The application of a cost management system within the changing dynamics of organisations

Nagirikandalage, P ORCID logoORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6411-3632 and Ogundana, O ORCID logoORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0121-7231, 2025. The application of a cost management system within the changing dynamics of organisations. Strategic Change. ISSN 1086-1718 (Forthcoming)

[thumbnail of 2498183_Nagirikandalage.pdf] Text
2498183_Nagirikandalage.pdf - Post-print
Restricted to Repository staff only

Download (533kB)

Abstract

Contingency theory suggests that cost-management systems (CMS) must be aligned with organisational and environmental characteristics, however, empirical evidence remains fragmented and is drawn largely from advanced economies. It remains unclear whether the importance of specific contingent factors varies when digital infrastructure, capital resources, and competitive pressures differ substantially. This study addresses that gap by investigating the determinants of CMS adoption in Sri Lanka a developing, post-conflict economy through survey data from 186 firms in the manufacturing and service sectors and binary logistic regression analysis. The results reveal that external and structural contingencies, technological capability, market competition, organisational size, financial strength and the burden of cost justification are significantly associated with CMS adoption, whereas internal process variables such as information quality and routine change are not. Prior studies indicate that these patterns deviate from evidence in developed settings, thereby refining contingency theory by demonstrating that foundational resource constraints can eclipse “soft” informational drivers. Conceptually, the paper advances knowledge by specifying how resource scarcity and infrastructure maturity moderate the traditional contingency framework; practically, it offers policymakers and managers a prioritisation schema for phasing CMS investment in resource-constrained contexts. In doing so, the study extends CMS scholarship beyond its prevailing developed economy focus and provides a transferable analytical model for other emerging and developing markets.

Item Type: Journal article
Publication Title: Strategic Change
Creators: Nagirikandalage, P. and Ogundana, O.
Publisher: Wiley
Date: 25 August 2025
ISSN: 1086-1718
Identifiers:
Number
Type
2498183
Other
Divisions: Schools > Nottingham Business School
Record created by: Laura Borcherds
Date Added: 17 Sep 2025 08:56
Last Modified: 17 Sep 2025 08:56
URI: https://irep.ntu.ac.uk/id/eprint/54346

Actions (login required)

Edit View Edit View

Statistics

Views

Views per month over past year

Downloads

Downloads per month over past year