Management accounting practices, governing boards and competitive advantage of Ugandan secondary schools
Management accounting practices, governing boards and competitive advantage of Ugandan secondary schools
Purpose: this paper reports on the results of a study carried out to determine the use of Management Accounting Practices (MAPR) in Ugandan secondary schools. The study also sought to determine whether MAPR and governing boards (board size, gender diversity and frequency of board meetings) influence the perceived competitive advantage.
Design/methodology/approach: this study is cross-sectional and correlational. Data were collected through a questionnaire survey of 200 secondary schools. The data was analysed through ordinary least squares regression using Statistical Package for Social Scientists.
Findings: there are wide variations in MAP in terms of the extent to which the schools employ management accounting techniques. Also, MAP and governing boards have a predictive force on the schools’ competitive advantage. However, governing board’s size has no effect on competitive advantage. In terms of the control variables, the results suggest that while government school ownership has a positive effect on competitive advantage, the school’s size
has no effect. There are intertwining relationships of frequency of board meetings, board size and school size.
Result limitations/Implications: the present study was limited to the secondary schools in Uganda which limits generalizability. Still, the results offer important implications for secondary schools’ governing boards, owners and for similar African governments who are a major stakeholder in the secondary school education system. The exact mechanism by which intertwining relationships of frequency of board meetings, board size and school size impact
competitive advantage is not been explored in this paper. Future researchers may direct researcheffort in this endeavour.
Originality/Value: to our knowledge, this is the first study to investigate use of MAPR in secondary schools and to provide evidence of their efficacy
Management accounting practices, governing boards, competitive advantage
958-974
Nkundabayanga, Stephen
1821284f-c0e3-4044-955e-f957b822c6dd
Tauringana, Venancio
27634458-b041-4bc1-94da-3e031d777e4f
Muhwezi, Moses
4e6a4f87-f32a-4fec-a61e-e53bf7aa721b
2018
Nkundabayanga, Stephen
1821284f-c0e3-4044-955e-f957b822c6dd
Tauringana, Venancio
27634458-b041-4bc1-94da-3e031d777e4f
Muhwezi, Moses
4e6a4f87-f32a-4fec-a61e-e53bf7aa721b
Nkundabayanga, Stephen, Tauringana, Venancio and Muhwezi, Moses
(2018)
Management accounting practices, governing boards and competitive advantage of Ugandan secondary schools.
The International Journal of Management Education, 32 (6), .
(doi:10.1108/IJEM-02-2017-0034).
Abstract
Purpose: this paper reports on the results of a study carried out to determine the use of Management Accounting Practices (MAPR) in Ugandan secondary schools. The study also sought to determine whether MAPR and governing boards (board size, gender diversity and frequency of board meetings) influence the perceived competitive advantage.
Design/methodology/approach: this study is cross-sectional and correlational. Data were collected through a questionnaire survey of 200 secondary schools. The data was analysed through ordinary least squares regression using Statistical Package for Social Scientists.
Findings: there are wide variations in MAP in terms of the extent to which the schools employ management accounting techniques. Also, MAP and governing boards have a predictive force on the schools’ competitive advantage. However, governing board’s size has no effect on competitive advantage. In terms of the control variables, the results suggest that while government school ownership has a positive effect on competitive advantage, the school’s size
has no effect. There are intertwining relationships of frequency of board meetings, board size and school size.
Result limitations/Implications: the present study was limited to the secondary schools in Uganda which limits generalizability. Still, the results offer important implications for secondary schools’ governing boards, owners and for similar African governments who are a major stakeholder in the secondary school education system. The exact mechanism by which intertwining relationships of frequency of board meetings, board size and school size impact
competitive advantage is not been explored in this paper. Future researchers may direct researcheffort in this endeavour.
Originality/Value: to our knowledge, this is the first study to investigate use of MAPR in secondary schools and to provide evidence of their efficacy
Text
Nkundabayanga, Tauringana and Muhwezi 2017
- Accepted Manuscript
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 22 October 2017
e-pub ahead of print date: 23 August 2018
Published date: 2018
Keywords:
Management accounting practices, governing boards, competitive advantage
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 415032
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/415032
ISSN: 1472-8117
PURE UUID: a4d16488-3dcc-42ca-841d-83a62422c90d
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Date deposited: 23 Oct 2017 16:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 05:51
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Author:
Stephen Nkundabayanga
Author:
Moses Muhwezi
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