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“The frog in the pan”: relational transformation of public values in the UK tax authority

Sara C. Closs-Davies (Bangor Business School, Bangor University, Bangor, UK)
Koen P.R. Bartels (Institute of Local Government Studies, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK)
Doris M. Merkl-Davies (Bangor Business School, Bangor University, Bangor, UK)

Accounting, Auditing & Accountability Journal

ISSN: 0951-3574

Article publication date: 30 October 2020

Issue publication date: 10 September 2021

657

Abstract

Purpose

The authors aim to contribute to conceptual and empirical understanding of publicness in public sector accounting research by analysing how accounting technologies facilitated the transformation of public values of the UK tax authority.

Design/methodology/approach

The authors develop a conceptual framework for analysing public values in terms of relational power. Combining governmentality and actor–network theory, the authors focus on the complex relationships through which human and non-human actors interact and the public values that emerge from these evolving socio-material networks. Based on a critical-interpretivist ethnographic study of interviews, documents and secondary survey data, the authors identify the emergent properties of accounting technologies in their case study.

Findings

The authors explain how accounting technologies facilitated the transformation of public values in the tax authority by reshaping relational power. Traditional public values were eroded and replaced by neoliberal values through a gradual change process (“frog in the pan”) of (1) disconnecting workers and citizens both spatially and socially; (2) losing touch with the embodied nature of tax administration; and (3) yielding to a dehumanising performance management system. Neoliberal accounting technologies transformed the texture of relationships in such a way that workers and citizens became disempowered from effective, accountable and humane tax administration.

Research limitations/implications

Further research is needed that gains wider access to tax authority workers, extends the scope of the empirical data and provides comparisons with other tax authorities and public sector organisations.

Social implications

The authors show that a relational approach to public values enables identification of what is “valuable” and how public sector organisations can become “value-able”.

Originality/value

The authors offer an interdisciplinary conceptualisation of publicness based on public administration literature, develop a relational conceptualisation of public values and provide original empirical evidence about the changing publicness of the UK tax authority.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors are thankful for the constructive feedback provided by participants of the virtual Critical Perspectives on Accounting (CPA) conference in July 2020 on a prior version of this paper. The authors would also like to thank the two anonymous reviewers and the editors of the Special Issue on Accounting for Public Services: Reconsidering Publicness in Accounting Research and Practice, Enrico Bracci, Iris Saliterer, Maria Francesca Sicilia, and Ileana Steccolini. The authors are grateful to David Massey, University of Central Lancashire, for providing archival data to support the research project on UK Tax Credits (TC) administration this paper builds on.

Citation

Closs-Davies, S.C., Bartels, K.P.R. and Merkl-Davies, D.M. (2021), "“The frog in the pan”: relational transformation of public values in the UK tax authority", Accounting, Auditing & Accountability Journal, Vol. 34 No. 7, pp. 1635-1663. https://doi.org/10.1108/AAAJ-11-2019-4280

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2020, Emerald Publishing Limited

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