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Management Accounting Section of the American Accounting Association

Journal of Management
Accounting Research

2005, Volume 17


Contents


On the Use of Customized versus Standardized Performance Measures

Anil Arya
Jonathan Glover
Brian Mittendorf
Lixin Ye

Abstract:Despite the influx of measures which can be customized to the demands of each business unit (e.g., customer satisfaction surveys and quality indices), many firms have been dogged in their reliance on standardized measures (e.g., conventional financial metrics) in performance evaluation. In this paper, we consider one justification: though customized measures may more accurately target the goals of a particular unit, standardized measures may offer more meaningful opportunities for relative performance evaluation. Standardized measures have a commonality in errors which is naturally absent among measures targeted to each circumstance. This commonality allows learning about one measure from another and, thus, the construction of more efficient proxies for unobservable employee inputs. The use of comparative evaluation schemes is not without its challenges, since it may induce unwanted coordination by those being evaluated. Even with such gaming concerns, standardized measures can still be preferred, but the requirements are more stringent.

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The Retention of Nonfinancial Performance Measures in Compensation Contracts

Hassan R. HassabElnaby
Amal A. Said
Benson Wier

Abstract:This study empirically investigates firms' decisions to retain the use of nonfinancial performance measures as part of the compensation contracts following their initial implementation. Using three-stage regression and survival analysis, we provide explanations for the decision to retain the use of nonfinancial performance measures after controlling for possible endogeneity. Based on a sample of firms that used nonfinancial measures during the period 1993?998, we find that the appropriate match of nonfinancial measures and firm characteristics and subsequent enhanced performance are crucial factors in deciding whether a firm will retain nonfinancial performance measures in compensation contracts. The analyses provide evidence that the effects of significant firm characteristics on the decision to retain nonfinancial performance measures are time invariant while the effects of performance are time variant during the study period. The results suggest that adverse performance is a reflection of a nonoptimizing initial adoption decision of nonfinancial performance measures while the decision to discard their use in light of the unfavorable performance is an indication of an optimizing decision.

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Influence Costs and Implementation of Organizational Changes

Michal Matejka
Anja De Waegenaere

Abstract:We present an economic model of the process that leads to a decision to implement a change. We argue that the decision gives rise to influencing efforts as privately informed agents attempt to affect the decision to their benefit. The decision maker trades off the information benefits and costs of influencing by imposing a limit on the agents' efforts. Our analysis of this trade-off yields the following insights. First, it is rational to approve initiation of a change, but later to reject its implementation. Second, firms with potentially high influence costs are more likely to reject initiation of a change. Third, it is often better to risk implementing an undesirable change than to allow costly collecting of all relevant information.

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Optimal Performance Measures with Task Complementarity

Anthony D. Nikias
Steven Schwartzstrong
Richard A. Young

Abstract:This study examines optimal performance measures under moral hazard where a risk neutral agent with limited liability is assigned two interdependent tasks. Task interdependency, or complementarity, is captured by assuming that when the agent provides high effort on one task, it affects the probability of success on a second task. Two performance measures are considered, disaggregate and aggregate. The relative benefit of aggregate performance measures derives from the agent's uncertainty about compensation when performing the second task. The relative benefit of disaggregate measures arises because it produces more information about the agent's actions on each task. The comparative advantage of aggregate measures is maximized for relatively independent tasks and diminishes with strong positive or negative complementarity. Endogenous task assignment is then explored. The principal can bundle the two tasks together and assign them to a single agent, maintaining the effects of task complementarity, or unbundle the tasks and assign each to a different agent, eliminating the effect of task complementarity. The inclination to avoid negative task complementarity increases the likelihood, conditional on bundling the tasks, that the principal prefers aggregate performance measures.

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Cost Considerations in Optimal Capacity Acquisition: An Option Pricing Approach

Dileep G. Dhavale

Abstract:The optimal capacity choice is a tradeoff between the costs of shortage and excess capacity. This paper models the costs as the prices of an infinite number of European call and put options maturing continuously over the planning horizon. This approach allows a firm to consider the benefits of flexibility arising from delaying the acquisition of some capacity to a later time when more information about stochastic demand becomes available. The firm can then adjust the capacity to meet exact demand by purchasing in the spot market or reselling in the salvage market. The model determines optimal capacity by minimizing acquisition and capacity adjustment costs. I compare the model to extant models and discuss some special situations. Qualitative sensitivity analysis describes the impact of changes in model parameters on the optimal capacity. A Monte Carlo simulation compares this model with other models and results show that the Option Pricing model results in the lowest operating cost for all scenarios considered. A substantially simplified version of the model, which does not require complete understanding of option pricing methods, also performs well under certain conditions.

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Opportunity Costing Decision Heuristics for Product Acceptance Decisions

Robert A. Leitch
Patrick R. Philipoom
Timothy D. Fry

Abstract: Full-cost heuristics have been proposed as proxies for opportunity costs in order acceptance decisions. We continue this investigation by considering the effect of different levels of stochastic product demand, lead-time allowances, variations in product cost structure, and the balance of workstation capacity, on the efficacy of the full-cost heuristic compared to other accounting based heuristics. We use simulation to consider a common job shop where order arrivals are stochastic and capacity acquisition takes place prior to demand realization. We find that the full-cost heuristic performs well when lead-time allowances are long and the shop is balanced. However, deviations from these conditions can lead to a reduction in its usefulness and better performance by other accounting heuristics.

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Cross-Sectional Field Studies in Management Accounting Research - Closing the Gaps between Surveys and Case Studies

Anne M. Lillis
Julia Mundy

Abstract: While empirical researchers in management accounting frequently address overlapping research issues using a variety of methods, there is little evidence of productive dialogue addressing the uncertainties and ambiguities raised within each stream of research. For example, survey researchers frequently call for deeper field-based insights into conflicting or ambiguous findings. Case study researchers convey rich organizational stories of management accounting in context. However, these fieldbased findings are rarely used to resolve the ambiguity in construct definition, measurement, and inter-relationships that plague our empirical research bases. In this paper we seek to regenerate interest in a method that has been implemented in the past to promote productive field-based dialogue on issues related to complex constructs and their interrelationships. The method is best illustrated by the cross-sectional field study approach adopted by Merchant and Manzoni (1989) to study budget target achievability. By considering the Merchant and Manzoni (1989) study as well as two other examples (Bruns and McKinnon 1993; Abernethy and Lillis 1995) we identify the range of questions suited to this method and how the method contributes significant insights to the management accounting literature. We also articulate the design attributes of cross-sectional field studies by explicitly linking the rationale for these studies with the complexity of the phenomenon under study, sampling logic, instrument design, and data analysis protocols. The insights produced from the relatively few published studies using a cross-sectional field study method suggest that opportunities for the application of this method may be underexploited.

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