Management Accounting in an Early Multidivisional Organization: General Motors in the 1920s*
H. Thomas Johnson
Business History Review, 1978, vol. 52, issue 4, 490-517
Abstract:
Introduction of the multidivisional enterprise, which has generally replaced the functional or departmental form of organization in the twentieth century, required management accounting techniques that provided both divisional and top management with data with which to evaluate individual managers' performance, company-wide performance, and future company policy. Professor Johnson discusses the development of these controls at General Motors, the results obtained with them in practice, and their alleged shortcomings, especially in respect to division managers' attitudes towards constructive decisions that might tend to limit in the short run the rate of return on the investment entrusted to them. He concludes with some observations on the influence that organization has had on corporate goals.
Date: 1978
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:cup:buhirw:v:52:y:1978:i:04:p:490-517_04
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