The Migration of a Government Trading Enterprise's Accounting System during Privatisation with reference to Japanese Management Accounting

This study examines the impact of privatisation upon the accounting system of a large government trading enterprise, with particular emphasis on the capital budgeting system. A case study of a major Malaysian enterprise before and after its privatisation revealed substantial improvement of the accou...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Asian Review of Accounting
Main Author: Kamal Abdul Rahman I.; Omar N.; Taylor D.W.
Format: Review
Language:English
Published: 2002
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84993030128&doi=10.1108%2feb060748&partnerID=40&md5=23dd579bd70477220df3970116d40a12
id 2-s2.0-84993030128
spelling 2-s2.0-84993030128
Kamal Abdul Rahman I.; Omar N.; Taylor D.W.
The Migration of a Government Trading Enterprise's Accounting System during Privatisation with reference to Japanese Management Accounting
2002
Asian Review of Accounting
10
1
10.1108/eb060748
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84993030128&doi=10.1108%2feb060748&partnerID=40&md5=23dd579bd70477220df3970116d40a12
This study examines the impact of privatisation upon the accounting system of a large government trading enterprise, with particular emphasis on the capital budgeting system. A case study of a major Malaysian enterprise before and after its privatisation revealed substantial improvement of the accounting system, particularly the component of budgeting. However, several difficulties continued to be faced by the accounting department of this enterprise. For example, although accounting emerged as “visible” in the organisation, its function was confined to narrow procedural aspects of budgeting, accountability and performance appraisal. The accounting department was also seen unable to penetrate into the “values” of non-accountant managers and professionals, such as the engineers. The discussion of the findings in this paper are extended to a consideration of the potential for Malaysian companies undergoing organisational change to emulate Japanese management accounting systems approaches. © 2002, MCB UP Limited

13217348
English
Review

author Kamal Abdul Rahman I.; Omar N.; Taylor D.W.
spellingShingle Kamal Abdul Rahman I.; Omar N.; Taylor D.W.
The Migration of a Government Trading Enterprise's Accounting System during Privatisation with reference to Japanese Management Accounting
author_facet Kamal Abdul Rahman I.; Omar N.; Taylor D.W.
author_sort Kamal Abdul Rahman I.; Omar N.; Taylor D.W.
title The Migration of a Government Trading Enterprise's Accounting System during Privatisation with reference to Japanese Management Accounting
title_short The Migration of a Government Trading Enterprise's Accounting System during Privatisation with reference to Japanese Management Accounting
title_full The Migration of a Government Trading Enterprise's Accounting System during Privatisation with reference to Japanese Management Accounting
title_fullStr The Migration of a Government Trading Enterprise's Accounting System during Privatisation with reference to Japanese Management Accounting
title_full_unstemmed The Migration of a Government Trading Enterprise's Accounting System during Privatisation with reference to Japanese Management Accounting
title_sort The Migration of a Government Trading Enterprise's Accounting System during Privatisation with reference to Japanese Management Accounting
publishDate 2002
container_title Asian Review of Accounting
container_volume 10
container_issue 1
doi_str_mv 10.1108/eb060748
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84993030128&doi=10.1108%2feb060748&partnerID=40&md5=23dd579bd70477220df3970116d40a12
description This study examines the impact of privatisation upon the accounting system of a large government trading enterprise, with particular emphasis on the capital budgeting system. A case study of a major Malaysian enterprise before and after its privatisation revealed substantial improvement of the accounting system, particularly the component of budgeting. However, several difficulties continued to be faced by the accounting department of this enterprise. For example, although accounting emerged as “visible” in the organisation, its function was confined to narrow procedural aspects of budgeting, accountability and performance appraisal. The accounting department was also seen unable to penetrate into the “values” of non-accountant managers and professionals, such as the engineers. The discussion of the findings in this paper are extended to a consideration of the potential for Malaysian companies undergoing organisational change to emulate Japanese management accounting systems approaches. © 2002, MCB UP Limited
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language English
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