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Leveraging business intelligence systems to enhance management control and business process performance in the public sector

Mohamed Z. Elbashir (Department of Accounting and Information Systems, Qatar University, Doha, Qatar)
Steve G. Sutton (Department of Accounting, Auditing and Law, NHH Norwegian School of Economics, Bergen, Norway and Dixon School of Accounting, University of Central Florida, Orlando, Florida, USA)
Vicky Arnold (Department of Accounting, Auditing and Law, NHH Norwegian School of Economics, Bergen, Norway and Dixon School of Accounting, University of Central Florida, Orlando, Florida, USA)
Philip A. Collier (Department of Accounting, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia)

Meditari Accountancy Research

ISSN: 2049-372X

Article publication date: 23 November 2021

Issue publication date: 14 July 2022

1164

Abstract

Purpose

Recent research and policy reports indicate public sector organizations struggle to leverage information technology-based performance measurement systems and fail to effectively evaluate performance beyond financial metrics. This study aims to focus on organizational factors that influence the assimilation of business intelligence (BI) systems into integrated management control systems and the corollary impact on improving business process performance within public sector organizations.

Design/methodology/approach

The complete Australian client list was acquired from a leading BI vendor; and the authors surveyed all public sector organizations, receiving 226 individual responses representing 160 public sector organizations in Australia. Using latent construct measurement, structural equation modeling (SEM)-partial least squares is used to test the theoretical model.

Findings

When top management promotes knowledge creation among the organization’s operational level employees and support their activities with strong BI infrastructure, the same knowledge and infrastructure capabilities that are critical to assimilation in private sector hold in the public sector. However, public sector organizations generally have difficulty retaining staff with expertise in new technologies and attracting new innovative staff that can leverage smart systems to effect major change in performance measurement. When top management effectively manages knowledge importation from external entities to counteract deficiencies, public sector organizations effectively assimilate BI knowledge into performance measurement yielding strong process performance.

Research limitations/implications

When top management promotes knowledge creation among the organization’s operational level employees and support their activities with strong BI infrastructure, the same knowledge and infrastructure capabilities critical to assimilation in the private sector hold in the public sector. However, public sector organizations generally have difficulty retaining staff with expertise in new technologies and attracting new innovative staff that can leverage smart systems to effect major change in performance measurement. The research extends the theory behind organizational absorptive capacity by highlighting how knowledge importation can be used as an external source facilitating internal knowledge creation. This collaborative knowledge creation leads to affective assimilation of BI technologies and associated performance gains.

Practical implications

The results provide guidance to public sector organizations that struggle to measure and validate service outcomes under New Public Management regulations and mandates.

Originality/value

The results reveal that consistent with the philosophies behind New Public Management strategies, private sector measures for increasing organizational absorptive capacity can be applied in the public sector. However, knowledge importation appears to be a major catalyst in the public sector where the resources to retain skilled professionals with an ability to leverage contemporary technologies into service performance are often very limited. Top management team knowledge and skills are critical to effectively leveraging these internal and external knowledge creation mechanisms.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to thank participants in presentations at Clemson University, University of Technology Sydney, the Accounting Information Systems Mid-Year Meeting of the American Accounting Association, and in particular Jared Koreff, Diane Janvrin, Prabhu Sivabalan, and Sally Widener.

Citation

Elbashir, M.Z., Sutton, S.G., Arnold, V. and Collier, P.A. (2022), "Leveraging business intelligence systems to enhance management control and business process performance in the public sector", Meditari Accountancy Research, Vol. 30 No. 4, pp. 914-940. https://doi.org/10.1108/MEDAR-04-2021-1287

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2021, Emerald Publishing Limited

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