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Budgeting in New Zealand secondary schools in a changing devolved financial management environment

Stuart Tooley (School of Accountancy, Massey University, Palmerston North, New Zealand)
James Guthrie (Discipline of Accounting, The University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia)

Journal of Accounting & Organizational Change

ISSN: 1832-5912

Article publication date: 27 March 2007

1540

Abstract

Purpose

Change in the New Zealand state education system during the 1980s brought about a transfer of responsibility for school financial management from the centre to the school level. The purpose of this paper is to report an investigation of how aspects of this devolved responsibility have been operationalised and managed in a secondary school setting.

Design/methodology/approach

The empirical study is based on four case studies.

Findings

The paper concludes that the expectations of an espoused economic‐rationalist approach to school‐based management have yet to fully permeate into the schools' way of “doing” devolved financial management. Accounting and management technologies have come to be used as a tool of rhetoric and have served a useful, political purpose, although not in the way intended by the reform architects.

Originality/value

This conclusion raises a question about the administrative reform and whether the consequential outcomes have yielded the espoused efficiency and educational quality gains.

Keywords

Citation

Tooley, S. and Guthrie, J. (2007), "Budgeting in New Zealand secondary schools in a changing devolved financial management environment", Journal of Accounting & Organizational Change, Vol. 3 No. 1, pp. 4-28. https://doi.org/10.1108/18325910710732830

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2007, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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