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Social capital and participative budgeting : a process thinking perspective

Al Hudithi, Faisal Abdyllah S.

Authors

Faisal Abdyllah S. Al Hudithi



Contributors

Waymond Rodgers
Supervisor

Mohamed M. Khalil
Supervisor

Abstract

Over the past years, participative budgeting has attracted researchers and scholars to investigate its impact on subordinates’ behaviours. Earlier empirical studies have investigated this impact as either a direct relationship, with the influence of a moderator or an antecedent or with both moderators and antecedents. Yet, prior studies’ findings were inconsistent with each other.

This study depicts that participative budgeting is governed by the concept of Social Capital and its different dimensions, relational, structural and cognitive. Scholars conceptualised social capital as a set of social resources available through subordinates’ relations, which empower their communication with a variety of individuals. Further, this study investigates the impact of participative budgeting on subordinates’ behaviours by implementing the Throughput model. This model is a decision making model with four factors, linked with six different pathways. The factors are the perception of the individual, the information available for decision making, judgement and finally the decision made. The linking pathways, moreover, would reflect the rationalisation of the individual upon the availability of those different factors. This study examines how the employment of the throughput model can assist in deducting the impact of participative budgeting on subordinates’ behaviours.

This study was implemented among Saudi Arabian mid-level managers working in manufacturing listed companies. A total of 283 surveys were analysed using a second generation statistical tool, SEM-PLS. The results reveal performance and satisfaction were impacted by their relational dimension of social capital. In other words, mid-level managers’ relations with other individuals will have a significant impact on their performance and satisfaction.

The usage of social capital and the implementation of the throughput model advance the understating of the thinking process of those mid-level managers and ultimately the impact on their behaviours within participative budgeting settings.

Citation

Al Hudithi, F. A. S. (2017). Social capital and participative budgeting : a process thinking perspective. (Thesis). University of Hull. Retrieved from https://hull-repository.worktribe.com/output/4219634

Thesis Type Thesis
Deposit Date Oct 27, 2017
Publicly Available Date Feb 23, 2023
Keywords Accounting
Public URL https://hull-repository.worktribe.com/output/4219634
Additional Information Business School, The University of Hull
Award Date Apr 1, 2017

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Copyright Statement
© 2017 Al Hudithi, Faisal Abdyllah S. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced without the written permission of the copyright holder.




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