TY - JOUR
T1 - The impact of society on management control systems
AU - Greve, Jan
AU - Ax, Christian
AU - Bedford, David S.
AU - Bednarek, Piotr
AU - Brühl, Rolf
AU - Dergard, Johan
AU - Ditillo, Angelo
AU - Dossi, Andrea
AU - Gosselin, Maurice
AU - Hozee, Sophie
AU - Israelson, Poul
AU - Janschek, Otto
AU - Johanson, Daniel
AU - Johansson, Tobias
AU - Madsen, Dag Ovind
AU - Malmi, Teemu
AU - Rohde, Carsten
AU - Sandelin, Mikko
AU - Strömsten, Torkel
AU - Toldblod, Thomas
AU - Willert, Jeannette
PY - 2017
Y1 - 2017
N2 - The aim of this study is to investigate whether certain configurations of management controls dominate in certain societies (socio-cultural contexts) and whether the effectiveness of a given archetype of management control systems (MCSs) varies depending on the socio-cultural setting—the society—in which it operates. The study focuses on three socio-cultural groups and the corresponding institutional contexts (an Anglo-Saxon group, a Central European group, and a Northern European group) and three MCS archetypes (delegated bureaucratic control, delegated output control, and programmable output control). We use unique data from a cross-national, interview-based survey encompassing 610 strategic business units from nine countries (seven European countries plus Canada and Australia). The idea that firms tend to adapt MCSs to the socio-cultural context does not gain empirical support in this study. No significant differences in the distribution of MCSs between the three socio-cultural groups are noted. However, we do find that programmable output control has a more positive impact on effectiveness in Anglo-Saxon cultures, while delegated output control has a more positive impact on effectiveness in Northern Europe. Taken together these findings indicate that distinct differences between societies make a particular MCS design more appropriate in a given society, but where such differences are not dramatic (as in the present case), multiple MCS designs can be found in the same society.
AB - The aim of this study is to investigate whether certain configurations of management controls dominate in certain societies (socio-cultural contexts) and whether the effectiveness of a given archetype of management control systems (MCSs) varies depending on the socio-cultural setting—the society—in which it operates. The study focuses on three socio-cultural groups and the corresponding institutional contexts (an Anglo-Saxon group, a Central European group, and a Northern European group) and three MCS archetypes (delegated bureaucratic control, delegated output control, and programmable output control). We use unique data from a cross-national, interview-based survey encompassing 610 strategic business units from nine countries (seven European countries plus Canada and Australia). The idea that firms tend to adapt MCSs to the socio-cultural context does not gain empirical support in this study. No significant differences in the distribution of MCSs between the three socio-cultural groups are noted. However, we do find that programmable output control has a more positive impact on effectiveness in Anglo-Saxon cultures, while delegated output control has a more positive impact on effectiveness in Northern Europe. Taken together these findings indicate that distinct differences between societies make a particular MCS design more appropriate in a given society, but where such differences are not dramatic (as in the present case), multiple MCS designs can be found in the same society.
UR - http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0956522116303086
U2 - 10.1016/j.scaman.2017.08.002
DO - 10.1016/j.scaman.2017.08.002
M3 - Journal article
SN - 0956-5221
VL - 33
SP - 253
EP - 266
JO - Scandinavian Journal of Management
JF - Scandinavian Journal of Management
IS - 4
ER -