Publication | Open Access
Constraining and facilitating management control in times of austerity
57
Citations
53
References
2015
Year
Mc ElementsBehavioral Decision MakingAgent TheoryOrganizational BehaviorSocial SciencesPublic Sector ContextManagement Control SystemBureaucracyManagementFacilitating Management ControlGovernmental DepartmentsManagement AnalysisManagerial Control SystemsEconomicsPublic PolicyManagerial AspectEconomic ControlControl EnvironmentEconomic PolicyBusinessRegulation
Abstract Purpose The purpose of this paper is to examine how management control (MC) within governmental departments is used in times of austerity, and how insights from agency and stewardship theory can enhance the understanding of this issue. Design/methodology/approach The authors distinguish two types of MC (constraining and facilitating) based on their different assumptions regarding human behavior (agent-like and steward-like). The authors empirically analyze changes in the use of these types of MC in four cases located in two municipalities. The collected data consists of 51 semi-structured interviews, desk research and multiple field observations. Findings The authors find that MC at the departmental level becomes more constraining in times of austerity. The authors suggest that an overemphasis on constraining MC has negative consequences. It can, for instance, evoke agent-like, opportunistic behavior while it disregards potential steward-like behavior. These negative consequences are less prevalent when there is a simultaneous increase in emphasis on the use of facilitating MC elements. Originality/value The authors acknowledge "human ambivalence," i.e. an employee's recurring choice between agent-like and steward-like behavior, and illustrate the dangers of overly relying on constraining types of MC. The authors also contemplate alternative strategic managerial responses to austerity in a public sector context.
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