Assessing the interaction effect of cost control systems and information technology integration on manufacturing plant financial performance |
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Affiliation: | 1. Anderson School of Management, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM 87106, United States;2. Davis School of Business, Jacksonville University, Jacksonville, FL 32211, United States;1. Faculty of Business Administration, University of Hamburg, Moorweidenstrasse 18, 20148 Hamburg, Germany;2. UCLA Anderson, 110 Westwood Plaza, Los Angeles, CA 90095, USA |
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Abstract: | The interface between management control and information technology is an under-developed research area with a knowledge gap concerning its implications for financial performance. This study contributes to bridging this gap by investigating the interaction effect of cost control systems and information technology integration on manufacturing plant financial performance. We surveyed a sample of 518 managers of U.S. manufacturing plants, approximately evenly distributed between those using activity-based costing and volume-based costing. Using hierarchical regression analyses, results indicate that while information technology integration and cost control systems do not provide significant independent effects on plant financial performance, they do interact to positively impact manufacturing plant financial performance. Thus, our findings suggest that manufacturing plants will reap the greatest financial performance benefits from investments in activity-based cost control systems when combined with information technology integration. |
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Keywords: | IT integration Cost control systems Manufacturing plant financial performance Activity-based costing Volume-based costing |
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