Author:
Sharma Divesh,Sharma Umesh
Abstract
Purpose
The purpose of this paper is to examine the factors related to the use of the balanced scorecard (BSC) by private companies. Specifically, the authors examine how foreign ownership, focus on a global market beyond the local company’s geographic region and other sophisticated management accounting practices (MAPs) (activity-based costing, just-in-time and total quality management) are related to the use of the BSC.
Design/methodology/approach
The paper takes a contingency theoretic perspective. The data in this study is based on responses to a survey questionnaire that was mailed to 300 non-listed private companies in Singapore. A total of 135 responses were received, but 23 were incomplete, and thus, rendered unusable. Therefore, the final sample for the study is 112 private companies yielding a 37.3 per cent response rate that is considered high for survey research.
Findings
The authors find significant associations between the use of BSC and foreign ownership, focus on a global market and other sophisticated MAPs. The authors find that foreign ownership and a global market focus are significantly and consistently related to the extent to which the BSC is used across seven different management control purposes. The authors also find some evidence of associations between other sophisticated MAPs and the extent to which the BSC is used for management control purposes.
Practical implications
Private companies can use the BSC to better manage risks and use it for purposes such as communicating strategy and objectives, setting targets, evaluating performance, rewarding employees and managers, motivating employees and managers, controlling performance and coordinating across activities, departments and/or functional areas. The study has limitations such as the model is limited and excludes the effects of other significant contingency factors such as organisational culture. It may be appropriate to interview organisational participants to learn more about how their national and organisational culture affects the decision to use the BSC.
Originality/value
The findings fill a critical void in the literature by providing new evidence on the determinants of the use of the BSC by private companies.
Reference93 articles.
1. The impact of firm characteristics on management accounting practices: a UK-based empirical analysis;The British Accounting Review,2008
2. The role of budgets in organisations facing strategic change: an exploratory study;Accounting, Organizations and Society,1999
3. A framework for assessing cost management system changes: the case of activity-based costing implementation at general motors, 1986-1993;Journal of Management Accounting Research,1995
4. New directions in management accounting research;Journal of Management Accounting Research,1997
5. A critique of the balanced scorecard as a performance measurement tool;International Journal of Business and Social Science,2015
Cited by
8 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献