Lars Östman towards a general theory of financial control
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An overview of main trends
At an early stage, pay-driven companies were managed by circles close to an owner and a family, on their conditions. People in the neighbourhood were dependent on their attitudes and financial capacity. Most sub-units within the pay-driven organisations concerned functions. Function-driven organisations were not so numerous and so large. This was also the case within the State and municipalities. They were evaluated and financed by representatives as principals. During the 20 th century, vertical structures and processes developed fundamentally. They were strengthened, both outside and within organisations. Power distribution along the vertical line varied, but generally there was a clear trend towards conditioned 15
decentralisation. Shorter time periods were followed up more frequently. Not only wealthy individuals but also people in general became dependent on rates of return on stock markets as a financial source. This change, implemented through institutional ownership, affected how the economy worked. Also, the vertical structure became more and more multinational for private organisations. In certain cases, owners came from various countries, group management and headquarter from another country than most of the owners, subsidiaries were located in a third and operating units in a fourth country, which might be the same as for some of the higher levels. For nations, not least in Europe, super-national levels developed in critical respects. Structures and control systems were more and more oriented towards relating costs in one step of the horizontal flow with immediate and tangible functions in the next step. Pay- driven organisations were established wherever possible. Function-driven organisations often developed a pseudo-commercial nature. Some of them were given financial independence in the sense that their income-generating capability was decisive for activity volume. There was a general move away from function-driven units that were managed in traditional cost-based forms. Strictly identifying output, and assigning prices, rather than emphasizing common and less distinct functions, was one of the most noticeable ideas in financial control during the latter part of the 20 th century. A tendency towards “commodification” evolved. For function-driven organisations too, some kind of “product” is delivered from producers to users, who are human beings or organisations and who may have a real option or not. In the horizontal line, thus, structures and financial control systems were more and more oriented towards specific use, immediate use, target groups or at least pronounced views of target groups. The period in and around the 1970s was an exception to this development, with a heavy emphasis on union and employee perspectives. At the same time as the focus on tangible use gradually increased, the activities of many units had more distant connections to end use. To an increasing extent, horizontal flows were extended across national borders. Thus, interdependences were more complex, including being more comprehensive spatially. Technology and the internet changed patterns and distances between organisations and users. Efficient relations with an output user from an organisation´s point of view did not necessarily mean routines that favoured pre-use contacts, accessibility and contacts at the moments of use from the users´ point of view. Often, experiential functions of output required flexible human use contacts rather than the technical properties of a computerized communication system.
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