Lars Östman towards a general theory of financial control
Dimensioning and orientation of separate organisations
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Dimensioning and orientation of separate organisations
The growth of an organisation is dependent on the nature of the horizontal flow and how the vertical process is connected to this flow. For pay-driven and transfer-driven organisations, possible in- and outflows, their time pattern, uncertainty and risk are key variables. Growth is essential in several respects. For purely pay-driven and transfer-driven units, share value-in-exchange is significant. Growth in cash flows that are available for dividends has a strong impact on this value. In turn, such growth requires that activities are expanded and rearranged. Consequently, the development of existing business areas and the search for areas and new geographical markets are strong driving forces. Selection and pricing are two powerful mechanisms; prospects in terms of revenues and costs set limits for future development. Expansion is organic or is built on mergers and acquisitions – financial control concepts and processes in the decades around the year 2000 tended to support market transactions. For pay-driven organisations, financial capacity is based on previous values-in-exchange for input and output, surpluses in horizontal processes and attraction on vertical principals and lenders through expected surpluses. Exceptions are possible. For purely function-driven organisations, a specific horizontal process is the starting point and aim. At each point of time, needs and demands to satisfy have a certain scope. If groups 32
of users increase naturally, growth may be required too, as is the case with schools and health care when the population increases. In addition, function-driven organisations may make efforts to reach new groups in new ways. Or they may try to utilize their competence in other contexts by developing new horizontal processes on pay-driven grounds. For function-driven organisations, cost targets are relative easy to determine for output in cases where technology and volume are the main determinants of costs. Targets are much less well-founded for other tasks that are difficult to define, especially general functions for an organisation as such. In those cases, targets will have the form of discretionary limits, period by period. Focusing on output, piece by piece, was not the classical way to dimension function- driven units. Rather, the approach was to identify an activity that had some external functions outside the unit and determine what resources were needed. With such an approach, the value of some vague functions for somebody has to be judged, as well as the resources needed and the possibility and willingness to allocate such funds. Ventures into something new may be problematic for function-driven units with narrow cost limits, unless they involve rationalization or income opportunities. At the development stage, costs are incurred. After that, operations will also mean higher costs than before.
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