Description
Management control systems represent what is believed to be an important element in managing internal and
external interdependencies. The case study we present in this paper is an attempt to provide additional information
contributing to the understanding of the in¯uences on and the roles of management control systems in managing
interdependencies. The management control systems were used to deal with changes in the internal and external inter-
dependencies in the domains of strategy and structure of the organization, the organizational ®eld, and the state. The
role of the Chief Executive Ocer was a key element in both de®ning the internal and external interdependencies and
the employment of the management control systems.
Stability to pro®tability: managing interdependencies to meet
a new environment
K.J. Euske
a,
*, A. Riccaboni
b
a
Naval Postgraduate School, Monterey, CA 93943-5104, USA
b
UniversitaÁ di Siena, Siena, Italy
Abstract
Management control systems represent what is believed to be an important element in managing internal and
external interdependencies. The case study we present in this paper is an attempt to provide additional information
contributing to the understanding of the in¯uences on and the roles of management control systems in managing
interdependencies. The management control systems were used to deal with changes in the internal and external inter-
dependencies in the domains of strategy and structure of the organization, the organizational ®eld, and the state. The
role of the Chief Executive Ocer was a key element in both de®ning the internal and external interdependencies and
the employment of the management control systems. #1999 Published by Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.
1. Introduction
Management control systems represent what is
believed to be an important element in managing
internal and external interdependencies (Euske,
Lebas, & McNair, 1993; Kloot, 1997; Otley, 1994).
Internal interdependencies can be categorized as
relating to controlling the relationship of manage-
ment and workers, the separation of ownership and
control, and the division of labor among di?erent
levels of management. External interdependencies
relate to a wide range of relationships such as with
the state, customers, and suppliers (Fligstein &
Freeland, 1995). There are, however, multiple
conceptualizations of the role the control systems
play in managing the interdependencies. One view
of the systems posits that they are planned entities
that provide for an economically e?ective and
ecient use of resources within the organization
(Anthony, Dearden & Govindarajan, 1992). Other
work describes multiple causes and roles for the
systems all of which may not be the direct result of
attempting to achieve economic eciency and
ecacy (e.g. Ansari & Euske, 1987; Hoque &
Hopper, 1994). The rapidly changing environment
in which the organizations and the management
control systems operate also may be modifying the
roles of the systems (Otley, 1994).
The understanding of the role of management
control systems in managing interdependencies is
less than complete. Gathering the information to
broaden the understanding of such systems is in
the domain of case research (Otley & Berry, 1994)
The case study we present in this paper is an
attempt to provide additional information con-
tributing to the understanding of the in¯uences on
0361-3682/99/$ - see front matter # 1999 Published by Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.
PI I : S0361- 3682( 99) 00020- 3
Accounting, Organizations and Society 24 (1999) 463±481
www.elsevier.com/locate/aos
* Corresponding author.
E-mail address: [email protected] (K.J. Euske)
and the roles of management control systems in
managing interdependencies. Given our goal to
enhance the understanding of the in¯uences on
and roles of management control systems, we
sought an organization that would likely be faced
with the need to adapt its management control
system to changing internal and external inter-
dependencies (Glaser & Strauss, 1970). An orga-
nization that met this criterion was Credito
Itallano (Credit) one of the largest Italian banks. In
1993, Credit was one of the ®rst large state-owned
banks in Italy to be privatized. The privatization
altered external interdependencies and quite likely
internal interdependencies. Additionally, the
®nancial markets were changing both within Italy
and world wide a?ecting interdependencies with
the market (Desario, 1995).
To us trying to understand the role of the man-
agement control system in managing internal and
external interdependencies within Credit meant
studying the role of the system in the privatization
process. Initially, we focused on and looked for
information and relationships relating to the topic.
During our early interviews, we heard how the
management control system evolved to help
ensure the success of the privatization. However,
as we became more familiar with the organization
and the information presented to us, we gradually
became aware that what we heard was not what
we were being told. Our predisposition to hear
information about the role of the management
control system in the success of the privatization
resulted in an initial ®ltering out of relevant
information. The story at Credit was not only one
of the role of the management control system in
the privatization process; it was also the story of
the role of the management control system in an
organization that was changing to meet a new and
di?erent competitive environment. Not only was
Credit being privatized but the state was rede®n-
ing the parameters of the market.
2. Perspective on the evolution of credit
From an institutional perspective, one would
argue that in order to manage external inter-
dependencies, management would try and make
the organization isomorphic with the prevailing
institutional logic of the organizational ®eld
(DiMaggio & Powell, 1983). The prevailing insti-
tutional logic provides the rules, norms, and
ideologies that legitimate the organization (Meyer
& Rowan, 1977) and provides the social frame-
work within which organizational eciency is
de®ned (Fligstein, 1990). This institutional per-
spective provides a means to help explain the
apparent homogeneity of organizational forms
and practices (DiMaggio & Powell, 1983). How-
ever, organizations and organizational ®elds
change. Institutional researchers such as Fligstein
(1991) have sought to provide a means to explain
the change from the perspective of institutional
theory. He focuses on the factors that fashion the
organizational ®eld and the role of actors in in¯u-
encing change.
Fligstein (1991) argues that for organizations
there are three important institutional domains in
which ``rules are created, meaningful actions occur,
power relations are formed, and concrete forms of
social organizations are set in place'' (Fligstein,
1991, p. 312).The three domains are: ``the existing
strategy and structure of the organization, the set
of organizations comprising the organizational
®eld, and the state'' (Fligstein, 1991, p. 312). The
three domains are a primary concern of the man-
ager of the organization. The domains represent
primary elements that provide de®nition for the
organization ®eld and the organization. Once a
given set of relationships and rules are established
managers will expend e?ort to maintain relation-
ships and rules unless there is some occurrence to
disrupt a consistent pattern of action. From this
perspective, the manager is seen as seeking stabi-
lity and attempting to conceptualize the environ-
ment as simply as possible in an attempt to gain
control of the internal and external inter-
dependencies. Because the environment is murky,
managers must interpret the available data to
delineate the contexts and determine what change,
if any, is necessary. In stable environments, the
expectation would be that there would be little
need for change. However, if a change or shock is
perceived as coming from the state, other organi-
zations, or macroeconomic conditions, manage-
ment will likely take actions to adapt. The
464 K.J. Euske, A. Riccaboni / Accounting, Organizations and Society 24 (1999) 463±481
manager must have both ``a perception of a new
strategy and the power to act upon if'' (Fligstein,
1991, p. 316) for a change to occur.
The individual actor or manager who leads the
organization is extremely important in this con-
ceptualization of the institutional perspective. The
top manager is the focal point for maintaining
control of interdependencies, both internal and
external, and has the resources to deal with the
inertia of the organization and to initiate change
(Fligstein & Freeland, 1995). Underlying this
interpretation of the environment and the organi-
zation is the manager's world view that provides a
context in which events are interpreted. In this
context, the manager interprets the information
from the murky environment and neither accepts
it as neutral information as a rational individual
nor acts upon it as an ``over socialized'' individual.
Explicitly recognizing the importance of the man-
ager as decision maker can help to explain the
decisions made in adoption of structures and pro-
cesses by the organization (Tolbert & Zucker,
1996). The interaction of the manager as decision
maker and the broader institutional forces oper-
ating on the organization highlights how the con-
trol systems are in¯uenced by and to some degree
the products of broad social-political forces and
not just the immediate concerns of the managers
of the organization (Bhimani, 1994; Hopwood,
1990).
Other perspectives could also be useful in ana-
lysing the evolution of management controls at
Credit. As Tolbert and Zucker (1996) note di?er-
ent theories can explain the same outcomes in an
organization. For instance, resource dependency
and eciency theories could also be used to
``make sense'' of the case data. Our intention in
this project was to try to understand the role
played by the management control system of
Credit in managing internal and external inter-
dependencies. Our choice for the use of institu-
tional theory was ex-post based on its applicability
to explain what we observed in a ®rm that had a
high need for social legitimacy in a highly-regu-
lated industry. The applicability of the theory to
such environments is well documented in the lit-
erature (e.g., DiMaggio & Powell, 1983; Scott,
1987).
3. Research method
The data for this study were collected over a 25
month (August 1994±September 1996) period
during six visits to the headquarters of the orga-
nization and 15 telephone interviews. We con-
ducted 23 hours of face-to-face interviews and ®ve
and one-half hours of telephone interviews with
six members of senior management. The positions
held by the individuals interviewed over the course
of the study were:
. Director General
. Director of Banking Operations in Italy
. Central Co-Director, previously he was
responsible for domestic banking
. Director of Organizational and Professional
Development
. Corporate and Group Controller
. Manager of Planning and Control
. Co-Director inside the Organizational and
Professional Development Department
1
The agreement with the organization was that
we would not record the interviews. Our doc-
umentation of the interviews consists of our notes
taken during the interviews and debrie®ng sessions
after the interviews. In addition to the interview
data, we collected supporting ®nancial and non-
®nancial archival data. To help control for
researcher bias, we incorporated two speci®c
mechanisms: First, the research team was com-
posed of an Italian and a non-European academic.
This had multiple bene®ts. Having a team member
who was part of the culture and environment in
which Credit operated minimized the chances of
missing cues or signals that are encrypted in the
data coming from that environment (Schein,
1988). Having a non-European team member
provided the opportunity to see those aspects of
the environment that are taken for granted or not
seen by those who are part of that environment
(Zucker, 1983). To some degree the design of the
1
One of the interviewees was promoted during the time
period of the study. There is, therefore, a discrepancy between
the number of individuals interviewed and the number of posi-
tions held.
K.J. Euske, A. Riccaboni / Accounting, Organizations and Society 24 (1999) 463±481 465
team achieved what Boland (1981) suggested as a
way to be able to understand an organization and
its environment Ð that is to be both part of it and
not part of it at the same time. Second, our ana-
lysis was reviewed by at least one sta? member of
Credit to insure that, at least from that indivi-
dual's point of view, we did not misrepresent
reality.
4. The evolution of Credit Italiano
In the 1960s and early 1970s, two phenomena
occurred that a?ected the interdependencies of
Credit: (1) The state began to alter the banking
environment in Italy. (2) The e?ects of industrial
globalization were beginning to be felt. Although
change in the environment was beginning to
occur, the change was gradual and did not sig-
ni®cantly impact the stability of the environment.
In 1969, Sig. Rondelli became the Chief Executive
Ocer of Credit and remained in that position
until 1990 when he retired. This stability in lea-
dership was and is almost unique among Italian
banks providing the opportunity for an individual,
Sig. Rondelli, to interpret and attempt to maintain
control of the internal and external inter-
dependencies. During this time of relative market
and internal stability, Sig. Rondelli began to for-
mulate changes to the existing strategy and struc-
ture of the organization. He apparently saw the
initial changes in the organizational ®eld and the
interdependencies with the state changing in such
a way that continuing to act in a consistent fash-
ion would not have been bene®cial. The reason he
made the changes is open to interpretation. On the
one hand, Rondelli could have been reacting to a
gradual shift in the de®nition of success for banks
in Italy. On the other hand, by making the chan-
ges Credit would become increasingly isomorphic
with the eciency-oriented business environment
of the North, thereby distancing itself from the state
banking regulators in Rome. In either case, becom-
ing more ecient and increasing the legitimacy of
the bank meant that the banking regulators would
have less reason to intervene in the operations of
the bank (e.g. replace top management). New bud-
geting, cost, compensation, and reporting systems
were developed that were more congruent with
what one would expect to ®nd in competitive
organizations. However, actual implementation of
the systems was relatively slow. For instance, even
though a new cost accounting system had been
developed, the legally required ®duciary reporting
system was used as the primary accounting system
until after privatization. The relatively rapid
development of the systems coupled with the cau-
tious implementation could be interpreted as
Credit attempting to provide the appropriate
symbols to maintain its legitimacy. That is, the
development demonstrates to external con-
stituencies a recognition of the need for and value
of the new system. The cautious implementation
provided a means to decouple the external image
presented from the actual workings of the organi-
zation. (Meyer & Rowan, 1977) and maintain the
interdependence with the state. Alternatively, the
slow implementation may have been a manifesta-
tion of the limits on the ability to change the
internal interdependencies (Fligstein, 1990). For
Credit, it appears that both decoupling external
image from internal workings and limits on the
ability to change the organization were factors.
However, as the Italian government continued to
alter the competitive environment, the initial
changes became necessary tools in the market
environment. The criteria for success in the rede-
®ned environment were unambiguous. The new
accounting and control tools were the accepted
means to measure success. These systems which
could be seen as symbolic up through the mid-to
late-1980s became necessary operating tools in the
eciency oriented Credit of the 1990s. What was
initially decoupled from the operations during a
time of state control when success was de®ned in
terms of managing risk within well-de®ned proce-
dures became an integral part of the operations
when success was de®ned as managing risk to
produce a pro®t. From the 1960s to the 1990s, the
state helped to rede®ne the organizational ®eld
and the accepted de®nition of success. This rede®-
nition altered the conception of what to control
and how to do so.
Although the period of the 1960s to the 1990s
captures a period of marked change for Credit,
previous periods were not without change. Credit
466 K.J. Euske, A. Riccaboni / Accounting, Organizations and Society 24 (1999) 463±481
was founded with German capital in 1870 as a
privately-owned bank called the Banca di Genova.
Banca Commerciale, the other bank that had been
privatized in the 1990s, was also founded as a pri-
vately-owned bank with German capital. Banca di
Genova changed its name to Credito Italiano in
1895. At that time, it began to expand its activities
outside the region of Liguria. In 1933 the Italian
government nationalized Credito Italiano (Anon,
1993), Banca Commerciale, and Banca di Roma.
Credit, along with Banca Commerciale, both
headquartered in northern Italy, has long had a
reputation as being the most ``commercial'' of the
Italian banks. Other banks such as Banca di
Roma were seen as being more involved in the
social, economic, and political goals of the Italian
government (Cuneo, 1994).
In December 1995, Credit ranked ®fth among
Italian banks and 88th in the world as measured
by total assets (Anon, 1996). Credit's headquarters
are in Milan with branches throughout Italy. In
1995, the bank had approximately 9% of the Italian
corporate and 4 % of the retail banking market. At
the end of 1995, it employed 15,230 people. Net
equity was $3.57 billion. Total loans were $44.08
billion. Total assets were $64.51 billion. Its opera-
tions were mainly focused on domestic banking,
working both in the corporate and in the retail
sector. The bank had 647 branches organized into
11 territorial units. Credit's operations abroad
were in the corporate sector and focused primarily
on supporting Italian clients. The evaluation of
the bank by the managers interviewed is captured
by the comment of one of the managers, ``Credit is
a very well run bank''. This comment is consistent
with what was said by the other interviewees.
The banking environment in which Credit oper-
ates in Italy can be traced to legislation passed in
the 1930s and more recently in the 1980s and
1990s. Legislation passed in 1936 created the basis
for Italian banking law (i.e. legge ancaria). The
legislation transformed the banking system into an
explicit instrument of economic policy. The aim of
the reform was to ensure a stable connection
between economic policy and the state's credit
policy (Frigerio, 1990). Also, legislation created a
governmental body, the Interministerial Committee
for Credit and Savings (i.e. Comitato Interministeriale
per il credito ed il risparmio) to supervise the sav-
ings and banking system. The committee had the
goal of maintaining the stability of the banking
system to avoid the repetition of past ®nancial
crises. To help promote the stability of the bank-
ing system, structural controls to were put in place
such as restrictions on granting loans, accepting
deposits, and opening new branches (Onado,
1996). Additionally, the market was segmented to
provide for Ordinary Credit Institutions that
operated in the short-term market and Special
Credit Institutions that operated in the mid-and
long-term markets. In this way, banking law
helped provide a relatively stable environment for
the banks into the 1970s. In this environment the
banks experienced constant growth (Bianchi,
1988; Forestieri, 1989; Masini, 1988; Riccaboni &
Ghirri, 1994).
4.1. The beginnings of change Ð the 1960s
In the mid-1960s competition was increasing
and the industrialists in Italy were questioning the
eciency and e?ectiveness of the banks, never-
theless, there was no major change in the banking
industry (Ostinelli & Toscano, 1994; Riccaboni &
Ghirri, 1994). During the 1960s, the bank oper-
ated with a 9±10% spread. Pro®table operations
covered inecient operations. Given the tightly
controlled market environment for Italian banks,
there was little reason to focus on eciency and
e?ectiveness. The focus was on managing risk
within the bureaucratic process de®ned by the
regulatory body in Rome. The information system
was geared to external regulatory reporting. At
that time, regulatory reporting requirements were
a major factor in the design of the information
systems down to the branch level. The commercial
code of 1882 and the banking law of 1936 de®ned
the structure for external reporting for the banks.
They were required to ®le a monthly operating
report with the Commercial Court and to publish
annual balance sheet and income statements. In
1942 legislation was passed that relieved the banks
of ®ling the monthly report with the Commercial
Court. However, the Interministerial Committee
for Credit and Savings continued to receive the
monthly report using it as a primary monitoring
K.J. Euske, A. Riccaboni / Accounting, Organizations and Society 24 (1999) 463±481 467
tool in the supervision of the bank. The report
contained items such as loan volume, assets, and
total deposits. The use of the information by the
regulatory body in¯uenced the structure of the
reporting system within the bank.
Credit was centrally controlled and this con-
tinued through the 1970s. All of the functional
areas reported to the two chief executive ocers
(i.e. Amministratori Delegati). This was typical for
an Italian Bank in the 1960s (Airoldi & Decastri,
1983; Coda, 1969; Masini, C., 1975; Saita, 1982).
Although there was no major change occurring
in the banking industry in the 1960s, the ®rst
major change that we identi®ed was implemented
at Credit in the 1960s. In 1965, Credit was one of
the ®rst banks to establish a career program for
individuals with college degrees. Graduates with
the highest grades from the best schools of eco-
nomics and law in the country were interviewed.
After a rigorous selection process, candidates were
entered into a four-year education program which
included theoretical and practical training. Those
who successfully completed the program were
given access to a career track that o?ered rela-
tively rapid promotions. Testoni (1991a)
2
states
that although there was not an immediate need to
develop personnel within the banking industry
before the mid-1980s Credit was working at
developing its human resources. These early
changes are consistent with Credit's image as being
one of the most commercial banks. In a relatively
stable and conservative environment, Credit was one
of the more progressive organizations.
4.2. The mid-years Ð the 1970s
The last half of the 1970s can be characterized
as a period of greater change than the previous
30±40 years. ``At the beginning of the 70's, the oil
crises, and problems in the currency markets and
labor markets caused a major restructuring of the
Italian industrial system'' (Desario, 1995, p. 17).
Credit's organizational ®eld was changing. Foreign
banks opened branches in Italy. With the foreign
banks came ®nancial innovations and new com-
petitors. Competition in the banking industry
became more intense. Also, the Italian govern-
ment was o?ering short-term government bonds
at relatively high interest rates. As a consequence
margins were beginning to decrease. These chan-
ges pressured the banks to set prices in accordance
with production costs. This encouraged the banks
to become concerned with developing systems to
identify the costs of various products and services.
However, the actual design and implementation of
such systems was not wide spread (Arcari, 1988;
Balossino, 1987; Bergarnin Barbato, 1988; Osti-
nelli & Toscano, 1994).
Even with these changes in the banking envir-
onment, success as a bank employee was tied to
seniority through the mid- to late-1980s. Develop-
ment of individuals was not given much emphasis
in the highly controlled environment. The primary
focus for human resources planning within the
organization was to predict turnover and the
impact of technological changes.
In the mid-1970s, Credit took at least three steps
toward refocusing the organization. The managers
interviewed said that these changes resulted from
Sig. Rondelli's perceived need to adapt to the
changing competitive conditions. They said that
by adapting to the competitive environment the
bank could maintain its success in the market
place and avoid intervention by the banking reg-
ulators. The coercive force of the state had become
a factor in prompting Credit to become more iso-
morphic with its environment.
First, Credit developed the branch budgeting
system in 1974. The personnel at Credit contend
that they were one of the ®rst banks in Italy to
have a branch budgeting system. Although branch
budgeting was not a new concept, we could not
identify another bank in Italy that had a branch
budgeting system that predated Credit's. To meet
the evolving interdependencies with the market
and the state, Sig. Rondelli adopted a system
found in the evolving organizational ®eld, thus
contributing to the di?usion of branch budgeting
into the Italian banking industry.
The branch budgeting system that was imple-
mented contained approximately 40 targets. The
2
Sig. Testoni's writings provided an additional source to
validate information regarding Credit's past. The contents of
Sig. Testoni's writings were consistent with the information
provided by the interviewees.
468 K.J. Euske, A. Riccaboni / Accounting, Organizations and Society 24 (1999) 463±481
targets were a set of ®nancial volume measures or
margins. A few non-®nancial administrative and
promotional targets were also given to the man-
agers. The manager responsible for domestic
banking gave the targets to area managers who in
turn gave the targets to the manager of each group
of branches (MGB). The targets of the group and
those of the manager coincided. The MGB divided
the targets among the managers of the branches of
the group and the lower level managers. Progress
toward meeting the targets was reviewed at mid-year
and at a year-end meeting. During the year, the
budget and the targets could be changed. Normally,
changes authorized by corporate headquarters
could be expected every six months. On rare
occasions the changes occurred on a three-month
cycle.
Credit had an accounting system at the branch
level prior to the implementation of the budgeting
system. The accounting system was, however,
focused on reporting the past to provide informa-
tion for the regulatory bodies. One of the man-
agers stated that under the old branch accounting
system,
managers were measured not with respect to
targets but, more generally, according to the
results they achieved, without any clear com-
parisons with pre-de®ned targets. That system
was ®ne within its context, the owner (Istituto
per la Ricostruzione Industriale (IRI)) was
pleased with the results. They didn't press us
much. They took the dividends (i.e., staccava
la cedola). Stability more than pro®tability
was the focus of control.
Second, Credit opened the Management Educa-
tion Center in 1975. The Center was a demonstra-
tion of Credit's commitment to the development
of the human resources of the organization. As an
indication of the quality of the training program,
interviewees said that in many cases managers
who left Credit became top ocers of smaller
banks. Their comments are congruent with the
commonly held view in the Italian banking sector
that Credit was a source of ocers for smaller
banks. This was also part of a larger role that
Credit, Banca Commerciale Italiana, and Banca
Nazionale del Lavoro played in the banking
industry. One rather high level example of such a
move is Sig. Testoni who left his position as
Director of Human Resources at Credit to become
the president of a smaller privately held Italian
bank. As one of the managers explained, the
movement of personnel happened at
all levels, not only managers, but also clerks
and ocers. Credit and Banca Commerciale
Italiana, have been the two largest banking
schools, with Banca Nazionale del Lavoro
third. For the other banks it was useful to
take advantage of it by o?ering higher sal-
aries or promotions. This was usually done by
small and middle-sized banks but it also hap-
pened with large banks.
Third, a work group was created at Credit to try
and cost the various portfolios and processes in
the organization. The work group was established
in the part of the organization that was in charge
of data processing. The ®rst products to be costed
were checks and bills of exchange. The analysis
found 600 di?erent products. The timing of the
initiative places Credit at the forefront of such
e?orts in Italy (Ostinelli & Toscano, 1994). How-
ever, the e?ort did not produce a new system and
could be described as collapsing of its own weight.
As one manager described the e?ort,
the problem was addressed through the use of
pedantic, cumbersome operations research
techniques. The results were signi®cant but
not implementable in any practical way. A lot
of statistical analysis without a general vision
Ð analysis without synthesis.
Another manager describing how the e?ort
became so focused on doing analysis said that
``They studied the sex of angels.''
One of the managers interviewed stated that the
initiation of these changes at Credit represented
the start of management control focused on out-
put and performance rather than narrow proce-
dures. In other words, to be successful was being
rede®ned from meeting requirements mandated by
the central regulatory body to performance in the
K.J. Euske, A. Riccaboni / Accounting, Organizations and Society 24 (1999) 463±481 469
marketplace. The management control system was
beginning to change to address the evolving
external interdependencies. In the process internal
interdependencies were changing. The new bud-
geting system, education center, and costing
initiative began to rede®ne the division of labor
and the relationship of management and workers.
Such changes in structure in an institutional
environment are not simply the by-product of
organizational activities but rather the result of
purposeful action (Tolbert & Zucker, 1996). In this
case, the changes were the results of actions taken
by Sig. Rondelli and his senior management.
4.3. Multiple changes Ð the 1980s
During the 1980s the banking system underwent
additional changes. Some of those changes were
the direct result of implementing the European
Community Directives 77/780 and 86/635. Pre-
sidential decree no. 350, 27 June 1983 enacted
Directive 77/780 on banking coordination. The
decree emphasized the banks as enterprises oper-
ating in a market environment and less as an
instrument of economic policy (Ciampi, 1993). As
part of this market emphasis, greater freedom was
given to the banks to open new branches. Direc-
tive 86/635 resulted in both the requirement for a
standardized balance sheet and income statement
for banks and the publication of explanatory
notes to the published accounts. Previously, nei-
ther a balance sheet in a standard format or
explanatory notes were required (Golia & March-
esi, 1991). The government and the authorities
supervising the banking industry tried to liberalize
the industry and stimulate greater competition
among the banks while trying to maintain the sta-
bility of the ®nancial structure of the banks. The
changes were enacted within the original banking
law of 1936. In what had been characterized as a
highly regulated and restrictive Ð albeit stable Ð
environment, the regulators were attempting to
reduce mandated market segmentation, allowing
more branches and territorial expansion, and gra-
dually abolishing the barriers to the entrance of new
®nancial intermediaries. The state was rede®ning its
relationship to the banks and the relationship of the
banks to each other (Desario, 1995; Ostinelli &
Toscano, 1994; Riccaboni & Ghirri, 1994).The
state, through its legislated authority, altered the
rules of the game and in e?ect coerced the banks
to change. With decreasing regulation of the
banking industry and the arrival of additional
competitors, the sophistication of the products
increased. This, in turn, created a need for a
greater emphasis in the industry on human
resource planning and development within the
organization (Testoni, 1991b).
In the mid-1980s, Sig. Rondelli, in response to
the initial changes in the regulatory environment
(Testoni, 1991a), developed two thrusts within the
bank: (1) develop a new managerial culture that
would involve all managers and (2) ®nd a way to
give targets to middle- and lower-level manage-
ment and incentives to top management.
The intent for the change in culture was to move
Credit from a traditional emphasis on the making
and the technical management of loans in the
corporate sector to one of managing the bank in
the retail and commercial sectors. The traditional
focus was exempli®ed by the training at the edu-
cational center.
Credit was a typical bank focused on ®rms and
making loans to ®rms. Loans were an impor-
tant part of the culture of the organization.
Training at the educational center was focused
on loans and their technical aspects. For a long
time, the Corso ®di, that is the course on loans,
was the top one (Credit Manager).
The manager explained that
The culture of the bank had always been that
of making loans, loans were at the center of
everything. One of the top managers had an
opportunity to work abroad and to see our
business in a wider way, less traditional. . .. In
1988 they tried to change that focus, the
emphasis was to have the bank as whole look
also at the retail sector not just loans to the
corporate sector. . .. The new focus required
communication; training can be very e?ective
in doing that. . .. The objective was that o-
cers trained at the center would take the new
culture to the branches.
470 K.J. Euske, A. Riccaboni / Accounting, Organizations and Society 24 (1999) 463±481
A top manager of Credit stated that ``The semi-
nars were a means to provide a uniform transfer of
the cultureÐthe new managerial culture''. The
program at the education center changed. Another
manager said that ``The training on managerial
issues increased greatly. . .technical was 80 percent
of the total, ®ve years later it was 50 percent.
Managerial went from 20 to 50 percent.'' The
training was extensive both in the number of
managers trained and in the topics covered. The
same manager stated that the
Courses for 2,300 managers were on the
changes just introduced: new strategy, struc-
ture, an MBO system, a renewed emphasis on
the development of human resources.
As part of the change, the bank moved from an
authoritarian organizational structure to one
where managers had increasing responsibility.
Before 1988 Credit, like other Italian banks, was
functionally organized. As shown in Fig. 1, the
directors of personnel, organization, accounting,
credit, international, market relations, and all the
MGBs reported directly to top management (i.e.
the President, the chief executive ocers, and the
single or functional area directors). Speci®c
reporting responsibilities and accountability were
not well de®ned. The MGBs reported to the func-
tional area directors on issues relevant to that
director. As a consequence of this reporting struc-
ture, no one, with the exception of the MGB, had
an overall view of the entire business of the
Groups of Branches. However, the structure was
successful. It provided a means to help ensure a
focus on the functionally oriented procedural reg-
ulatory requirements and sucient ¯exibility in
the relatively stable marketplace. When the envir-
onment started to change, the management of
Credit worked to implement new structures and
processes within the organization. For instance,
the Groups of Branches were organized into geo-
graphical areas, with a manager for each area
answerable to the director for domestic banking.
Fig. 2 shows the new position of director of
domestic banking. Management roles were rede-
®ned at all levels. Greater emphasis was placed on
results and not just technical skills, Also, the incen-
tive system, which is discussed below, was changed.
The managers interviewed interpreted these changes
as a response by Sig. Rondelli to changing market
conditions. In a paper written about Credit, Sig.
Fig. 1. Credito Italiano: pre-1988 organization chart.
K.J. Euske, A. Riccaboni / Accounting, Organizations and Society 24 (1999) 463±481 471
Mazzanti, one of the interviewees stated that these
changes ``were the product of a more turbulent and
competitive environment. . .the bank had passed
from a strategy of maintenance of its competitive
position to one of market penetration and develop-
ment'' (Mazzanti, 1995, p. 188).
After 1988 management of the organization
placed greater emphasis on results rather than
procedures. The focus was now on generating
more revenue and not on procedures such as how
eciently the reconciliation was done. In an
attempt to focus managers on results, the directors
at corporate headquarters, the 45 MGBs, and
other top managers (capiservizio) were included in
a Performance Assessment System (PAS). In the
PAS, each manager was evaluated according to:
. budget results
. human resources management
. quality
No direct salary increase was linked to a posi-
tive evaluation. PAS was used for long-term career
evaluation and the ®xed compensation associated
with future positions.
Additionally, a reward system was implemented
and there was an attempt to tie the rewards to
performance. Traditionally, discretionary bonuses
were given to managers from the branch to the top
levels in the bank based on a comparison of initial
and ®nal positions for the period using the
accounting information developed for external
reporting. The system provided information by
branch and not by client or product line. The
rewards were not based on pre-de®ned goals; the
rewards were based on subjective evaluations. The
new performance-based system was similar in
structure to Management by Objectives (MBO)
systems found in the Italian manufacturing indus-
try (Riccaboni, 1999). The plan had two main
features:
. The system placed the business risk on the
shoulders of each MGB.
. The amount of the incentive was auto-
matically determined by the rules of the sys-
tem.
For MGB, targets in the incentive system were a
subset of the 40 some budget targets previously
Fig. 2. Credito Italiano: 1988 organization chart.
472 K.J. Euske, A. Riccaboni / Accounting, Organizations and Society 24 (1999) 463±481
discussed. The ®ve to six MGB targets were
quantitative and stated in terms of volumes or
margins. Each area manager, in turn, had as his or
her target the sum of the targets given to the
managers of the groups of branches that reported
to him or her. The area manager was also given a
few qualitative targets related to administrative
changes or promotional campaigns. From about
15 days to a month after the budget was passed to
the MGB, a letter was sent with the ®ve to six
targets. The targets were the same for all the 45
MGBs; only the relative importance of the targets
and the range of acceptable performance changed.
Each was a crucial ®nancial target (e.g., gross
operating pro®t, total deposits, total loans, non-
performing loans), None of them were changed
during the year, the risk of uncontrollable events
and changes in the environment was given to the
MGB. If the MGB was lucky and the targets were
achieved with little or no e?ort, the MGB could
receive the incentive pay. However, the PAS eva-
luation could be negative. The manager could
receive the incentive pay but lose ground in terms
of career.
The directors who reported directly to Sig.
Rondelli also had performance targets. The mini-
mum level of performance rewarded was usually
higher than the budget target, the minimum level
of performance to be rewarded was given 80
points. The maximum number of points that could
be achieved was 120. If the manager got a score
between 80 and 120, the manager would receive
incentive pay that was between 5 and 12% of the
individual's annual salary. An average bonus of
8% was given to 60±70% of the participants.
As stated previously, below the MGB, no per-
formance-related incentives were given. Only dis-
cretionary bonuses were given if positive
performance was demonstrated. The overall per-
formance evaluation for the lower managers
focused on results and behavior based on meeting
budget and non-quantitative targets. At the end of
the year, each MGB was given an allotment of
funds for bonuses. The manager would award the
discretionary bonuses within speci®c ranges
de®ned by hierarchical level. Corporate head-
quarters had to be informed of the amount of the
bonuses. In 1996, the system was changing to limit
the discretion in providing the bonuses. This was
in¯uenced by the belief that the new management
control system enabled management to identify
responsibility for results (i.e., sales) by speci®c cli-
ent or account.
Also at the central headquarters, starting in the
mid-1980s, each Central Director had money to
distribute. A bonus of approximately 5±10% of
the annual salary was given to about 20±30% of
the individuals on sta?. Bonuses could be and
were awarded to some of the same individuals
from year to year. This bonus system continue to
be used through 1996 for individuals not directly
involved in selling activities.
Fig. 3 summarizes the evaluation and incentive
system at Credit. The overall purpose of the three
part evaluation and incentive system was to focus
managers on results. To measure results, the
managerial accounting system was re®ned to
obtain the necessary information for management
control. The cost of providing the main products
and services was to be computed for the ®rst time.
Pro®tability down to each window
3
(i.e., sportello)
would be developed. The new system was designed
to make it possible to track direct costs from the
smallest branch to the highest level at the top of
the bank. Costs and revenues would be booked at
the time of the sale. Multiple internal transfer
rates would be used to cost the funds used for the
various products and services. Also, management
started to analyze how to charge headquarters costs
to the operating departments. At headquarters
indirect costs were charged to managers. The chan-
ges and initiatives helped to make managerial
accounting information and results measurement
more accepted tools. In 1990, the system generated
its ®rst pro®tability reports.
Also in 1988, there was signi®cant turnover in
top management. Four out of the top 15 managers
(i.e., the head of domestic banking, the securities
and stocks portfolio manager, the head of organi-
zation and resources department, the head of the
personnel department) retired or simply left the
organization. Sig. Rondelli and the manager of the
3
Sportelli are small local branches that report to a local
main branch.
K.J. Euske, A. Riccaboni / Accounting, Organizations and Society 24 (1999) 463±481 473
human resources department at that time, Sig.
Testoni, used the opportunity to introduce di?er-
ent management tools and techniques. The change
in personnel became an opportunity for Sig. Ron-
delli to help insure that the rede®ned internal and
external interdependencies were the realized inter-
pretations by management and not merely sym-
bolic changes.
Managers consider 1988 to be a crucial year.
One manager viewed the changes that occurred or
were initiated in 1988 as being
like changing wheels on a truck while it was
moving. . .The period 1988±1990 is when
Credit changed from being an institution to
being a ®rm. Before 1988 our competitors
were only Banca Commerciale Italiana,
Banco di Roma, Banca Nazionale del Lavoro
and San Paolo di Torino. Afterwards (1990),
we competed with all the banking system,
working on short- and long-term and with
non-bank ®nancial intermediaries.
The changes brought an increase in pro®tability
but they also brought a ``short-term'' focus which
caused problems. One of the managers explained that
to o?set the focus on the short-term, the bank began
to ``keep managers in a single location for a longer
period. Traditionally, moving up the organization
meant frequent relocations. In recent years, moving
often has not been as important for career advance-
ment.'' From 1988 through the ®rst part of the 1990s
Credit focused on absorbing the changes made and
re®ning the tools that had been introduced.
In 1988, the changes in the organization started as
a top down initiative with the development of a new
strategic orientation and a new organizational struc-
ture. These initiatives were met by ``a push from the
bottom, as local managers were stimulated to ask for
more autonomy because of the incentives tied to
results and a growing recognition of their own cap-
abilities'' (Mazzanti, 1995, p. 188). Sig. Mazzanti's
observation was corroborated by the interview data.
Sig. Rondelli retired in 1990. After his retire-
ment, actions to cut costs were taken such as
reduction in the use of external consultants. Per-
sonnel costs were seen as excessive. The new leader
began to rede®ne the interdependencies resulting
in a reallocation of resources. Also, with worsen-
ing economic conditions, the number of non-per-
forming loans increased in¯uencing the character
of the operating environment. During the period
from 1990 to 1994, while Sig. Rondelli was retired,
there were moments when the momentum for change
within the organization decreased and the organiza-
tion behaved more as state-controlled rather than a
market-controlled organization. For instance, there
was an increase in lending to public organizations
(e.g., INI, IRI, EFIM).
4.4. The years of privatization Ð the 1990s
The 1990s brought new elements to in¯uence
change in the banking industry in Italy:
. market globalization, with new competitors
and the need to support clients in their
international activities;
Fig. 3. Managerial evaluation and incentive system.
474 K.J. Euske, A. Riccaboni / Accounting, Organizations and Society 24 (1999) 463±481
. deregulation by the Bank of Italy, thereby
eliminating some administrative constraints
and controls;
. a new banking law giving all the banks the
authority to operate in any ®nancial sector.
As indicated previously, until the 1990s, the
Italian banking system had two types of credit
institutions: Ordinary Credit Institutions that had
a short-term focus and Special Credit Institutions
that had a mid- and long-term focus. Ordinary
Credit Institutions included:
. Public charter banks (istituti di credito di
diritto pubblico)
. Banks of national interest (banche di interesse
nazionale)
. Ordinary credit banks (banche di credito
ordinario)
. Popular co-operative banks (banche popolari
cooperative)
. Savings banks (casse di risparmio)
. Pledge banks (monti di credito su pegno)
. Rural and artisan banks (banche rurali e
artigiane)
. Central institutions for each type of bank
(istituti centrale di categoria)
. Branches of foreign banks (®liali di banche
estere)
The banking reform of the 1990s gave each
bank the opportunity to operate in the short-,
mid-, and long-term markets (Riccaboni & Ghirri,
1994). The new legislation supported changes
promulgated in Economic Community Directives
(primarily Directive 89/646). The legislation
supported the de-specialization of the institutions,
strengthened the powers of the supervising autho-
rities, and underscored the neutrality of the
supervising authorities with respect to the struc-
ture adopted by the banks. These changes in e?ect
made survival as a ®nancial institution much more
performance based than it had been in the past.
Credit was one of the three banks of national
interest along with Banca Commerciale and Banca
di Roma. At the beginning of the 1990s, these
three banks accounted for approximately 13% of
the total banking activity in Italy. By law a bank
of national interest needed to be a joint-stock
company (i.e., Spa) whose shares were quoted on
the stock exchange. Before privatization, the
majority of the stock of these banks was owned by
IRI.
Linked to political changes and a large public
debt, the Italian government started a privatiza-
tion process that included the sale of two of the
banks of national interest, Credito Italiano in 1993
and Banca Commerciale in 1994. By making the
privatization decision the state rede®ned the
environment and de®nition of success for the
banks. The new context now required more
emphasis on results, including an acceptance of
some emphasis on short-term goals.
The rede®ned environment made the need to
determine and use reliable cost-of-services infor-
mation more important than it had been pre-
viously. Knowing which products generated the
pro®ts and losses was now crucial to the banks
survival. Although the new managerial accounting
system had been producing pro®tability reports
since 1990, the internal reporting system used until
1992 was based on required regulatory accounting
procedures, which did not provide operating
results for speci®c services and market sectors.
Starting in 1994, only the new full-cost, internal-
reporting system was used for internal decision
making. As one of the managers said, ``Before we
were focused on the clients, now we are focused on
the clients and the shareholders''. Much more
attention needed to be given to eciency and
e?ectiveness de®ned in terms of returns to the
shareholders. Shareholders, particularly the major
ones, were concerned with bottom line results.
In March 1994, with the ®rst general meeting of
the privatized company, Sig. Rondelli was back
again as president of the bank. From October
1992 until the return of Sig. Rondelli, Sig. Bruno
held the position of Chief Executive Ocer. Upon
Sig. Rondelli's return, Sig. Bruno acquired the
additional title of the vice-president of the bank.
Sig. Bruno was a ``man of the bank'' who had
started as a clerk in 1954. He is important in the
evolution of Credit because he provided continuity
in the leadership of the bank during Sig. Rondel-
li's absence and provided the technical knowledge
to bring the bank from the stable state-owned
K.J. Euske, A. Riccaboni / Accounting, Organizations and Society 24 (1999) 463±481 475
environment to the new competitive environment.
He is seen within the bank as the individual who
made the transition possible, the ferryman (i.e., il
traghettatore).
The organizational chart was redrawn during
June 1994 and twice in 1995, during April and
June. See Figs. 4±6. According to one of the man-
agers, the changes that
occurred in June 94, April 95, and June 95
were changes aimed at bringing the bank
closer to the clients. . .Starting in April 1994
di?erent units reported to the CEO: domestic
banking, international banking and ®nance,
organizational development, information
systems, administration, planning and con-
trol, investments. Domestic banking was
divided into retail, areas, and corporate.
Performance-related rewards continued to be
given by corporate headquarters down to the level
of the area managers. Each area manager in turn
gave performance-related rewards to the nine to ten
managers of groups of branches who reported to
himor her. Below the level of manager of a group of
branches, the branch manager could award a bonus
if a clear positive result was achieved.
In late 1994, key stockholders backed the
appointment of a new Corporate and Group
Controller. The new controller Sig. Profumo came
from a publicly-traded insurance company which
was a major stockholder in Credit. After seven
months with Credit, he was promoted to a new
position of Managing Director. Sig. Profumo
represented to the stockholders an individual
whose understanding of the broader organiza-
tional ®eld of ®nancial institutions Ð rather just
the Italian banking industry Ð would bring a
sharp focus to the interpretation of the inter-
dependencies with the market.
In April 1995 the bank's operations were divi-
ded into two business areas: domestic banking (the
core business) and international banking and
®nance. Domestic banking now included retail
and private banking, corporate, and the branch
network (i.e. rete).
In order to be closer to the clients: The cor-
porate sector was divided into enterprises and
key accounts for high level clients. Retail and
Fig. 4. Credito Italiano: June 1994 organization chart.
476 K.J. Euske, A. Riccaboni / Accounting, Organizations and Society 24 (1999) 463±481
private banking was divided into two separate
organizations. The Italian branch network
was still divided into ®ve areas, including 45
Groups of Branches, to which the branches
report, and windows (i.e. sportelli). Four tiers
later reduced to three (Credit Manager).
With these changes, the distinction between
the retail and the corporate operations became
deeper in the branches to allow Credit personnel
to become more specialized and be closer to the
clients.
A few weeks later a tier of middle management
was eliminated and 11 new territorial directors
(direzioni territoriali) were created rede®ning the
roles and responsibilities of the old area directors.
The position of the Head of Groups of Branches
was abolished. The new territorial directors were
given the authority to act ``as a managing director
of a local bank''. These directors had resources to
Fig. 6. Credito Italiano: June 1995 organization chart.
Fig. 5. Credito Italiano: April 1995 organization chart.
K.J. Euske, A. Riccaboni / Accounting, Organizations and Society 24 (1999) 463±481 477
promote sales activity in their territories and were
suciently high in the organizational hierarchy to
be able ``to produce globally and to sell locally''.
The managers of the 11 direzioni territoriali
are given a great deal of autonomy and report
to top management. They will run the dir-
ezioni as if they were autonomous companies.
The target is to become rooted in the local
environment. To do that we have changed one
of the main rules of the HRM in banks:
instead of moving among diverse locations,
managers will develop in narrower geographic
areas (Bruno, 1996).
Credit had just acquired Credit Romagnolo
(Rolo) a bank with a very strong market position
in north central Italy. Rolo was seen as being
representative of, if not a model for, the territorial
units. Credit explicitly was mimicking the struc-
ture of a successful, albeit smaller, privately held
organization.
In 1995 the planning function was changed so
that the strategic plan included not only the input
of the planning sta? and a few of the highest level
corporate managers but also high-level line man-
agers. The sta? input to the process decreased.
Top management of the organization met for a
series of Saturdays at the Management Education
Center to develop the plan. The e?ort required
setting income goals in terms of return on equity
(ROE) and having each of the top managers take
responsibility for meeting some portion of those
goals. The plan was then presented by the Chief
Executive Ocer and the Managing Director to
the managers in each of the 11 territories. Once
the top management agreed on the plan, it was
then presented to all of the managers at Credit.
Historically, only top management were privy to
the strategic plan.
With all of the changes that have occurred, the
interviewees continue to express a desire and need
to continue to adapt to the changing environment.
The areas of concern to the managers included:
. a need to involve all members of the organi-
zation in the life of the ®rm
. a need to stimulate the branches
. a need to better understand productivity and
quality in the units of the bank
. extend the management control system to
foreign branches
. current risk management was de®ned as not
generating bad debts
. a need to do more benchmarking
5. Concluding comments
There are at least four issues that are evident in
the Credit (Credito Italiano) case. The ®rst two are
directly related to the motivation for this paper and
the other two are tangential to the paper.
First, in regard to the speci®c events at Credito
Italiano, a key if not the fundamental element in
the use and evolution of the management control
system in the management of the inter-
dependencies was the role of Sig. Rondelli. He
delineated the context and de®ned the changes
during his term as Chief Executive Ocer. The
inertia from his e?orts continued after his retire-
ment. However, the new Chief Executive Ocer
brought a rede®nition of interdependencies. For
example, the focus on the reduction of personnel
costs and the increase in loans to public entities.
As Fligstein (1990) argues, the role of the top
manager is critical to the de®nition of what is to be
controlled and how to control it. In addition to
Sig. Rondelli's leadership, progressive thinking
``old guard'' and ``young Turks'' injected into the
organization provided important leadership for
the change. The ``old guard'' provided an under-
standing of the core values of the organization, the
characteristics of the interdependencies, and the
steps necessary to address the status quo. The
``young Turks'' brought a familiarity with the
rede®ned organizational ®eld and the correspond-
ing de®nition of success. To some degree the
changes that occurred were the result of broader
socio-political forces (e.g., changing regulatory
environment, globalization of ®nancial markets).
However, whoever was the Chief Executive Ocer
would have provided a de®nition Ð either in an
active or reactive mode Ð of what was to be con-
trolled and how to control it. Sig. Rondelli's
actions provide evidence to support the view of
478 K.J. Euske, A. Riccaboni / Accounting, Organizations and Society 24 (1999) 463±481
the manager as decision maker in an institutiona-
lized environment and not just as an ``over-
socialized'' individual.
Second, the management control system dealt
with changes in the internal and external inter-
dependencies in the domains of strategy and
structure of the organization, the organizational
®eld, and the state. Addressing strategy and
structure, the new branch budgeting system was
designed to emphasize speci®c performance goals.
The incentive system was adapted to reward
meeting speci®c budgetary goals. A subjective
evaluation was used as input for long-term career
and compensation decisions. The accounting sys-
tem shifted from one that focused on providing
information for regulatory control to one that
focused on measuring success de®ned in terms of
return to stockholders. Cost and pro®t reporting
systems were developed to meet the new market
and owner focus. In regard to the evolving orga-
nizational ®eld and relationship with the state, the
control system was used to minimize the depen-
dence on the regulatory body and to demonstrate
the adaptability of the organization in meeting the
evolving competitive environment. The training and
education programs provided a vehicle to foster the
image of a well-trained sta? and to demonstrate
that the organization accepted its socially de®ned
role as an educator of bankers. The management
control system appeared to be a ¯exible tool in the
management of the interdependencies.
Third, the case supports previous research
(Euske et al., 1993; Merchant & Riccaboni, 1992)
that found internal culture and the market context
may be more important than national culture in
explaining how management control works. That
is not to say that cultural di?erences may not be
important. This study was conducted in one orga-
nization, over a relatively short period of time that
included a major change in the market environ-
ment. Other work (e.g. Catturi & Riccaboni, 1996;
Chow, Kato & Merchant, 1996) provide evidence
that at some level cultural di?erences matter in the
design of management control systems. However,
at Credito Italiano it appears that the context,
history, and personalities seem to provide the data
to explain much of the behavior of the use and
evolution of the management control system.
Finally, the case of Credito Italiano provides
evidence that a state-owned enterprise can change.
Initially, Credito Italiano was not under strong
pressure to change. The initial change, facilitated
by an environment with relatively low levels of
competition, seemed to have some importance in
the creation of the internal momentum to develop
and to adapt the management control system. The
case study points to the importance of manage-
ment's role in the design and implementation of
the management control system in privatization
and not only the ®nancial, juridical, and eco-
nomic aspects of the process. The core of the
management control system that helped Credito
Italiano become part of the private sector was in
place when the transition to the private sector
was made. The organization did not need to
su?er dramatic changes in the management con-
trol processes to become a ``private'' organiza-
tion. Even though it was not used to its full
potential, the management control system was in
place.
Are the phenomena we observed unique to the
newly privatized Credito Italiano? Other work
(e.g., Hoque & Hopper, 1994) provides evidence
of a similar result in another environment. How-
ever, the entire issue of the interaction of reg-
ulatory forces, forms of governance, and the
management control system is a relatively unex-
plored area. The focus of much of the manage-
ment control systems research seems to be on
large publicly or privately held companies oper-
ating in a single country or internationally.
Studies of more varied and less orthodox organi-
zations than those in which the literature on man-
agement control system is grounded could help us
to better understand those systems.
Acknowledgements
The authors would like to thank Credito Ita-
liano and especially Sig. Bruno, Profumo, Ferraro,
Darbesio, and Mazzanti for their support of this
project.
K.J. Euske, A. Riccaboni / Accounting, Organizations and Society 24 (1999) 463±481 479
References
Airoldi, G., & Decastri, M. (1983). Le funzioni di organizza-
zione in impresa, I modelli generali di analisi e progettazione e
il caso delle banche italiane. Milano: Giu?re .
Anon. (1993). An introduction to Credito Italiano. Milan: Credit
Italiano.
Anon. (1996). The world's 100 largest banks. The Wall Street
Journal, 26 September, p. R29.
Ansari, S., & Euske, K. J. (1987). Rational, rationalizing, and
reifying uses of accounting data in organizations. Account-
ing, Organizations and Society, 12(6), 549±570.
Anthony, R. N., Dearden, J., & Govindarajan, V. (1992).
Management control systems. Irwin: Homewood.
Arcari, A. (1988). Il controllo di gestione nelle banche: l'esper-
ienza italiana. In F. Amigoni, Misurazioni d'Azi enda. Pro-
grammazzione e Controllo, 2. Milan: Giu?reÂ
Balossino, A. (1987). Il controllo di gestione nelle banche.
L'Impresa, 3, 86±96.
Bergamin Barbaro, M. (1988). La piani®cazione strategica ed il
controllo di gestione nelle aziende di credito. Banche e Ban-
chieri, 7/8, 483±491.
Bhimani, A. (1994). Accounting enlightenment in the age of
reason. The European Accounting Review, 3(3), 399±442.
Bianchi, T. (1988). Evoluzione del sistema bancario e del rap-
porto banca impressa. Banche e Banchieri, 1.
Boland, R. (9181). A study systems design: C. West Church-
man and Chris Argyris. Accounting, Organizations and
Society, 6(2), 109±118.
Bruno, E. (1996). Bruno: noi non giochiamo sporco. La
Repubblica, 30 January.
Catturi, G., & Riccaboni, A. (1996). Management control and
national culture. Padova: Cedam.
Ciampi, C. A. (1993). La transformazione delta banca in una
societaÁ che cresce. Banca, Impresa e SocietaÁ, 1.
Chow, C. W., Kato, Y., & Merchant, K. A. (1996). The use of
organizational controls and their e?ects on data manipula-
tion and management myopia: a Japan vs. U. S. comparison.
Accounting, Organizations and Society, 21(2/3), 175±192.
Coda, V. (1969). La determinazione dei redditi sezionali con
particolare riferimento alle aziende di credito (Scritti in onore
di G. Dell' Amore). Milan: Giu?re .
Cuneo, G. (1994). Privatizzazioni: problem: del cambiamentop
e gestione. Economica e management.
Desario, V. (1995). La nuova legge bancaria e l'avitaÁ di
controllo. In A. de Maio, & C. Patalano, Modelli organizza-
tivi e di controllo nel sistema bancario (pp. 17±33). Milan:
Edibank.
DiMaggio, P. J., & Powell, W. W. (1983). The iron cage revis-
ited: institutional isomorphism and collective rationality in
organizational ®elds. American Sociological Review, 48, 147±
160.
Euske, K. J., Lebas, M. J., & McNair, C. J. (1993). Perfor-
mance management in an international setting. Management
Accounting Research, 4(4), 275±365.
Fligstein, N. (1990). The transformation of corporate control.
Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
Fligstein, N. (1991). The structural transformation of American
industry: an institutional account of the causes of diversi®-
cation in the largest ®rms, 1919±1979. In W. W. Powell, & P.
J. DiMaggio, The new institutionalism in organizational ana-
lysis (pp. 311±336). Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Fligstein, N., & Freeland, R. (1995). Theoretical and com-
parative perspectives on corporate organization. In Annual
review of sociology (vol. 21, pp. 21±43). Palo Alto: Annual
Reviews Inc.
Forestieri, G. (1989). Evoluzione dello scenario ®nanziario e
della tecnologia e sviluppo dell'orga nizzazione bancaria. In
L'organizzazione della banca (pp. 51±68). Milan: EGEA.
Frigerio, E. (1990). Internal auditing nelle banche. Milan: Edibank.
Glaser, B. G., & Strauss, A. L. (1970). Theoretical sampling. In
N. K. Denzin, Sociological methods (pp. 105±114). Chicago:
Aldine.
Golia, P., & Marchesi. (1991). Trasparenza e comparabilitaÁ del
bilancio di esercizio delle aziende di credito. Milan: Associa-
zione per lo sviluppo degli studi di banca e borsa.
Hopwood, A. (1990). Accounting and organization change.
Accounting, Auditing, and Accountabilily, 3(1), 7±17.
Hoque, Z., & Hopper, T. (1994). Rationality, accounting and
politics: a case study of management control in a Banglade-
shi jute mill. Management Accounting Research, 5(1), 5±30.
Kloot, L. (1997). Organizational learning and management
control systems: responding to environmental change. Man-
agement Accounting Research, 8(1), 47±73.
Masini, C. (1975). I centri di reddito nella banca, in AA VV
(scritti in onore di U. Caprara). Milan: Vallardi.
Masini, M. (1988). Nuove strategie nella ricerca di produttivitaÁ e
di redditivitaÁ dell'integrazione in banca (prospettive di pro-
grammazione e controllo nelle banche). Milan: Giu?re .
Mazzanti, R. (1995). Credit: il controllo di gestione. In A. de
Maio, & C. Patalano, Modelli organizzativi e di controllo nel
sistema bancario (pp. 187±200). Milan: Edibank.
Merchant, K., & Riccaboni, A. (1992). In Evolution of perfor-
manced-based management incentives at the FIAT Group.
W. J. Bruns, Performance measurement, evaluation, and
incentives (pp. 63±96). Boston: Harvard Business School
Press.
Meyer, J. W., & Rowan, B. (1977). Institutional organizations:
formal structure as myth and ceremony. American Journal of
Sociology, 83, 340±363.
Onado, M. (1996). La banca come impresa. Bologna: Il Mulino.
Ostinelli, C., & Toscano, G. (1994). Putting quality to work in
banking through management accounting systems: three
Italian banks' alternative approaches. Paper presented at The
17th Annual Congress of the European Accounting Asso-
ciation, Venice, 6±8 April 1994.
Otley, D. (1994). Management control in contemporary orga-
nizations: towards a wider framework. Management
Accounting Research, 5(3,4), 289±299.
Otley, D. T., & Berry, A. J. (1994). Case study research in
management accounting and control. Management Account-
ing Research, 5(1), 45±65.
Riccaboni, A. (1999). Performance ed incentivi. Padova;
Cedam.
480 K.J. Euske, A. Riccaboni / Accounting, Organizations and Society 24 (1999) 463±481
Riccaboni, A., & Ghirri, R. (1994). European ®nancial report-
ing: Italy. London: Routledge.
Saita, M. (1982). Management bancario, nuovi sistemi dir-
ezionali e organizzativi. Milan: F. Angeli.
Schein, E. (1988). Organizational socialization and the profes-
sion of management. Sloan Management Review, 30(1), 53±65.
Scott, W. R. (1987). The adolescence of institutional theory.
Administrative Science Ouarterly, 32, 493±511.
Testoni, G. (1991a). Credito Italiano's approach to human
resource planning: a short summary. Paper presented at
Associazlone Bancaria Italiana, Rome, 6. June.
Testoni, G. (1991b). The changing nature of competition in
Italian banking and the response of Credit Italiano to this
change. Paper presented at People 91, London, 5 December.
Tolbert, P. S., & Zucker, L. G. (1996). The institutionalization
of institutional theory. In S. R. Clegg, & W. R. Nord,
Handbook of organizational studies (pp. 175±190). London:
Sage Publications.
Zucker, L. G. (1983). Organizations as institutions. In S.B
Bacharach, Research in the sociology of organizations (pp. 1±
42). Greenwich: JAI Press.
K.J. Euske, A. Riccaboni / Accounting, Organizations and Society 24 (1999) 463±481 481
doc_777786488.pdf
Management control systems represent what is believed to be an important element in managing internal and
external interdependencies. The case study we present in this paper is an attempt to provide additional information
contributing to the understanding of the in¯uences on and the roles of management control systems in managing
interdependencies. The management control systems were used to deal with changes in the internal and external inter-
dependencies in the domains of strategy and structure of the organization, the organizational ®eld, and the state. The
role of the Chief Executive Ocer was a key element in both de®ning the internal and external interdependencies and
the employment of the management control systems.
Stability to pro®tability: managing interdependencies to meet
a new environment
K.J. Euske
a,
*, A. Riccaboni
b
a
Naval Postgraduate School, Monterey, CA 93943-5104, USA
b
UniversitaÁ di Siena, Siena, Italy
Abstract
Management control systems represent what is believed to be an important element in managing internal and
external interdependencies. The case study we present in this paper is an attempt to provide additional information
contributing to the understanding of the in¯uences on and the roles of management control systems in managing
interdependencies. The management control systems were used to deal with changes in the internal and external inter-
dependencies in the domains of strategy and structure of the organization, the organizational ®eld, and the state. The
role of the Chief Executive Ocer was a key element in both de®ning the internal and external interdependencies and
the employment of the management control systems. #1999 Published by Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.
1. Introduction
Management control systems represent what is
believed to be an important element in managing
internal and external interdependencies (Euske,
Lebas, & McNair, 1993; Kloot, 1997; Otley, 1994).
Internal interdependencies can be categorized as
relating to controlling the relationship of manage-
ment and workers, the separation of ownership and
control, and the division of labor among di?erent
levels of management. External interdependencies
relate to a wide range of relationships such as with
the state, customers, and suppliers (Fligstein &
Freeland, 1995). There are, however, multiple
conceptualizations of the role the control systems
play in managing the interdependencies. One view
of the systems posits that they are planned entities
that provide for an economically e?ective and
ecient use of resources within the organization
(Anthony, Dearden & Govindarajan, 1992). Other
work describes multiple causes and roles for the
systems all of which may not be the direct result of
attempting to achieve economic eciency and
ecacy (e.g. Ansari & Euske, 1987; Hoque &
Hopper, 1994). The rapidly changing environment
in which the organizations and the management
control systems operate also may be modifying the
roles of the systems (Otley, 1994).
The understanding of the role of management
control systems in managing interdependencies is
less than complete. Gathering the information to
broaden the understanding of such systems is in
the domain of case research (Otley & Berry, 1994)
The case study we present in this paper is an
attempt to provide additional information con-
tributing to the understanding of the in¯uences on
0361-3682/99/$ - see front matter # 1999 Published by Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.
PI I : S0361- 3682( 99) 00020- 3
Accounting, Organizations and Society 24 (1999) 463±481
www.elsevier.com/locate/aos
* Corresponding author.
E-mail address: [email protected] (K.J. Euske)
and the roles of management control systems in
managing interdependencies. Given our goal to
enhance the understanding of the in¯uences on
and roles of management control systems, we
sought an organization that would likely be faced
with the need to adapt its management control
system to changing internal and external inter-
dependencies (Glaser & Strauss, 1970). An orga-
nization that met this criterion was Credito
Itallano (Credit) one of the largest Italian banks. In
1993, Credit was one of the ®rst large state-owned
banks in Italy to be privatized. The privatization
altered external interdependencies and quite likely
internal interdependencies. Additionally, the
®nancial markets were changing both within Italy
and world wide a?ecting interdependencies with
the market (Desario, 1995).
To us trying to understand the role of the man-
agement control system in managing internal and
external interdependencies within Credit meant
studying the role of the system in the privatization
process. Initially, we focused on and looked for
information and relationships relating to the topic.
During our early interviews, we heard how the
management control system evolved to help
ensure the success of the privatization. However,
as we became more familiar with the organization
and the information presented to us, we gradually
became aware that what we heard was not what
we were being told. Our predisposition to hear
information about the role of the management
control system in the success of the privatization
resulted in an initial ®ltering out of relevant
information. The story at Credit was not only one
of the role of the management control system in
the privatization process; it was also the story of
the role of the management control system in an
organization that was changing to meet a new and
di?erent competitive environment. Not only was
Credit being privatized but the state was rede®n-
ing the parameters of the market.
2. Perspective on the evolution of credit
From an institutional perspective, one would
argue that in order to manage external inter-
dependencies, management would try and make
the organization isomorphic with the prevailing
institutional logic of the organizational ®eld
(DiMaggio & Powell, 1983). The prevailing insti-
tutional logic provides the rules, norms, and
ideologies that legitimate the organization (Meyer
& Rowan, 1977) and provides the social frame-
work within which organizational eciency is
de®ned (Fligstein, 1990). This institutional per-
spective provides a means to help explain the
apparent homogeneity of organizational forms
and practices (DiMaggio & Powell, 1983). How-
ever, organizations and organizational ®elds
change. Institutional researchers such as Fligstein
(1991) have sought to provide a means to explain
the change from the perspective of institutional
theory. He focuses on the factors that fashion the
organizational ®eld and the role of actors in in¯u-
encing change.
Fligstein (1991) argues that for organizations
there are three important institutional domains in
which ``rules are created, meaningful actions occur,
power relations are formed, and concrete forms of
social organizations are set in place'' (Fligstein,
1991, p. 312).The three domains are: ``the existing
strategy and structure of the organization, the set
of organizations comprising the organizational
®eld, and the state'' (Fligstein, 1991, p. 312). The
three domains are a primary concern of the man-
ager of the organization. The domains represent
primary elements that provide de®nition for the
organization ®eld and the organization. Once a
given set of relationships and rules are established
managers will expend e?ort to maintain relation-
ships and rules unless there is some occurrence to
disrupt a consistent pattern of action. From this
perspective, the manager is seen as seeking stabi-
lity and attempting to conceptualize the environ-
ment as simply as possible in an attempt to gain
control of the internal and external inter-
dependencies. Because the environment is murky,
managers must interpret the available data to
delineate the contexts and determine what change,
if any, is necessary. In stable environments, the
expectation would be that there would be little
need for change. However, if a change or shock is
perceived as coming from the state, other organi-
zations, or macroeconomic conditions, manage-
ment will likely take actions to adapt. The
464 K.J. Euske, A. Riccaboni / Accounting, Organizations and Society 24 (1999) 463±481
manager must have both ``a perception of a new
strategy and the power to act upon if'' (Fligstein,
1991, p. 316) for a change to occur.
The individual actor or manager who leads the
organization is extremely important in this con-
ceptualization of the institutional perspective. The
top manager is the focal point for maintaining
control of interdependencies, both internal and
external, and has the resources to deal with the
inertia of the organization and to initiate change
(Fligstein & Freeland, 1995). Underlying this
interpretation of the environment and the organi-
zation is the manager's world view that provides a
context in which events are interpreted. In this
context, the manager interprets the information
from the murky environment and neither accepts
it as neutral information as a rational individual
nor acts upon it as an ``over socialized'' individual.
Explicitly recognizing the importance of the man-
ager as decision maker can help to explain the
decisions made in adoption of structures and pro-
cesses by the organization (Tolbert & Zucker,
1996). The interaction of the manager as decision
maker and the broader institutional forces oper-
ating on the organization highlights how the con-
trol systems are in¯uenced by and to some degree
the products of broad social-political forces and
not just the immediate concerns of the managers
of the organization (Bhimani, 1994; Hopwood,
1990).
Other perspectives could also be useful in ana-
lysing the evolution of management controls at
Credit. As Tolbert and Zucker (1996) note di?er-
ent theories can explain the same outcomes in an
organization. For instance, resource dependency
and eciency theories could also be used to
``make sense'' of the case data. Our intention in
this project was to try to understand the role
played by the management control system of
Credit in managing internal and external inter-
dependencies. Our choice for the use of institu-
tional theory was ex-post based on its applicability
to explain what we observed in a ®rm that had a
high need for social legitimacy in a highly-regu-
lated industry. The applicability of the theory to
such environments is well documented in the lit-
erature (e.g., DiMaggio & Powell, 1983; Scott,
1987).
3. Research method
The data for this study were collected over a 25
month (August 1994±September 1996) period
during six visits to the headquarters of the orga-
nization and 15 telephone interviews. We con-
ducted 23 hours of face-to-face interviews and ®ve
and one-half hours of telephone interviews with
six members of senior management. The positions
held by the individuals interviewed over the course
of the study were:
. Director General
. Director of Banking Operations in Italy
. Central Co-Director, previously he was
responsible for domestic banking
. Director of Organizational and Professional
Development
. Corporate and Group Controller
. Manager of Planning and Control
. Co-Director inside the Organizational and
Professional Development Department
1
The agreement with the organization was that
we would not record the interviews. Our doc-
umentation of the interviews consists of our notes
taken during the interviews and debrie®ng sessions
after the interviews. In addition to the interview
data, we collected supporting ®nancial and non-
®nancial archival data. To help control for
researcher bias, we incorporated two speci®c
mechanisms: First, the research team was com-
posed of an Italian and a non-European academic.
This had multiple bene®ts. Having a team member
who was part of the culture and environment in
which Credit operated minimized the chances of
missing cues or signals that are encrypted in the
data coming from that environment (Schein,
1988). Having a non-European team member
provided the opportunity to see those aspects of
the environment that are taken for granted or not
seen by those who are part of that environment
(Zucker, 1983). To some degree the design of the
1
One of the interviewees was promoted during the time
period of the study. There is, therefore, a discrepancy between
the number of individuals interviewed and the number of posi-
tions held.
K.J. Euske, A. Riccaboni / Accounting, Organizations and Society 24 (1999) 463±481 465
team achieved what Boland (1981) suggested as a
way to be able to understand an organization and
its environment Ð that is to be both part of it and
not part of it at the same time. Second, our ana-
lysis was reviewed by at least one sta? member of
Credit to insure that, at least from that indivi-
dual's point of view, we did not misrepresent
reality.
4. The evolution of Credit Italiano
In the 1960s and early 1970s, two phenomena
occurred that a?ected the interdependencies of
Credit: (1) The state began to alter the banking
environment in Italy. (2) The e?ects of industrial
globalization were beginning to be felt. Although
change in the environment was beginning to
occur, the change was gradual and did not sig-
ni®cantly impact the stability of the environment.
In 1969, Sig. Rondelli became the Chief Executive
Ocer of Credit and remained in that position
until 1990 when he retired. This stability in lea-
dership was and is almost unique among Italian
banks providing the opportunity for an individual,
Sig. Rondelli, to interpret and attempt to maintain
control of the internal and external inter-
dependencies. During this time of relative market
and internal stability, Sig. Rondelli began to for-
mulate changes to the existing strategy and struc-
ture of the organization. He apparently saw the
initial changes in the organizational ®eld and the
interdependencies with the state changing in such
a way that continuing to act in a consistent fash-
ion would not have been bene®cial. The reason he
made the changes is open to interpretation. On the
one hand, Rondelli could have been reacting to a
gradual shift in the de®nition of success for banks
in Italy. On the other hand, by making the chan-
ges Credit would become increasingly isomorphic
with the eciency-oriented business environment
of the North, thereby distancing itself from the state
banking regulators in Rome. In either case, becom-
ing more ecient and increasing the legitimacy of
the bank meant that the banking regulators would
have less reason to intervene in the operations of
the bank (e.g. replace top management). New bud-
geting, cost, compensation, and reporting systems
were developed that were more congruent with
what one would expect to ®nd in competitive
organizations. However, actual implementation of
the systems was relatively slow. For instance, even
though a new cost accounting system had been
developed, the legally required ®duciary reporting
system was used as the primary accounting system
until after privatization. The relatively rapid
development of the systems coupled with the cau-
tious implementation could be interpreted as
Credit attempting to provide the appropriate
symbols to maintain its legitimacy. That is, the
development demonstrates to external con-
stituencies a recognition of the need for and value
of the new system. The cautious implementation
provided a means to decouple the external image
presented from the actual workings of the organi-
zation. (Meyer & Rowan, 1977) and maintain the
interdependence with the state. Alternatively, the
slow implementation may have been a manifesta-
tion of the limits on the ability to change the
internal interdependencies (Fligstein, 1990). For
Credit, it appears that both decoupling external
image from internal workings and limits on the
ability to change the organization were factors.
However, as the Italian government continued to
alter the competitive environment, the initial
changes became necessary tools in the market
environment. The criteria for success in the rede-
®ned environment were unambiguous. The new
accounting and control tools were the accepted
means to measure success. These systems which
could be seen as symbolic up through the mid-to
late-1980s became necessary operating tools in the
eciency oriented Credit of the 1990s. What was
initially decoupled from the operations during a
time of state control when success was de®ned in
terms of managing risk within well-de®ned proce-
dures became an integral part of the operations
when success was de®ned as managing risk to
produce a pro®t. From the 1960s to the 1990s, the
state helped to rede®ne the organizational ®eld
and the accepted de®nition of success. This rede®-
nition altered the conception of what to control
and how to do so.
Although the period of the 1960s to the 1990s
captures a period of marked change for Credit,
previous periods were not without change. Credit
466 K.J. Euske, A. Riccaboni / Accounting, Organizations and Society 24 (1999) 463±481
was founded with German capital in 1870 as a
privately-owned bank called the Banca di Genova.
Banca Commerciale, the other bank that had been
privatized in the 1990s, was also founded as a pri-
vately-owned bank with German capital. Banca di
Genova changed its name to Credito Italiano in
1895. At that time, it began to expand its activities
outside the region of Liguria. In 1933 the Italian
government nationalized Credito Italiano (Anon,
1993), Banca Commerciale, and Banca di Roma.
Credit, along with Banca Commerciale, both
headquartered in northern Italy, has long had a
reputation as being the most ``commercial'' of the
Italian banks. Other banks such as Banca di
Roma were seen as being more involved in the
social, economic, and political goals of the Italian
government (Cuneo, 1994).
In December 1995, Credit ranked ®fth among
Italian banks and 88th in the world as measured
by total assets (Anon, 1996). Credit's headquarters
are in Milan with branches throughout Italy. In
1995, the bank had approximately 9% of the Italian
corporate and 4 % of the retail banking market. At
the end of 1995, it employed 15,230 people. Net
equity was $3.57 billion. Total loans were $44.08
billion. Total assets were $64.51 billion. Its opera-
tions were mainly focused on domestic banking,
working both in the corporate and in the retail
sector. The bank had 647 branches organized into
11 territorial units. Credit's operations abroad
were in the corporate sector and focused primarily
on supporting Italian clients. The evaluation of
the bank by the managers interviewed is captured
by the comment of one of the managers, ``Credit is
a very well run bank''. This comment is consistent
with what was said by the other interviewees.
The banking environment in which Credit oper-
ates in Italy can be traced to legislation passed in
the 1930s and more recently in the 1980s and
1990s. Legislation passed in 1936 created the basis
for Italian banking law (i.e. legge ancaria). The
legislation transformed the banking system into an
explicit instrument of economic policy. The aim of
the reform was to ensure a stable connection
between economic policy and the state's credit
policy (Frigerio, 1990). Also, legislation created a
governmental body, the Interministerial Committee
for Credit and Savings (i.e. Comitato Interministeriale
per il credito ed il risparmio) to supervise the sav-
ings and banking system. The committee had the
goal of maintaining the stability of the banking
system to avoid the repetition of past ®nancial
crises. To help promote the stability of the bank-
ing system, structural controls to were put in place
such as restrictions on granting loans, accepting
deposits, and opening new branches (Onado,
1996). Additionally, the market was segmented to
provide for Ordinary Credit Institutions that
operated in the short-term market and Special
Credit Institutions that operated in the mid-and
long-term markets. In this way, banking law
helped provide a relatively stable environment for
the banks into the 1970s. In this environment the
banks experienced constant growth (Bianchi,
1988; Forestieri, 1989; Masini, 1988; Riccaboni &
Ghirri, 1994).
4.1. The beginnings of change Ð the 1960s
In the mid-1960s competition was increasing
and the industrialists in Italy were questioning the
eciency and e?ectiveness of the banks, never-
theless, there was no major change in the banking
industry (Ostinelli & Toscano, 1994; Riccaboni &
Ghirri, 1994). During the 1960s, the bank oper-
ated with a 9±10% spread. Pro®table operations
covered inecient operations. Given the tightly
controlled market environment for Italian banks,
there was little reason to focus on eciency and
e?ectiveness. The focus was on managing risk
within the bureaucratic process de®ned by the
regulatory body in Rome. The information system
was geared to external regulatory reporting. At
that time, regulatory reporting requirements were
a major factor in the design of the information
systems down to the branch level. The commercial
code of 1882 and the banking law of 1936 de®ned
the structure for external reporting for the banks.
They were required to ®le a monthly operating
report with the Commercial Court and to publish
annual balance sheet and income statements. In
1942 legislation was passed that relieved the banks
of ®ling the monthly report with the Commercial
Court. However, the Interministerial Committee
for Credit and Savings continued to receive the
monthly report using it as a primary monitoring
K.J. Euske, A. Riccaboni / Accounting, Organizations and Society 24 (1999) 463±481 467
tool in the supervision of the bank. The report
contained items such as loan volume, assets, and
total deposits. The use of the information by the
regulatory body in¯uenced the structure of the
reporting system within the bank.
Credit was centrally controlled and this con-
tinued through the 1970s. All of the functional
areas reported to the two chief executive ocers
(i.e. Amministratori Delegati). This was typical for
an Italian Bank in the 1960s (Airoldi & Decastri,
1983; Coda, 1969; Masini, C., 1975; Saita, 1982).
Although there was no major change occurring
in the banking industry in the 1960s, the ®rst
major change that we identi®ed was implemented
at Credit in the 1960s. In 1965, Credit was one of
the ®rst banks to establish a career program for
individuals with college degrees. Graduates with
the highest grades from the best schools of eco-
nomics and law in the country were interviewed.
After a rigorous selection process, candidates were
entered into a four-year education program which
included theoretical and practical training. Those
who successfully completed the program were
given access to a career track that o?ered rela-
tively rapid promotions. Testoni (1991a)
2
states
that although there was not an immediate need to
develop personnel within the banking industry
before the mid-1980s Credit was working at
developing its human resources. These early
changes are consistent with Credit's image as being
one of the most commercial banks. In a relatively
stable and conservative environment, Credit was one
of the more progressive organizations.
4.2. The mid-years Ð the 1970s
The last half of the 1970s can be characterized
as a period of greater change than the previous
30±40 years. ``At the beginning of the 70's, the oil
crises, and problems in the currency markets and
labor markets caused a major restructuring of the
Italian industrial system'' (Desario, 1995, p. 17).
Credit's organizational ®eld was changing. Foreign
banks opened branches in Italy. With the foreign
banks came ®nancial innovations and new com-
petitors. Competition in the banking industry
became more intense. Also, the Italian govern-
ment was o?ering short-term government bonds
at relatively high interest rates. As a consequence
margins were beginning to decrease. These chan-
ges pressured the banks to set prices in accordance
with production costs. This encouraged the banks
to become concerned with developing systems to
identify the costs of various products and services.
However, the actual design and implementation of
such systems was not wide spread (Arcari, 1988;
Balossino, 1987; Bergarnin Barbato, 1988; Osti-
nelli & Toscano, 1994).
Even with these changes in the banking envir-
onment, success as a bank employee was tied to
seniority through the mid- to late-1980s. Develop-
ment of individuals was not given much emphasis
in the highly controlled environment. The primary
focus for human resources planning within the
organization was to predict turnover and the
impact of technological changes.
In the mid-1970s, Credit took at least three steps
toward refocusing the organization. The managers
interviewed said that these changes resulted from
Sig. Rondelli's perceived need to adapt to the
changing competitive conditions. They said that
by adapting to the competitive environment the
bank could maintain its success in the market
place and avoid intervention by the banking reg-
ulators. The coercive force of the state had become
a factor in prompting Credit to become more iso-
morphic with its environment.
First, Credit developed the branch budgeting
system in 1974. The personnel at Credit contend
that they were one of the ®rst banks in Italy to
have a branch budgeting system. Although branch
budgeting was not a new concept, we could not
identify another bank in Italy that had a branch
budgeting system that predated Credit's. To meet
the evolving interdependencies with the market
and the state, Sig. Rondelli adopted a system
found in the evolving organizational ®eld, thus
contributing to the di?usion of branch budgeting
into the Italian banking industry.
The branch budgeting system that was imple-
mented contained approximately 40 targets. The
2
Sig. Testoni's writings provided an additional source to
validate information regarding Credit's past. The contents of
Sig. Testoni's writings were consistent with the information
provided by the interviewees.
468 K.J. Euske, A. Riccaboni / Accounting, Organizations and Society 24 (1999) 463±481
targets were a set of ®nancial volume measures or
margins. A few non-®nancial administrative and
promotional targets were also given to the man-
agers. The manager responsible for domestic
banking gave the targets to area managers who in
turn gave the targets to the manager of each group
of branches (MGB). The targets of the group and
those of the manager coincided. The MGB divided
the targets among the managers of the branches of
the group and the lower level managers. Progress
toward meeting the targets was reviewed at mid-year
and at a year-end meeting. During the year, the
budget and the targets could be changed. Normally,
changes authorized by corporate headquarters
could be expected every six months. On rare
occasions the changes occurred on a three-month
cycle.
Credit had an accounting system at the branch
level prior to the implementation of the budgeting
system. The accounting system was, however,
focused on reporting the past to provide informa-
tion for the regulatory bodies. One of the man-
agers stated that under the old branch accounting
system,
managers were measured not with respect to
targets but, more generally, according to the
results they achieved, without any clear com-
parisons with pre-de®ned targets. That system
was ®ne within its context, the owner (Istituto
per la Ricostruzione Industriale (IRI)) was
pleased with the results. They didn't press us
much. They took the dividends (i.e., staccava
la cedola). Stability more than pro®tability
was the focus of control.
Second, Credit opened the Management Educa-
tion Center in 1975. The Center was a demonstra-
tion of Credit's commitment to the development
of the human resources of the organization. As an
indication of the quality of the training program,
interviewees said that in many cases managers
who left Credit became top ocers of smaller
banks. Their comments are congruent with the
commonly held view in the Italian banking sector
that Credit was a source of ocers for smaller
banks. This was also part of a larger role that
Credit, Banca Commerciale Italiana, and Banca
Nazionale del Lavoro played in the banking
industry. One rather high level example of such a
move is Sig. Testoni who left his position as
Director of Human Resources at Credit to become
the president of a smaller privately held Italian
bank. As one of the managers explained, the
movement of personnel happened at
all levels, not only managers, but also clerks
and ocers. Credit and Banca Commerciale
Italiana, have been the two largest banking
schools, with Banca Nazionale del Lavoro
third. For the other banks it was useful to
take advantage of it by o?ering higher sal-
aries or promotions. This was usually done by
small and middle-sized banks but it also hap-
pened with large banks.
Third, a work group was created at Credit to try
and cost the various portfolios and processes in
the organization. The work group was established
in the part of the organization that was in charge
of data processing. The ®rst products to be costed
were checks and bills of exchange. The analysis
found 600 di?erent products. The timing of the
initiative places Credit at the forefront of such
e?orts in Italy (Ostinelli & Toscano, 1994). How-
ever, the e?ort did not produce a new system and
could be described as collapsing of its own weight.
As one manager described the e?ort,
the problem was addressed through the use of
pedantic, cumbersome operations research
techniques. The results were signi®cant but
not implementable in any practical way. A lot
of statistical analysis without a general vision
Ð analysis without synthesis.
Another manager describing how the e?ort
became so focused on doing analysis said that
``They studied the sex of angels.''
One of the managers interviewed stated that the
initiation of these changes at Credit represented
the start of management control focused on out-
put and performance rather than narrow proce-
dures. In other words, to be successful was being
rede®ned from meeting requirements mandated by
the central regulatory body to performance in the
K.J. Euske, A. Riccaboni / Accounting, Organizations and Society 24 (1999) 463±481 469
marketplace. The management control system was
beginning to change to address the evolving
external interdependencies. In the process internal
interdependencies were changing. The new bud-
geting system, education center, and costing
initiative began to rede®ne the division of labor
and the relationship of management and workers.
Such changes in structure in an institutional
environment are not simply the by-product of
organizational activities but rather the result of
purposeful action (Tolbert & Zucker, 1996). In this
case, the changes were the results of actions taken
by Sig. Rondelli and his senior management.
4.3. Multiple changes Ð the 1980s
During the 1980s the banking system underwent
additional changes. Some of those changes were
the direct result of implementing the European
Community Directives 77/780 and 86/635. Pre-
sidential decree no. 350, 27 June 1983 enacted
Directive 77/780 on banking coordination. The
decree emphasized the banks as enterprises oper-
ating in a market environment and less as an
instrument of economic policy (Ciampi, 1993). As
part of this market emphasis, greater freedom was
given to the banks to open new branches. Direc-
tive 86/635 resulted in both the requirement for a
standardized balance sheet and income statement
for banks and the publication of explanatory
notes to the published accounts. Previously, nei-
ther a balance sheet in a standard format or
explanatory notes were required (Golia & March-
esi, 1991). The government and the authorities
supervising the banking industry tried to liberalize
the industry and stimulate greater competition
among the banks while trying to maintain the sta-
bility of the ®nancial structure of the banks. The
changes were enacted within the original banking
law of 1936. In what had been characterized as a
highly regulated and restrictive Ð albeit stable Ð
environment, the regulators were attempting to
reduce mandated market segmentation, allowing
more branches and territorial expansion, and gra-
dually abolishing the barriers to the entrance of new
®nancial intermediaries. The state was rede®ning its
relationship to the banks and the relationship of the
banks to each other (Desario, 1995; Ostinelli &
Toscano, 1994; Riccaboni & Ghirri, 1994).The
state, through its legislated authority, altered the
rules of the game and in e?ect coerced the banks
to change. With decreasing regulation of the
banking industry and the arrival of additional
competitors, the sophistication of the products
increased. This, in turn, created a need for a
greater emphasis in the industry on human
resource planning and development within the
organization (Testoni, 1991b).
In the mid-1980s, Sig. Rondelli, in response to
the initial changes in the regulatory environment
(Testoni, 1991a), developed two thrusts within the
bank: (1) develop a new managerial culture that
would involve all managers and (2) ®nd a way to
give targets to middle- and lower-level manage-
ment and incentives to top management.
The intent for the change in culture was to move
Credit from a traditional emphasis on the making
and the technical management of loans in the
corporate sector to one of managing the bank in
the retail and commercial sectors. The traditional
focus was exempli®ed by the training at the edu-
cational center.
Credit was a typical bank focused on ®rms and
making loans to ®rms. Loans were an impor-
tant part of the culture of the organization.
Training at the educational center was focused
on loans and their technical aspects. For a long
time, the Corso ®di, that is the course on loans,
was the top one (Credit Manager).
The manager explained that
The culture of the bank had always been that
of making loans, loans were at the center of
everything. One of the top managers had an
opportunity to work abroad and to see our
business in a wider way, less traditional. . .. In
1988 they tried to change that focus, the
emphasis was to have the bank as whole look
also at the retail sector not just loans to the
corporate sector. . .. The new focus required
communication; training can be very e?ective
in doing that. . .. The objective was that o-
cers trained at the center would take the new
culture to the branches.
470 K.J. Euske, A. Riccaboni / Accounting, Organizations and Society 24 (1999) 463±481
A top manager of Credit stated that ``The semi-
nars were a means to provide a uniform transfer of
the cultureÐthe new managerial culture''. The
program at the education center changed. Another
manager said that ``The training on managerial
issues increased greatly. . .technical was 80 percent
of the total, ®ve years later it was 50 percent.
Managerial went from 20 to 50 percent.'' The
training was extensive both in the number of
managers trained and in the topics covered. The
same manager stated that the
Courses for 2,300 managers were on the
changes just introduced: new strategy, struc-
ture, an MBO system, a renewed emphasis on
the development of human resources.
As part of the change, the bank moved from an
authoritarian organizational structure to one
where managers had increasing responsibility.
Before 1988 Credit, like other Italian banks, was
functionally organized. As shown in Fig. 1, the
directors of personnel, organization, accounting,
credit, international, market relations, and all the
MGBs reported directly to top management (i.e.
the President, the chief executive ocers, and the
single or functional area directors). Speci®c
reporting responsibilities and accountability were
not well de®ned. The MGBs reported to the func-
tional area directors on issues relevant to that
director. As a consequence of this reporting struc-
ture, no one, with the exception of the MGB, had
an overall view of the entire business of the
Groups of Branches. However, the structure was
successful. It provided a means to help ensure a
focus on the functionally oriented procedural reg-
ulatory requirements and sucient ¯exibility in
the relatively stable marketplace. When the envir-
onment started to change, the management of
Credit worked to implement new structures and
processes within the organization. For instance,
the Groups of Branches were organized into geo-
graphical areas, with a manager for each area
answerable to the director for domestic banking.
Fig. 2 shows the new position of director of
domestic banking. Management roles were rede-
®ned at all levels. Greater emphasis was placed on
results and not just technical skills, Also, the incen-
tive system, which is discussed below, was changed.
The managers interviewed interpreted these changes
as a response by Sig. Rondelli to changing market
conditions. In a paper written about Credit, Sig.
Fig. 1. Credito Italiano: pre-1988 organization chart.
K.J. Euske, A. Riccaboni / Accounting, Organizations and Society 24 (1999) 463±481 471
Mazzanti, one of the interviewees stated that these
changes ``were the product of a more turbulent and
competitive environment. . .the bank had passed
from a strategy of maintenance of its competitive
position to one of market penetration and develop-
ment'' (Mazzanti, 1995, p. 188).
After 1988 management of the organization
placed greater emphasis on results rather than
procedures. The focus was now on generating
more revenue and not on procedures such as how
eciently the reconciliation was done. In an
attempt to focus managers on results, the directors
at corporate headquarters, the 45 MGBs, and
other top managers (capiservizio) were included in
a Performance Assessment System (PAS). In the
PAS, each manager was evaluated according to:
. budget results
. human resources management
. quality
No direct salary increase was linked to a posi-
tive evaluation. PAS was used for long-term career
evaluation and the ®xed compensation associated
with future positions.
Additionally, a reward system was implemented
and there was an attempt to tie the rewards to
performance. Traditionally, discretionary bonuses
were given to managers from the branch to the top
levels in the bank based on a comparison of initial
and ®nal positions for the period using the
accounting information developed for external
reporting. The system provided information by
branch and not by client or product line. The
rewards were not based on pre-de®ned goals; the
rewards were based on subjective evaluations. The
new performance-based system was similar in
structure to Management by Objectives (MBO)
systems found in the Italian manufacturing indus-
try (Riccaboni, 1999). The plan had two main
features:
. The system placed the business risk on the
shoulders of each MGB.
. The amount of the incentive was auto-
matically determined by the rules of the sys-
tem.
For MGB, targets in the incentive system were a
subset of the 40 some budget targets previously
Fig. 2. Credito Italiano: 1988 organization chart.
472 K.J. Euske, A. Riccaboni / Accounting, Organizations and Society 24 (1999) 463±481
discussed. The ®ve to six MGB targets were
quantitative and stated in terms of volumes or
margins. Each area manager, in turn, had as his or
her target the sum of the targets given to the
managers of the groups of branches that reported
to him or her. The area manager was also given a
few qualitative targets related to administrative
changes or promotional campaigns. From about
15 days to a month after the budget was passed to
the MGB, a letter was sent with the ®ve to six
targets. The targets were the same for all the 45
MGBs; only the relative importance of the targets
and the range of acceptable performance changed.
Each was a crucial ®nancial target (e.g., gross
operating pro®t, total deposits, total loans, non-
performing loans), None of them were changed
during the year, the risk of uncontrollable events
and changes in the environment was given to the
MGB. If the MGB was lucky and the targets were
achieved with little or no e?ort, the MGB could
receive the incentive pay. However, the PAS eva-
luation could be negative. The manager could
receive the incentive pay but lose ground in terms
of career.
The directors who reported directly to Sig.
Rondelli also had performance targets. The mini-
mum level of performance rewarded was usually
higher than the budget target, the minimum level
of performance to be rewarded was given 80
points. The maximum number of points that could
be achieved was 120. If the manager got a score
between 80 and 120, the manager would receive
incentive pay that was between 5 and 12% of the
individual's annual salary. An average bonus of
8% was given to 60±70% of the participants.
As stated previously, below the MGB, no per-
formance-related incentives were given. Only dis-
cretionary bonuses were given if positive
performance was demonstrated. The overall per-
formance evaluation for the lower managers
focused on results and behavior based on meeting
budget and non-quantitative targets. At the end of
the year, each MGB was given an allotment of
funds for bonuses. The manager would award the
discretionary bonuses within speci®c ranges
de®ned by hierarchical level. Corporate head-
quarters had to be informed of the amount of the
bonuses. In 1996, the system was changing to limit
the discretion in providing the bonuses. This was
in¯uenced by the belief that the new management
control system enabled management to identify
responsibility for results (i.e., sales) by speci®c cli-
ent or account.
Also at the central headquarters, starting in the
mid-1980s, each Central Director had money to
distribute. A bonus of approximately 5±10% of
the annual salary was given to about 20±30% of
the individuals on sta?. Bonuses could be and
were awarded to some of the same individuals
from year to year. This bonus system continue to
be used through 1996 for individuals not directly
involved in selling activities.
Fig. 3 summarizes the evaluation and incentive
system at Credit. The overall purpose of the three
part evaluation and incentive system was to focus
managers on results. To measure results, the
managerial accounting system was re®ned to
obtain the necessary information for management
control. The cost of providing the main products
and services was to be computed for the ®rst time.
Pro®tability down to each window
3
(i.e., sportello)
would be developed. The new system was designed
to make it possible to track direct costs from the
smallest branch to the highest level at the top of
the bank. Costs and revenues would be booked at
the time of the sale. Multiple internal transfer
rates would be used to cost the funds used for the
various products and services. Also, management
started to analyze how to charge headquarters costs
to the operating departments. At headquarters
indirect costs were charged to managers. The chan-
ges and initiatives helped to make managerial
accounting information and results measurement
more accepted tools. In 1990, the system generated
its ®rst pro®tability reports.
Also in 1988, there was signi®cant turnover in
top management. Four out of the top 15 managers
(i.e., the head of domestic banking, the securities
and stocks portfolio manager, the head of organi-
zation and resources department, the head of the
personnel department) retired or simply left the
organization. Sig. Rondelli and the manager of the
3
Sportelli are small local branches that report to a local
main branch.
K.J. Euske, A. Riccaboni / Accounting, Organizations and Society 24 (1999) 463±481 473
human resources department at that time, Sig.
Testoni, used the opportunity to introduce di?er-
ent management tools and techniques. The change
in personnel became an opportunity for Sig. Ron-
delli to help insure that the rede®ned internal and
external interdependencies were the realized inter-
pretations by management and not merely sym-
bolic changes.
Managers consider 1988 to be a crucial year.
One manager viewed the changes that occurred or
were initiated in 1988 as being
like changing wheels on a truck while it was
moving. . .The period 1988±1990 is when
Credit changed from being an institution to
being a ®rm. Before 1988 our competitors
were only Banca Commerciale Italiana,
Banco di Roma, Banca Nazionale del Lavoro
and San Paolo di Torino. Afterwards (1990),
we competed with all the banking system,
working on short- and long-term and with
non-bank ®nancial intermediaries.
The changes brought an increase in pro®tability
but they also brought a ``short-term'' focus which
caused problems. One of the managers explained that
to o?set the focus on the short-term, the bank began
to ``keep managers in a single location for a longer
period. Traditionally, moving up the organization
meant frequent relocations. In recent years, moving
often has not been as important for career advance-
ment.'' From 1988 through the ®rst part of the 1990s
Credit focused on absorbing the changes made and
re®ning the tools that had been introduced.
In 1988, the changes in the organization started as
a top down initiative with the development of a new
strategic orientation and a new organizational struc-
ture. These initiatives were met by ``a push from the
bottom, as local managers were stimulated to ask for
more autonomy because of the incentives tied to
results and a growing recognition of their own cap-
abilities'' (Mazzanti, 1995, p. 188). Sig. Mazzanti's
observation was corroborated by the interview data.
Sig. Rondelli retired in 1990. After his retire-
ment, actions to cut costs were taken such as
reduction in the use of external consultants. Per-
sonnel costs were seen as excessive. The new leader
began to rede®ne the interdependencies resulting
in a reallocation of resources. Also, with worsen-
ing economic conditions, the number of non-per-
forming loans increased in¯uencing the character
of the operating environment. During the period
from 1990 to 1994, while Sig. Rondelli was retired,
there were moments when the momentum for change
within the organization decreased and the organiza-
tion behaved more as state-controlled rather than a
market-controlled organization. For instance, there
was an increase in lending to public organizations
(e.g., INI, IRI, EFIM).
4.4. The years of privatization Ð the 1990s
The 1990s brought new elements to in¯uence
change in the banking industry in Italy:
. market globalization, with new competitors
and the need to support clients in their
international activities;
Fig. 3. Managerial evaluation and incentive system.
474 K.J. Euske, A. Riccaboni / Accounting, Organizations and Society 24 (1999) 463±481
. deregulation by the Bank of Italy, thereby
eliminating some administrative constraints
and controls;
. a new banking law giving all the banks the
authority to operate in any ®nancial sector.
As indicated previously, until the 1990s, the
Italian banking system had two types of credit
institutions: Ordinary Credit Institutions that had
a short-term focus and Special Credit Institutions
that had a mid- and long-term focus. Ordinary
Credit Institutions included:
. Public charter banks (istituti di credito di
diritto pubblico)
. Banks of national interest (banche di interesse
nazionale)
. Ordinary credit banks (banche di credito
ordinario)
. Popular co-operative banks (banche popolari
cooperative)
. Savings banks (casse di risparmio)
. Pledge banks (monti di credito su pegno)
. Rural and artisan banks (banche rurali e
artigiane)
. Central institutions for each type of bank
(istituti centrale di categoria)
. Branches of foreign banks (®liali di banche
estere)
The banking reform of the 1990s gave each
bank the opportunity to operate in the short-,
mid-, and long-term markets (Riccaboni & Ghirri,
1994). The new legislation supported changes
promulgated in Economic Community Directives
(primarily Directive 89/646). The legislation
supported the de-specialization of the institutions,
strengthened the powers of the supervising autho-
rities, and underscored the neutrality of the
supervising authorities with respect to the struc-
ture adopted by the banks. These changes in e?ect
made survival as a ®nancial institution much more
performance based than it had been in the past.
Credit was one of the three banks of national
interest along with Banca Commerciale and Banca
di Roma. At the beginning of the 1990s, these
three banks accounted for approximately 13% of
the total banking activity in Italy. By law a bank
of national interest needed to be a joint-stock
company (i.e., Spa) whose shares were quoted on
the stock exchange. Before privatization, the
majority of the stock of these banks was owned by
IRI.
Linked to political changes and a large public
debt, the Italian government started a privatiza-
tion process that included the sale of two of the
banks of national interest, Credito Italiano in 1993
and Banca Commerciale in 1994. By making the
privatization decision the state rede®ned the
environment and de®nition of success for the
banks. The new context now required more
emphasis on results, including an acceptance of
some emphasis on short-term goals.
The rede®ned environment made the need to
determine and use reliable cost-of-services infor-
mation more important than it had been pre-
viously. Knowing which products generated the
pro®ts and losses was now crucial to the banks
survival. Although the new managerial accounting
system had been producing pro®tability reports
since 1990, the internal reporting system used until
1992 was based on required regulatory accounting
procedures, which did not provide operating
results for speci®c services and market sectors.
Starting in 1994, only the new full-cost, internal-
reporting system was used for internal decision
making. As one of the managers said, ``Before we
were focused on the clients, now we are focused on
the clients and the shareholders''. Much more
attention needed to be given to eciency and
e?ectiveness de®ned in terms of returns to the
shareholders. Shareholders, particularly the major
ones, were concerned with bottom line results.
In March 1994, with the ®rst general meeting of
the privatized company, Sig. Rondelli was back
again as president of the bank. From October
1992 until the return of Sig. Rondelli, Sig. Bruno
held the position of Chief Executive Ocer. Upon
Sig. Rondelli's return, Sig. Bruno acquired the
additional title of the vice-president of the bank.
Sig. Bruno was a ``man of the bank'' who had
started as a clerk in 1954. He is important in the
evolution of Credit because he provided continuity
in the leadership of the bank during Sig. Rondel-
li's absence and provided the technical knowledge
to bring the bank from the stable state-owned
K.J. Euske, A. Riccaboni / Accounting, Organizations and Society 24 (1999) 463±481 475
environment to the new competitive environment.
He is seen within the bank as the individual who
made the transition possible, the ferryman (i.e., il
traghettatore).
The organizational chart was redrawn during
June 1994 and twice in 1995, during April and
June. See Figs. 4±6. According to one of the man-
agers, the changes that
occurred in June 94, April 95, and June 95
were changes aimed at bringing the bank
closer to the clients. . .Starting in April 1994
di?erent units reported to the CEO: domestic
banking, international banking and ®nance,
organizational development, information
systems, administration, planning and con-
trol, investments. Domestic banking was
divided into retail, areas, and corporate.
Performance-related rewards continued to be
given by corporate headquarters down to the level
of the area managers. Each area manager in turn
gave performance-related rewards to the nine to ten
managers of groups of branches who reported to
himor her. Below the level of manager of a group of
branches, the branch manager could award a bonus
if a clear positive result was achieved.
In late 1994, key stockholders backed the
appointment of a new Corporate and Group
Controller. The new controller Sig. Profumo came
from a publicly-traded insurance company which
was a major stockholder in Credit. After seven
months with Credit, he was promoted to a new
position of Managing Director. Sig. Profumo
represented to the stockholders an individual
whose understanding of the broader organiza-
tional ®eld of ®nancial institutions Ð rather just
the Italian banking industry Ð would bring a
sharp focus to the interpretation of the inter-
dependencies with the market.
In April 1995 the bank's operations were divi-
ded into two business areas: domestic banking (the
core business) and international banking and
®nance. Domestic banking now included retail
and private banking, corporate, and the branch
network (i.e. rete).
In order to be closer to the clients: The cor-
porate sector was divided into enterprises and
key accounts for high level clients. Retail and
Fig. 4. Credito Italiano: June 1994 organization chart.
476 K.J. Euske, A. Riccaboni / Accounting, Organizations and Society 24 (1999) 463±481
private banking was divided into two separate
organizations. The Italian branch network
was still divided into ®ve areas, including 45
Groups of Branches, to which the branches
report, and windows (i.e. sportelli). Four tiers
later reduced to three (Credit Manager).
With these changes, the distinction between
the retail and the corporate operations became
deeper in the branches to allow Credit personnel
to become more specialized and be closer to the
clients.
A few weeks later a tier of middle management
was eliminated and 11 new territorial directors
(direzioni territoriali) were created rede®ning the
roles and responsibilities of the old area directors.
The position of the Head of Groups of Branches
was abolished. The new territorial directors were
given the authority to act ``as a managing director
of a local bank''. These directors had resources to
Fig. 6. Credito Italiano: June 1995 organization chart.
Fig. 5. Credito Italiano: April 1995 organization chart.
K.J. Euske, A. Riccaboni / Accounting, Organizations and Society 24 (1999) 463±481 477
promote sales activity in their territories and were
suciently high in the organizational hierarchy to
be able ``to produce globally and to sell locally''.
The managers of the 11 direzioni territoriali
are given a great deal of autonomy and report
to top management. They will run the dir-
ezioni as if they were autonomous companies.
The target is to become rooted in the local
environment. To do that we have changed one
of the main rules of the HRM in banks:
instead of moving among diverse locations,
managers will develop in narrower geographic
areas (Bruno, 1996).
Credit had just acquired Credit Romagnolo
(Rolo) a bank with a very strong market position
in north central Italy. Rolo was seen as being
representative of, if not a model for, the territorial
units. Credit explicitly was mimicking the struc-
ture of a successful, albeit smaller, privately held
organization.
In 1995 the planning function was changed so
that the strategic plan included not only the input
of the planning sta? and a few of the highest level
corporate managers but also high-level line man-
agers. The sta? input to the process decreased.
Top management of the organization met for a
series of Saturdays at the Management Education
Center to develop the plan. The e?ort required
setting income goals in terms of return on equity
(ROE) and having each of the top managers take
responsibility for meeting some portion of those
goals. The plan was then presented by the Chief
Executive Ocer and the Managing Director to
the managers in each of the 11 territories. Once
the top management agreed on the plan, it was
then presented to all of the managers at Credit.
Historically, only top management were privy to
the strategic plan.
With all of the changes that have occurred, the
interviewees continue to express a desire and need
to continue to adapt to the changing environment.
The areas of concern to the managers included:
. a need to involve all members of the organi-
zation in the life of the ®rm
. a need to stimulate the branches
. a need to better understand productivity and
quality in the units of the bank
. extend the management control system to
foreign branches
. current risk management was de®ned as not
generating bad debts
. a need to do more benchmarking
5. Concluding comments
There are at least four issues that are evident in
the Credit (Credito Italiano) case. The ®rst two are
directly related to the motivation for this paper and
the other two are tangential to the paper.
First, in regard to the speci®c events at Credito
Italiano, a key if not the fundamental element in
the use and evolution of the management control
system in the management of the inter-
dependencies was the role of Sig. Rondelli. He
delineated the context and de®ned the changes
during his term as Chief Executive Ocer. The
inertia from his e?orts continued after his retire-
ment. However, the new Chief Executive Ocer
brought a rede®nition of interdependencies. For
example, the focus on the reduction of personnel
costs and the increase in loans to public entities.
As Fligstein (1990) argues, the role of the top
manager is critical to the de®nition of what is to be
controlled and how to control it. In addition to
Sig. Rondelli's leadership, progressive thinking
``old guard'' and ``young Turks'' injected into the
organization provided important leadership for
the change. The ``old guard'' provided an under-
standing of the core values of the organization, the
characteristics of the interdependencies, and the
steps necessary to address the status quo. The
``young Turks'' brought a familiarity with the
rede®ned organizational ®eld and the correspond-
ing de®nition of success. To some degree the
changes that occurred were the result of broader
socio-political forces (e.g., changing regulatory
environment, globalization of ®nancial markets).
However, whoever was the Chief Executive Ocer
would have provided a de®nition Ð either in an
active or reactive mode Ð of what was to be con-
trolled and how to control it. Sig. Rondelli's
actions provide evidence to support the view of
478 K.J. Euske, A. Riccaboni / Accounting, Organizations and Society 24 (1999) 463±481
the manager as decision maker in an institutiona-
lized environment and not just as an ``over-
socialized'' individual.
Second, the management control system dealt
with changes in the internal and external inter-
dependencies in the domains of strategy and
structure of the organization, the organizational
®eld, and the state. Addressing strategy and
structure, the new branch budgeting system was
designed to emphasize speci®c performance goals.
The incentive system was adapted to reward
meeting speci®c budgetary goals. A subjective
evaluation was used as input for long-term career
and compensation decisions. The accounting sys-
tem shifted from one that focused on providing
information for regulatory control to one that
focused on measuring success de®ned in terms of
return to stockholders. Cost and pro®t reporting
systems were developed to meet the new market
and owner focus. In regard to the evolving orga-
nizational ®eld and relationship with the state, the
control system was used to minimize the depen-
dence on the regulatory body and to demonstrate
the adaptability of the organization in meeting the
evolving competitive environment. The training and
education programs provided a vehicle to foster the
image of a well-trained sta? and to demonstrate
that the organization accepted its socially de®ned
role as an educator of bankers. The management
control system appeared to be a ¯exible tool in the
management of the interdependencies.
Third, the case supports previous research
(Euske et al., 1993; Merchant & Riccaboni, 1992)
that found internal culture and the market context
may be more important than national culture in
explaining how management control works. That
is not to say that cultural di?erences may not be
important. This study was conducted in one orga-
nization, over a relatively short period of time that
included a major change in the market environ-
ment. Other work (e.g. Catturi & Riccaboni, 1996;
Chow, Kato & Merchant, 1996) provide evidence
that at some level cultural di?erences matter in the
design of management control systems. However,
at Credito Italiano it appears that the context,
history, and personalities seem to provide the data
to explain much of the behavior of the use and
evolution of the management control system.
Finally, the case of Credito Italiano provides
evidence that a state-owned enterprise can change.
Initially, Credito Italiano was not under strong
pressure to change. The initial change, facilitated
by an environment with relatively low levels of
competition, seemed to have some importance in
the creation of the internal momentum to develop
and to adapt the management control system. The
case study points to the importance of manage-
ment's role in the design and implementation of
the management control system in privatization
and not only the ®nancial, juridical, and eco-
nomic aspects of the process. The core of the
management control system that helped Credito
Italiano become part of the private sector was in
place when the transition to the private sector
was made. The organization did not need to
su?er dramatic changes in the management con-
trol processes to become a ``private'' organiza-
tion. Even though it was not used to its full
potential, the management control system was in
place.
Are the phenomena we observed unique to the
newly privatized Credito Italiano? Other work
(e.g., Hoque & Hopper, 1994) provides evidence
of a similar result in another environment. How-
ever, the entire issue of the interaction of reg-
ulatory forces, forms of governance, and the
management control system is a relatively unex-
plored area. The focus of much of the manage-
ment control systems research seems to be on
large publicly or privately held companies oper-
ating in a single country or internationally.
Studies of more varied and less orthodox organi-
zations than those in which the literature on man-
agement control system is grounded could help us
to better understand those systems.
Acknowledgements
The authors would like to thank Credito Ita-
liano and especially Sig. Bruno, Profumo, Ferraro,
Darbesio, and Mazzanti for their support of this
project.
K.J. Euske, A. Riccaboni / Accounting, Organizations and Society 24 (1999) 463±481 479
References
Airoldi, G., & Decastri, M. (1983). Le funzioni di organizza-
zione in impresa, I modelli generali di analisi e progettazione e
il caso delle banche italiane. Milano: Giu?re .
Anon. (1993). An introduction to Credito Italiano. Milan: Credit
Italiano.
Anon. (1996). The world's 100 largest banks. The Wall Street
Journal, 26 September, p. R29.
Ansari, S., & Euske, K. J. (1987). Rational, rationalizing, and
reifying uses of accounting data in organizations. Account-
ing, Organizations and Society, 12(6), 549±570.
Anthony, R. N., Dearden, J., & Govindarajan, V. (1992).
Management control systems. Irwin: Homewood.
Arcari, A. (1988). Il controllo di gestione nelle banche: l'esper-
ienza italiana. In F. Amigoni, Misurazioni d'Azi enda. Pro-
grammazzione e Controllo, 2. Milan: Giu?reÂ
Balossino, A. (1987). Il controllo di gestione nelle banche.
L'Impresa, 3, 86±96.
Bergamin Barbaro, M. (1988). La piani®cazione strategica ed il
controllo di gestione nelle aziende di credito. Banche e Ban-
chieri, 7/8, 483±491.
Bhimani, A. (1994). Accounting enlightenment in the age of
reason. The European Accounting Review, 3(3), 399±442.
Bianchi, T. (1988). Evoluzione del sistema bancario e del rap-
porto banca impressa. Banche e Banchieri, 1.
Boland, R. (9181). A study systems design: C. West Church-
man and Chris Argyris. Accounting, Organizations and
Society, 6(2), 109±118.
Bruno, E. (1996). Bruno: noi non giochiamo sporco. La
Repubblica, 30 January.
Catturi, G., & Riccaboni, A. (1996). Management control and
national culture. Padova: Cedam.
Ciampi, C. A. (1993). La transformazione delta banca in una
societaÁ che cresce. Banca, Impresa e SocietaÁ, 1.
Chow, C. W., Kato, Y., & Merchant, K. A. (1996). The use of
organizational controls and their e?ects on data manipula-
tion and management myopia: a Japan vs. U. S. comparison.
Accounting, Organizations and Society, 21(2/3), 175±192.
Coda, V. (1969). La determinazione dei redditi sezionali con
particolare riferimento alle aziende di credito (Scritti in onore
di G. Dell' Amore). Milan: Giu?re .
Cuneo, G. (1994). Privatizzazioni: problem: del cambiamentop
e gestione. Economica e management.
Desario, V. (1995). La nuova legge bancaria e l'avitaÁ di
controllo. In A. de Maio, & C. Patalano, Modelli organizza-
tivi e di controllo nel sistema bancario (pp. 17±33). Milan:
Edibank.
DiMaggio, P. J., & Powell, W. W. (1983). The iron cage revis-
ited: institutional isomorphism and collective rationality in
organizational ®elds. American Sociological Review, 48, 147±
160.
Euske, K. J., Lebas, M. J., & McNair, C. J. (1993). Perfor-
mance management in an international setting. Management
Accounting Research, 4(4), 275±365.
Fligstein, N. (1990). The transformation of corporate control.
Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
Fligstein, N. (1991). The structural transformation of American
industry: an institutional account of the causes of diversi®-
cation in the largest ®rms, 1919±1979. In W. W. Powell, & P.
J. DiMaggio, The new institutionalism in organizational ana-
lysis (pp. 311±336). Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Fligstein, N., & Freeland, R. (1995). Theoretical and com-
parative perspectives on corporate organization. In Annual
review of sociology (vol. 21, pp. 21±43). Palo Alto: Annual
Reviews Inc.
Forestieri, G. (1989). Evoluzione dello scenario ®nanziario e
della tecnologia e sviluppo dell'orga nizzazione bancaria. In
L'organizzazione della banca (pp. 51±68). Milan: EGEA.
Frigerio, E. (1990). Internal auditing nelle banche. Milan: Edibank.
Glaser, B. G., & Strauss, A. L. (1970). Theoretical sampling. In
N. K. Denzin, Sociological methods (pp. 105±114). Chicago:
Aldine.
Golia, P., & Marchesi. (1991). Trasparenza e comparabilitaÁ del
bilancio di esercizio delle aziende di credito. Milan: Associa-
zione per lo sviluppo degli studi di banca e borsa.
Hopwood, A. (1990). Accounting and organization change.
Accounting, Auditing, and Accountabilily, 3(1), 7±17.
Hoque, Z., & Hopper, T. (1994). Rationality, accounting and
politics: a case study of management control in a Banglade-
shi jute mill. Management Accounting Research, 5(1), 5±30.
Kloot, L. (1997). Organizational learning and management
control systems: responding to environmental change. Man-
agement Accounting Research, 8(1), 47±73.
Masini, C. (1975). I centri di reddito nella banca, in AA VV
(scritti in onore di U. Caprara). Milan: Vallardi.
Masini, M. (1988). Nuove strategie nella ricerca di produttivitaÁ e
di redditivitaÁ dell'integrazione in banca (prospettive di pro-
grammazione e controllo nelle banche). Milan: Giu?re .
Mazzanti, R. (1995). Credit: il controllo di gestione. In A. de
Maio, & C. Patalano, Modelli organizzativi e di controllo nel
sistema bancario (pp. 187±200). Milan: Edibank.
Merchant, K., & Riccaboni, A. (1992). In Evolution of perfor-
manced-based management incentives at the FIAT Group.
W. J. Bruns, Performance measurement, evaluation, and
incentives (pp. 63±96). Boston: Harvard Business School
Press.
Meyer, J. W., & Rowan, B. (1977). Institutional organizations:
formal structure as myth and ceremony. American Journal of
Sociology, 83, 340±363.
Onado, M. (1996). La banca come impresa. Bologna: Il Mulino.
Ostinelli, C., & Toscano, G. (1994). Putting quality to work in
banking through management accounting systems: three
Italian banks' alternative approaches. Paper presented at The
17th Annual Congress of the European Accounting Asso-
ciation, Venice, 6±8 April 1994.
Otley, D. (1994). Management control in contemporary orga-
nizations: towards a wider framework. Management
Accounting Research, 5(3,4), 289±299.
Otley, D. T., & Berry, A. J. (1994). Case study research in
management accounting and control. Management Account-
ing Research, 5(1), 45±65.
Riccaboni, A. (1999). Performance ed incentivi. Padova;
Cedam.
480 K.J. Euske, A. Riccaboni / Accounting, Organizations and Society 24 (1999) 463±481
Riccaboni, A., & Ghirri, R. (1994). European ®nancial report-
ing: Italy. London: Routledge.
Saita, M. (1982). Management bancario, nuovi sistemi dir-
ezionali e organizzativi. Milan: F. Angeli.
Schein, E. (1988). Organizational socialization and the profes-
sion of management. Sloan Management Review, 30(1), 53±65.
Scott, W. R. (1987). The adolescence of institutional theory.
Administrative Science Ouarterly, 32, 493±511.
Testoni, G. (1991a). Credito Italiano's approach to human
resource planning: a short summary. Paper presented at
Associazlone Bancaria Italiana, Rome, 6. June.
Testoni, G. (1991b). The changing nature of competition in
Italian banking and the response of Credit Italiano to this
change. Paper presented at People 91, London, 5 December.
Tolbert, P. S., & Zucker, L. G. (1996). The institutionalization
of institutional theory. In S. R. Clegg, & W. R. Nord,
Handbook of organizational studies (pp. 175±190). London:
Sage Publications.
Zucker, L. G. (1983). Organizations as institutions. In S.B
Bacharach, Research in the sociology of organizations (pp. 1±
42). Greenwich: JAI Press.
K.J. Euske, A. Riccaboni / Accounting, Organizations and Society 24 (1999) 463±481 481
doc_777786488.pdf