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The interface between traditional organisational practices and a World Bank-led performance management reform

Mahmud Al Masum (Adelaide Business School, The University of Adelaide, Adelaide, Australia)
Lee Parker (Adam Smith School of Business, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK)

Meditari Accountancy Research

ISSN: 2049-372X

Article publication date: 11 June 2024

Issue publication date: 10 September 2024

148

Abstract

Purpose

This paper aims to investigate how the technical logics of a World Bank-led performance management reform interacted with the social, political and historical logics within a developing country (DC) regulatory organisation. The institutional environment both within and outside the organisation was considered to understand the performance management reform experience.

Design/methodology/approach

An interview-based, longitudinal, qualitative case study approach was used to locate accounting in its technical, social and political space. A large regulatory organisation in Bangladesh was investigated as a case study to reveal how traditional organisational practices and public sector norms mediated a performance management reform. Informed by the institutional logics (IL) and economies of worth perspectives, interviews were used to locate IL at macro-level and associated organisational actors’ strategic responses that ultimately shaped the implementation of a performance management system (PMS).

Findings

This paper reveals how accounting, as a social and political practice, influences accountability reform within a regulatory organisation. It provides an account of both the processes and resultant practices of an accounting reform initiative. While a consultative and transparent performance management process was intended to enhance accountability, it challenged the traditional organisational authority structure and culture. The new PMS retained, modified and adjusted a number of its characteristics over time. These adjustments reflected an amalgamation of the influence of institutional pressures from powerful constituents and the ability of the local agents (managers) in negotiating and mediating the institutionalisation of a new PMS.

Practical implications

The findings of this paper carry major implications for policy makers, particularly with respect to the design of future reform programs on PMS.

Originality/value

This paper offers a theoretical mapping of IL and its organisation-level interpretations and practices. Thus, the authors locate power and influence at field and firm levels. The findings of this study reflect historical, political and cultural backgrounds of the case study organisation and how these contextual forces were active in shaping the meaning of reform logics. Though the institutional environment and agents were unique to the case study organisation, this research offers a “process generalisation” that reveals how a best practice PMS was translated and transformed by the traditional organisational practices in a DC regulatory context.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to acknowledge the valuable feedback from the participants of the Asia Pacific Interdisciplinary Research in Accounting (APIRA) Conference, July 1–3, 2019, Auckland, New Zealand. The authors also gratefully acknowledge the helpful comments received from the Editor and two anonymous Reviewers on earlier versions of the paper.

Citation

Masum, M.A. and Parker, L. (2024), "The interface between traditional organisational practices and a World Bank-led performance management reform", Meditari Accountancy Research, Vol. 32 No. 5, pp. 1931-1976. https://doi.org/10.1108/MEDAR-06-2023-2041

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2024, Emerald Publishing Limited

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