Lars Östman towards a general theory of financial control
Horizontal tensions and forms of mobility
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Horizontal tensions and forms of mobility
Horizontal processes contain many of the factors that are ultimately significant for everybody in his/her unique life as a social being, consumer and worker. Additionally, purely financial transactions take place in such processes. Many pivotal horizontal processes are in a state of high tensions and vertical processes set conditions. At least latently and in the course of time, interests stand in opposition to each other: financiers´ opportunities to use resources in alternative ways, room for action for a continuous organisation, the output and prices offered to users, and working conditions, including remuneration. Relationships between external processes and internal processes are important; variations in direction and strength are many. They may vary over time. Shifts in surroundings, without any particular immediate connection to an individual organisation, may nevertheless form a crucial strategic impulse. All horizontal processes have some similarities but each one also has its own profile, especially those that essentially intervene in some person´s urgent functions. Organisational behaviour is important in this context. In the horizontal line, organisations act forwards and backwards. Forwards, they make offers and provide output to users and buyers. Mostly, they want output to be appreciated and, especially in the case of pay-driven organisations, to appear as competitive, that is, particular and difficult to substitute for a certain group of buyers and users. Communicative elements are user-oriented and perhaps personal, at least on the surface, while uniformity, standardisation and efficiency are essential for accomplished services as well as physical products as such. Backwards, organisations try to substitute, that is, look for opportunities to replace one resource with another and to reduce input and costs. In the horizontal line, information systems for interaction between organisations and external parties, especially customers, have changed radically. Control systems gradually develop to capture external events, views and tendencies and to influence the surrounding actors. At the same time, each individual wants to preserve and improve capabilities from his/her point of view and to have liberty of choice. Ambitions and hopes for consumption vary with fundamental conditions. Many people have alternatives and can make choices for major and minor functions. For a majority of people in Western countries, ambitions extend much further than to primary functions. Experiential functions have had more weight in relation to
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material functions. Buyers with purchasing power can take advantage of offers when new products are launched and are, in general, attracted by opportunities to substitute. For various reasons, in some parts of the world and at some stages in life, individual influence on most pivotal functions is only marginal. As workers, most people are themselves candidates for being removed and perhaps substituted. Spatial boundaries tend to widen step by step. Professional practices of restructuring have changed accordingly. The fact that human beings are possible substitutes from a collective point of view means a decisive dependence on the surrounding entities. These circumstances shape conditions for each individual. In principle, the pace of the long- and short-term systems movements may be related to possible effects on the unique, finite lives of individuals, who have their existential prerequisites and need for mobility and influence on their own personal matters. Central executives play a key role in vertical control processes, or at least they have a possibility to gain this role. Such managers may bridge the gap between the perspectives that financial principals represent and activity-oriented perspectives within an organisation. Upwards, a manager needs trust from vertical principals to whom the manager has a distance. S/he, and accountants, have responsibility for the preparation of reports that comply with external standards. Downwards, s/he can arrange a control process on his/her conditions. S/he will observe operative activities at a distance that is considerable in large organisations. Principals at the top, in the private sector as well as in the public sphere, have a special mobility because they have alternative uses of money. Financiers are in a position to direct requirements placed on the activity, explicitly or implicitly, in combination with financial frameworks that are more or less clear. Each activity that needs money from the outside must be sufficiently attractive in these respects and for the users of output. Functions and visions of an organisation with a continuous activity are confronted with a need for financial resources for alternative use. Divergence between the two perspectives is intrinsically unavoidable. Decoupling between activities and the financial function can only be temporary – although it may be difficult to predict acute points of time.
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