Lars Östman towards a general theory of financial control
The topical perspective and the fundamental perspective
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The topical perspective and the fundamental perspective
Almost constantly, fundamentals justify the question of how an organisation should view long-term opportunities and requirements. Ultimately, room for action is at stake. The timing and magnitude of actions call for a standpoint. Generally speaking, two conflicting views with almost moral dimensions may be propounded. The first says that economic actions cannot wait – those who cut powerfully and early are the clever ones. Besides, it may be a good idea to take an extra step when insights about a crisis are established. According to the alternative view, it is a virtue not to allow plans to be constrained by financial aspects that may become urgent only later on. The ideal is to extend ambitions so that financial capacity is clearly strained and to give financial indicators a very broad context. What is the wisest line – and how far should one go? It is difficult to get a complete score of the state of activities. An assessment cannot be based merely on what is currently visible. Other variables to be captured are the ability to make choices in the future and exposure to uncertainty. Efficiency and productivity are vital concepts, but they are often extraordinarily difficult to depict with a sufficient range of nuances. They can be viewed either in terms of external output or with regard to the way in which organisations function in their entirety. Many resources can be quantified rather easily, while it is often hardly meaningful to calculate what is achieved, especially not in financial terms. Nor can final results in some cases be given a meaning independent of the resources used. Financial problems become visible when there is a risk that certain financial limits will be exceeded. Information tends to be regarded as a kind of reality in itself. If so, it is interpreted not merely as one representation of processes and states. Formulated in terms of an individual occasion, problems that are identified often rest on narrow grounds in relation to 43
fundamental financial needs. Evaluations and actions may possibly focus on marginal changes or expressed expectations, for example in the form of budgetary values or implicit stock market variables, rather than absolute amounts and entireties. An impression of an immediate crisis may emerge in some cases but not in others, without any important fundamental differences. To some extent, “financial crises” are not problems in the same absolute sense from one occasion to another. An organisation may create room for action either through a solid financial position or through a manifest ability to master current financial emergencies. Strong processes centred on topical circumstances determine many actions, both externally and internally. Each evaluation appears in the context of immediate observations and comparisons. The perceived character of the occasion plays an important role for process atmosphere, for the formulation of a problem picture and for measures taken. Reference points inevitably differ from those that may seem natural in the light of a pattern of events constructed at a much later date. The starting point for a series of numbers is particularly decisive. Continuous measuring points have become increasingly frequent, and the intensity of actions has also increased. More actions are initiated, with repercussions far ahead in the future. In order to achieve congruence between activities and financial limits, a small set of steps is primarily considered on each occasion. The handling of certain demarcated variables becomes a determining factor. Financial limits tend to result in a temporary one-sidedness in actions, depending on what is currently considered movable and influential with sufficient potential. Fundamental issues, however, are extensive and complicated, especially in relation to the narrow problem pictures presented in the short-term reports that are an essential driving force in the management process. A break-through may possibly wait around the corner. For many organisations, however, problems are not temporary, nor are they solved by single actions when they become visible. It is in the nature of things that most actions only have, at best, a temporary impact on the financial situation. Fundamental cost processes continue and it is mostly a question of time before financial limits are again exceeded. Actions take place against a background of demarcated perspectives for activities and financial matters, rather than after analyses of connections in any deeper sense. Powerfulness is evident and based on the strong logic of control systems. A basic question is whether those systems promote exchange perspectives or use perspectives.
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