Probity or performance? 150 years of public expenditure reform, UK Defence 1850-2000
Qualitative Research in Accounting & Management
ISSN: 1176-6093
Article publication date: 28 February 2023
Issue publication date: 10 March 2023
Abstract
Purpose
This paper analyses public sector accounting and organisation reforms, focusing on the departments in charge of defence, military procurement and war between 1850 and 2000 in Britain. Over this period, three parliamentary acts, resulting from a power struggle between the Treasury and Parliament, produced the shift between two institutional logics: probity (spending properly) and performance (spending well). The purpose of this paper is to describe how the acts produced a shift between two institutional logics.
Design/methodology/approach
The authors adopt Quattrone’s (2015) procedural notion of institutional logics and the consequent concept of “unfolding rationality”. Using documents from the National Archives, the authors analyse three reforms: The Exchequer and Audit Departments Act 1866 (towards probity), The Exchequer and Audit Departments Act 1921 (towards performance) and the National Audit Office Act of 1983 (towards performance and probity).
Findings
For a long time, the actors narrated in this story argued and acted as if probity and performance were incompatible. The two are now treated as compatible and equally important. Before that, the “incompatibility” was a rhetorical, or “procedural”, device. The authors argue that a procedural rather than substantive notion of institutional logics is more suitable to explain the trajectory that was the result of constant negotiation among actors.
Practical implications
The study might contribute to the understanding of the increase in national defence-spending at continental level and the call for a common European Union (EU) military procurement strategy that followed the invasion of Ukraine. The war could produce changes in what is a traditional tension between two logics: sovereignty or efficiency.
Originality/value
The originality of this paper stands in highlighting the link between the institutional logic of public-administration accounting and military history. This link emerges also thanks to a very long time-horizon. Additionally, from a theoretical viewpoint, the authors have put Quattrone’s approach to the test in a context very different from the original one (the Jesuit order).
Keywords
Acknowledgements
The authors express their gratitude to the reviewers. They have really learnt a great deal from their anonymous feedback. They have read the paper, a very long one, several times and have patiently pushed them to improve it. They have noticed both tiny inaccuracies and large shortfalls, and they have kindly supported them to the stage of publication.
Citation
Bernardi, A. and Hilton, B. (2023), "Probity or performance? 150 years of public expenditure reform, UK Defence 1850-2000", Qualitative Research in Accounting & Management, Vol. 20 No. 2, pp. 278-307. https://doi.org/10.1108/QRAM-01-2022-0013
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
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