organisation with a distinctive culture Apple Steve Jobs “Cult Like”
  • CC’s are unobtrusive – not thought of as a control system.
  • Peter Drucker “culture eats strategy for breakfast”
  • Useable in every setting, lower cost and less side effects
  • “Soft” is shown to make economic sense but “Too Strong” can also be a disadvantage, especially when they need changing. Culture Carriers.
26
Q

To implement tight control, what is required by management?

A

• That management has a good understanding of how one or more control objects – results, actions and personnel/culture relate and contribute to overall organisational objectives

27
Q

What are tight and loose controls? Why is tight control considered beneficial?

A
  • When specific control mechanisms are detailed and applied frequently and there is limited acceptance of non-compliance
  • When specific control mechanisms are less detailed and frequent application and greater acceptance of non-compliance
  • Tight control is often seen as beneficial as it increases the likelihood of congruence between organisation (strategic) goals and employee behaviour
28
Q

What is required for tight result controls to be implemented?

A
  • Congruence – managers need to understand the objectives and choose the correct performance dimensions to measure (reasonable assumption) apart from government agencies, new services vs cost reduction? Challenging choice of measure
  • Specificity – e.g.$2.99 labour cost per unit of production however some dimensions are harder such as CSR, disaggregate
  • Communication and Internalization
  • Completeness – all dimensions which require good performance so the undefined dimension does not slip. E.g. If only cost is measured quality might slip. Volume vs big ticket items – managerial myopia. British Gas fined £11.1 Million failing to deliver results and their excuses did not sway Ofgem.
  • Performance Measurement Adequacy (precise, objective, timely and understandable)
  • Incentives –direct (rewards) and definite (no excuses)
29
Q

What is the problem associated with tight results controls?

A

• There is a fine line between tight results control and too tight restrictive results controls “too controlling”. Tesco – Motorola armbands monitoring. Good example of tight results controls.

30
Q

What is the purpose of tight results controls and what does organization situations tightness/looseness depend on?

A
  • The purpose of tightening results controls is often to loosen other controls e.g. loosening of action controls by delegating decision rights (decentralisation).
  • The tightness / looseness of control is dependent on financial health/performance of the company, in times of prosperity controls may be lose, in times of recession the controls will tighten.
31
Q

Compare and contrast the action controls at Super Micro Computer and Netflix.

A
  • Behavioural constraints (administrative)
  • Super microcomputer – tight action controls which centralised decision making authority. Mr Liang CEO made every decision, approved everything etc. the company outperformed competitors. The fear is that Mr Liang was detrimental to the business “irreplaceable”
  • Netflix – loose action controls allowing Mr Kail to complete both the choice and approval of invoices, resulting in fraud. Classic segregation of duties violation.
32
Q

How can Pre-action reviews be tight? Where are tight pre-action reviews found?

A
  • The more frequent, detailed and performed by knowledgeable reviewers.
  • Pre-action reviews are tight in areas involving large resource allocation because many investments are not easily reversible and can result in failure of the organisation.
  • Tight pre-action reviews involve intense scrutiny of business plans and the involvement of finance personnel and management.
  • Some organisations use Pre-action reviews before employees can even spend small amounts of money Jeff Bezos, no one flies first class, small teams of employee and cheap furniture. Resulted in $90 billion stock market value and 35% revenue growth.
33
Q

What is required for tight action controls?

A
  • Definitions of actions (congruent, specific, understandable & accepted and complete)
  • Action tracking – tracking of white collar jobs
  • Action reinforcement – punishment
34
Q

What are the two types of control system costs and is there a link between the two?

A
  • Direct – includes all the out of pocket monetary costs required to design and implement MCS’s e.g. cost of paying cash bonuses, investment in information systems, managerial time.
  • Indirect – in terms of dysfunctional attitudes, hard to measure. Include; Behavioural displacement, Gamesmanship, Operating delays and negative attitudes.
  • There is said to be an intricate link between direct and indirect costs. BNP Paribas failure to comply $9bn indirect fine followed by direct costs to overhaul internal controls
35
Q

What is behavioural displacement and how does it affect, result, action and personnel/cultural controls?

A
  • An indirect cost when MCS’s produce or encourages behaviours that are not consistent with the organizations objectives.
  • Results controls – setting of results measures which are incongruent with the organizations “true” objectives. One example includes sales quotas relating to volume rather than high profit “big ticket” items. Incongruence occurs from focusing on easy to quantify results metrics that lead them to incompletely capture all of the desired results. Garbage collection. “is what is counted all that counts?”
  • Action controls – means-ends inversion, meaning that employees pay attention to what they do (the means) while losing sight of what they are to accomplish. Investing only in small investments to be within the action accountability controls but this may not be suboptimal. Incongruence, length of calls. Promotion of rigid, non-adaptive behaviours lack of experimentation and competitive advantage. May hinder innovation.
  • Personnel/ Cultural controls – recruiting the wrong types of employees or providing insufficient training
36
Q

What is Gamesmanship? Discuss two major forms!

A
  • Indirect Cost - We use the term gamesmanship to refer generally to the actions employees take to improve their performance without producing any positive effects for the organization. Results controls mostly!
  • The first type, Creation of Slack resources involves the consumption of organizations resources by employees beyond what is required to achieve company objectives. Relating mostly to result controls which are tight (budget targets). Managers protect themselves against underachieving through budgetary slack, for example. Budgetary slack achieved through negotiating easy achievable targets, deliberately lower than their future prediction. Protection against future contingencies. Positive of slack – reduce tensions, Negative of slack – obscures information and decision making.
  • The second major type, Data Manipulation – (1) falsification of accounting records. (2) Data management - most favourable accounting method or altering operating decisions switching from accelerated to straight line depreciation. Sometimes managers manipulate data so performance is bad so for example share price falls in presence of option grants!!
37
Q

What are operating delays?

A
  • An indirect cost mainly resulting from action controls! Pre-action reviews and behavioural constraints. Minor delays such as entering passwords etc. Major requiring signatures from various managers at various levels. “Straight jacket” operations and hence curtail market responsiveness. “Bureaucracy killing entrepreneurial ship” eg. NHS journals signatures and posting! Duty of separation. Toyota – Gave autonomy to US.
  • Action controls – act first, apologise later.
38
Q

What are negative attitudes and which control do they relate to?

A
  • Mainly related to results and action controls. They include job tension, frustration and resistance they coincident with other behaviours such as game playing, lack of effort, absenteeism and turnover.
  • Results controls can produce negative attitudes! Lack of commitment to performance targets defined in the results controls system. Most employees are not committed to targets considered too difficult, not meaningful, not controllable, or imprudent. Inequitable rewards. Allowing employees to participate in setting targets often reduces negative attitudes to results controls but could create budgetary slack.
39
Q

Is there a 3rd type of cost associated with MCSs?

A

• Adaption costs – especially for multinationals they may need to adapt the MCS to SBU’s or product/service lines due to a difference in competitive strategies.

40
Q

What are the issues related to the assessment of control system costs?

A
  • Direct costs of operating a control system have to be weighed against indirect costs of dysfunctional attitudes/ behaviours.
  • Only some direct costs are quantifiable (e.g. investments in IT but what about managerial time?)
  • Indirect costs are hidden and may only appear when it’s too late to do anything about them.
  • Direct and indirect costs need to be weighed against their benefits - no all benefits are quantifiable in advance, data management benefits.
41
Q

What questions are involved in designing and improving an MCS?

A
  • What is desired? What is likely to happen?
  • A desired stem from objectives, likely to happen refers to any of the 3 control problems occurring (direction, motivation, limitation).
  • If what is likely is different from what is desired then managers must then address the next two questions:
  • What controls should be used? How tightly should they be applied
42
Q

Which controls solve lack of direction?

A
  • Results/Action accountability
  • Pre-action reviews
  • Selection
  • Training
  • Strong culture
  • Group-based rewards
43
Q

What controls solve motivation problems?

A
  • Results and action accountability
  • Behavioural constraints, pre-action reviews
  • Selection, strong culture, group based rewards.
44
Q

What solves personal limitations?

A
  • Selection
  • Training
  • Provision of necessary resources
45
Q

Which MCs to choose?

A

• The management controls to be selected from the feasible alternatives should be those that provide the greatest net benefits.

46
Q

What are the benefits and drawbacks of personnel/ cultural controls?

A
  • Management should start by assessing the adequacy of personnel and cultural controls. The reason for this is their low harmful side effects and out-of-pocket costs.
  • However they are difficult to change, require significant trust and are insufficient alone.
47
Q

What are the benefits and drawbacks of action controls?

A
  • Direct link to actions – reduces need for monitoring
  • Documentation and learning – organizational memory (if a key employee leaves)
  • Key element of bureaucratic forms of organisations where standardization and routinization are desirable attributes (McDonald’s).
  • Ritualistic compliance – lack of adaptation, creativity and innovation (not required in some jobs). Opportunity cost in innovative markets.
  • Sloppiness – cutting corners, check the box type
  • Negative attitudes
  • Operating delays
48
Q

What are the benefits and drawbacks of results controls?

A
  • Results controls can provide effective controls where knowledge as to what actions are desirable is lacking.
  • Enhance autonomy, creativity
  • Relatively low direct costs
  • Imperfect links to actions
  • Behavioural displacement “is what measures all that counts”
  • Gamesmanship – budgetary slack and falsification and data management.
49
Q

What is there to consider when choosing control tightness?

A
  • What are the potential benefits of tight controls? What are the costs? Are there any harmful side effects likely?
  • Tight controls over critical areas, super markets for example – inventory
50
Q

What is Merchant and Van der Stede’s framework based on? What assumption this?

A

• The framework presumes an implicit economics-based model by conceptualising the choice of control systems as an outcome of cost-benefit trade-offs.
Assumptions
• Homo Economicus
• Superiors (principals) and subordinates (agents) are both self-interested and have diverging interests and objectives
• Subordinates are effort and risk adverse
• MCS’s can be reduced to a question of implicit (implied) or explicit (directly stated) contracting.
• Costs and benefits are easily conceptualised and (in principal) are measurable.

51
Q

Under the economics-based approach how does one chose an MCS?

A
  • Where superiors have imperfect information about subordinate’s actions, the former has two basic options: (1) contracts based on behaviour (actions) of the sub and monitor compliance OR (2) contracts based on outcomes (results) of subs actions and design rewards compensating for the risk shift to subordinate.
  • Compare direct costs of 1 and 2
  • Choose least costly alternative subject to contextual constraints.
52
Q

Why do personnel/cultural controls not feature in this EBA to MC?

A
  • Sociology, feelings, social relations.
  • Assumption that social relationships are narrowed down into calculations, social relationships are contractual: emotions etc are irrelevant. Hard to incorporate into model!
  • Fundamental requirement needed for personnel and cultural control – TRUST! Absent from the model. Mutual trust between both parties. How can you trust self- interested, lazy etc?
53
Q

What are the limitations of the economics based model?

A
  • Presumes that organisational members work in a social vacuum and always act on their self-interests. P/C controls, trust? Everyone is lazy, self-interested, why make friends? Social relations to smooth things over
  • Organisational history, political and cultural context and individual psychology differences do not matter. (Specificity). Reflects dominoes of economics in North American business schools. Does not hold as MC travels across the globe, Asia?
  • Reduces the choice of control systems to a matter of (explicit, implicit) economic calculation.
  • The process of changing control systems is largely “black boxed” study static states. Two states of economic equilibrium. What goes on inside the change process?
  • Economic theories are self-fulfilling, they do not reflect the world they are a force behind them! The more we use the model, the more people are indoctrinated towards them. This can reinforce rather than mitigate dysfunctional attitudes and behaviour. (Excuse). Incentives contributing to the financial crisis, bonus schemes enforcing excessive risks with other people’s money!
54
Q

What is the illusion and management control?

A
  • Dermer and Lucas 1986
  • Based on managerial rational (Shareholders).
  • Ignores that organisations are constituted by multiple stakeholders with their own rationality and competing demands. Beginning to change from financial crisis, customers, subprime mortgages and treating ethically. Trade unions? Regulators? Natural environment?
  • Narrow minded, simplistic with view of only shareholders, is control really there?
  • Public sector – new public management private sector to public sector “imitation” forces illusion of management control.
  • Managers are so narrow minded they think they are in control! When they don’t understand what is really going on.
  • Important: Unless managers recognise multiple rationality control may prove illusive. (Conflicts between stakeholders).
  • Prerequisites for management control: specificity, measurability, controllability. In MNC’s, Non-for Profit, complex organisations these break down quickly.
  • Argument relevant now due to technologies available! Sophisticated systems managers trust in believing they can see performance. Managers believe transparency and control, leading managers to believe they know more than they do.
55
Q

Is it possible or desirable to uphold the illusion of managerial of control?

A
  • Easy to uphold management control
  • Allowing every stakeholder to have a voice, completely full democracy? Decision making optimal? Anarchy?
  • Is there a need to uphold illusion of control in order to get things done?
  • Streamlining people’s views to force action. Paradoxically in crisis. Radical action needed or bankruptcy. IBM layoffs and expertise employed. (Ignoring stakeholder groups!)
  • “Never waste a good crisis” there is a need for rapid actions, there’s only 1 way to do it!
  • It is dangerous to expose the illusion of management control as it can destabilise organisations and lead to disruptive conflicts and power struggles.
  • May lead to loss of direction and ambiguity. Illusion of management control allows a lid on a can of words.
56
Q

Since the illusion of managerial control is a consequence of EBA to MCS. What are the alternatives to study MCS?

A
  • There are multiple rationalities from stakeholders
  • Chua 1986 Alternative Paradigms
  • Rationalist/ Functionalist – EBA, assumes equilibrium, little change.
  • Interpretive – examine multi-rationale of approaches. Different dimensions of social reality. (sit back and observe)
  • Critical – tricks! Takes the side of the powerful, observe. (Intervene on the part of under presented party) activist instead of researcher.
57
Q

What can be concluded about the EBA?

A
  • Much traditional textbook thinking on management accounting takes the rationalist/functionalist approach for granted.
  • This may enforce (Dermer and Lucas 1986) “illusion of managerial control” rather than compelling students and managers to question whose interests are being served by MCS? (Chua 1986)
  • A more intelligent way to design MCS is to acknowledge the existence of multiple rationalities and the role of power in organisations
  • Interpretive and critical paradigms may be useful in this regard (Chua 1986).