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The MCS package in a non-budgeting organisation: a case study of Mainfreight

Winnie O’Grady (Business School, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand)
Chris Akroyd (College of Business, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon, USA)

Qualitative Research in Accounting & Management

ISSN: 1176-6093

Article publication date: 18 April 2016

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Abstract

Purpose

Budgets are commonly viewed as a central component of management control systems (MCS). The beyond budgeting literature argues that managers can develop other controls to replace budgets. The purpose of this paper is to examine the MCS package of an organisation which has never in its history had a traditional budget.

Design/methodology/approach

The authors carry out an ethnomethodology informed case study at Mainfreight, a large multinational logistics company headquartered in New Zealand. Data were collected from interviews with managers and accountants, internal company documents, published corporate histories, a company presentation, the corporate Web site and site visits.

Findings

The authors found that Mainfreight’s MCS package was explicitly designed based on cultural and administrative systems which supported the planning, cybernetic and reward systems managers used to monitor key drivers of short-and long-term performance with a focus on profitability.

Research limitations/implications

The implication of the finding is that a more holistic view of the MCS package is necessary to understand how control is achieved within organisations that have moved beyond budgeting.

Practical implications

The authors show that organisations can operate without traditional budgets and still maintain a high level of control by developing appropriate cultural and administrative control systems that are internally consistent with their planning, cybernetic and reward systems.

Originality/value

The scarcity of organisations that have never had budgets limits opportunities to investigate an MCS package intended to function without budgets. This unique case setting reveals the design of an integrated non-budgeting MCS package.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

This paper has benefited from the helpful comments on earlier versions made by Theresa Libby, Jan Mouritsen, Norio Sawabe and participants at the 2013 Global Management Accounting Research Symposium (GMARS) held at Michigan State University, as well as seminar participants at Management Accounting Seminars at The University of Auckland and Doshisha University. The authors also acknowledge the valuable comments and feedback from Deryl Northcott (Editor) and the two anonymous reviewers.

Citation

O’Grady, W. and Akroyd, C. (2016), "The MCS package in a non-budgeting organisation: a case study of Mainfreight", Qualitative Research in Accounting & Management, Vol. 13 No. 1, pp. 2-30. https://doi.org/10.1108/QRAM-09-2014-0056

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2016, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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