Sustainability Management Accounting in Urban Development: A Case Study of an Egyptian State-Owned Enterprise
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
3. The Egyptian Context
4. Theoretical Framework
5. Methodology
6. Analysis
6.1. Broader Urban Development Pressures for Sustainability Management Accounting
Before the revolution, characterised by corruption, favouritism, mediation, and dubious political relationships, the public sector’s SOEs were without a dependable management accounting system to oversee and regulate the corporate sustainability KPIs mandated by the government. The NAG’s antiquated management accounting system, although computerised, was not interconnected across the various corporate and governmental strata engaged in national urban development projects. This lack of networking facilitated frequent manipulations by both veteran NAG executives and high-ranking ministry officials, leading to chaos in reporting corporate sustainability practices or related KPIs and in decision-making processes. Such disorganisation contributed to NAG’s financial and executive shortcomings in urban development, ultimately impeding its ability to fulfil its social objectives for the public community as an SOE.
Previously, the company lacked a corporate SMA system and only had scattered, ineffective management accounting practices focused mainly on performance measurement and control rather than sustainability accounting and management accountability during urban development governance. These traditional practices were internally focused and not used by the national government for external decision-making. Government decision-makers and associated SOEs viewed organisational management accounting reports merely as performance evaluations or variance reports, which played no part in urban development decision-making processes. The significance of management accounting in sustainable urban development diminished until the second Egyptian revolution in 2013…
…Post-2013, with the country’s shift towards new political, military, and governmental visions emphasising corporate sustainability in urban development, management accounting and accountants became integral to the successful SMA systems implemented in SOEs from early 2019. From 2013 to 2019, the public sector and associated SOEs underwent a period of sustainability transition. During this time, numerous structural and organisational reforms were implemented within SOEs, including corporate SMA reforms, to comply with new government mandates for national urban development. Consequently, a corporate SMA system has been established within NAG’s daily management accounting routines. This system is operated through an advanced ERP platform, recognised as NAG’s SMA system. The new system was launched through a collaboration between the SMA committee of NAG and Said Co. for Technology, one of our private-sector financial partners, and it officially went into operation on 4 January 2019.
The SMA system is enhanced by a sophisticated, interconnected ERP platform. Unlike before, this operational platform is dedicated to digitally collecting, monitoring, and reporting NAG’s sustainability performance indicators in urban development. The upgraded system enables the SMA committee’s management accountants to both authenticate the reliability of sustainability KPIs and guarantee their transparency to the public. Corporate sustainability KPIs, previously hidden, are made public, thereby increasing the transparency, governance, and accountability of urban development initiatives overseen by the national government and its SOEs.
Currently, the central government and urban development financial partners such as the IMF require specific sustainability KPIs, making it essential to integrate a corporate SMA system. These KPIs are crucial for maintaining the company’s control environment, risk assessment, monitoring activities, and information and communication regarding sustainability. Unlike before, the SMA committee’s management accountants are now required to ensure corporate compliance with integrity and ethics, evaluate risks and fraud, and implement extensive controls over technology and policies. Additionally, they must ensure the communication of relevant information both internally and externally, conduct ongoing assessments, and identify and report any deficiencies. Hence, in contrast to the pre-SMA system, the role of management accountants has evolved to become a central figure in corporate sustainability within urban development.
Unlike before, NAG’s SMA system has markedly decreased fraud among management accountants in corporate SMA/KPIs reporting. The adoption of a corporate SMA system, coupled with relevant KPIs, has normalised the everyday responsibilities of committee management accountants. This is achieved through a consistent procedural protocol via ERP, thereby tackling the previously observed fraud issues in corporate SMA reporting within past urban development initiatives.
In 2020, ERP aided the SMA committee’s management accountants in incorporating KPI2, which focuses on transparency and stakeholder engagement, into NAG’s SMA system. During this period, the IMF requested an SMA report on the public sector’s SOEs to assess their sustainability practices in urban development. The IMF used the SMA/KPIs report to evaluate the SOEs’ effectiveness in implementing national urban development projects and to decide on their financial allocations. A gap related to KPI2, crucial for accurate corporate sustainability evaluations, was noted in the report by the IMF. As a result, the IMF deferred the financial contributions to the SOEs, including NAG, for about three months until the SMA committee’s accountants refined the SMA framework with KPI2 and presented a revised report to the IMF. This event highlights the importance of implementing an SMA system with pertinent KPIs for well-informed funding decisions and reinforces the role of management accountants, as well as the significance of integrating ERP in corporate sustainability within urban development.
6.2. Local Implementation of a Sustainability Management Accounting System in Urban Development Pressures
NAG’s history of failures and the prior chairwoman’s internal manipulations necessitated intervention by the central government, specifically the public sector ministry, in NAG’s internal operations. This intervention marked the beginning of efforts to halt these failures and fraudulent activities. The government, especially the new public sector minister, has dismissed the former chairwoman and her corrupt associates from their positions. Moreover, they have been sentenced to three years by a government court for embezzling public funds and abusing their official capacities for personal gain, contrary to the collective and societal objectives pursued by the government. This has led to the initiation of corporate sustainability reforms within the ministry and NAG via management accounting.
Traditional management accounting methods have not kept pace with the demands of national urban development financing, the evolving role of management accountants in corporate sustainability, or their involvement in the national government’s decision-making processes. With the intensifying pressures of government financing, our senior management faced challenges with the public sector ministry, particularly as the adoption of government KPIs at the national level became obligatory for SOEs engaged in urban development, including NAG. The senior management opted to transition to a new SMA system that incorporates innovative and previously unused techniques like sustainability risk management, sustainability performance measurement, sustainability financial governance, and sustainability internal control. These novel techniques are designed to complement, not replace, existing management accounting methods such as ratio analysis, variance analysis, and cost analysis, thereby supporting corporate sustainability and decision-making. ERP has enabled the NAG’s SMA committee to integrate various techniques into a unified procedural protocol that aligns with the existing routines of its executive members, thus combatting fraud and corruption in corporate SMA reporting.
The ERP platform has structured the operational framework for an SMA system, incorporating new corporate sustainability practices through various channels. These channels encompass innovative practices in risk management, performance measurement, financial governance, and internal control. On the daily ERP interface, one can view these SMA channels within our operational portal, symbolising the recently implemented daily corporate sustainability practices in urban development that inform government financing decisions.
Sustainability risk management practices empower management accountants to develop appropriate responses and engage employees in risk management. These practices also facilitate the provision of daily reports on the effectiveness of sustainability risk management. This is achieved through daily operational movement reports that the SMA committee delivers to NAG senior management at the end of each working day. Should any potential issues emerge, management accounting strategies are implemented to address them.
Beyond this, with the advent of new financial governance practices, management accountants are instrumental in formulating appropriate financial sustainability strategies and projections. They are responsible for furnishing senior management with daily financial performance reports and engaging with pertinent departments to address any unforeseen financial discrepancies in project budgets. In doing so, management accountants ensure stringent governance and accountability in national urban development financing.
The SMA committee conducts two types of sustainability internal control reports: daily and quarterly. The daily report is dispatched at the close of each workday through the ERP platform to key decision-makers at NAG and the public sector ministry, to assess daily operations and make necessary decisions. ERP extends beyond just the SMA committee’s management accountants; it is an integrated platform that encompasses various parties involved in NAG’s national urban development projects. This includes executive departments at the NAG level and key decision-makers at the NAG and ministry levels, who are equipped to oversee daily sustainability performance and make necessary interventions remotely…
…The quarterly report monitors progress in the company’s internal sustainability control measures over the previous three months, compared to the preceding quarter. This report extends beyond the company’s senior management and the ministry, unlike the daily report which serves corporate governance and accountability. It is also shared with various significant funders and public accountability authorities at the national level, confirming NAG’s dedication to internal control practices for corporate sustainability in urban development.
In 2021, SMA reports indicated a marked improvement in corporate sustainability in the context of national urban development, despite senior management’s apprehensions about the potential sustainability risks posed by COVID-19. This unexpected boost in sustainability performance during the difficult times of the pandemic prompted senior management to provide financial bonuses and extra incentives to employees. The goal was to motivate them to stay resilient and overcome the challenges brought by the pandemic, while still advancing internal sustainability practices amid the pressures of national urban development financing.
Another management accountant, A2, cited another example, saying:
In 2022, amid the aftermath of the pandemic, SMA reports underscored the concerns of management accountants about potential financial sustainability risks facing the company. These concerns stemmed from possible fluctuations in both local and international markets over the next two years. Acting as a warning signal, these concerns led the senior management to increase NAG’s reserves from USD 3 million to USD 3.8 million, aiming to safeguard against the anticipated risks in urban development.
7. Discussion
8. Conclusions
9. Implications and Future Research
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Job Titles | Codes | Categories | Age | Qualifications | Experience | Main Interviews (2021) | Ex-Post Interviews (2022) | Duration | Recorded or Notes Taken |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Number of Interview(ee)s | |||||||||
Chairman | P1 | politician | 56 years | PhD | 20 years | 1 | - | 2 h | recorded |
Board director | M1 | military | 53 | PhD | 19 | 1 | 1 | 1.30 | noted |
Deputy board director | P2 | politician | 52 | PhD | 18 | 1 | - | 1.15–1.30 | recorded |
Urban development manager | M2 | military | 51 | MPhil | 15 | 1 | 1 | 1 | recorded |
SMA committee manager | A1 | public administrator | 51 | CPA, ACCA | 16 | 2 | 1 | 1 | noted |
SMA committee accountant | P3 | politician | 40 | ACCA | 10 | 1 | - | 2 | recorded |
SMA committee accountant | M3 | military | 43 | MBA | 13 | 2 | 1 | 1.30 | recorded |
SMA committee accountant | A2 | public administrator | 45 | MSc | 12 | 2 | 1 | 2 | recorded |
SMA committee accountant | A3 | public administrator | 50 | CPA | 10 | 1 | - | 1.30 | noted |
SMA committee accountant | P4 | politician | 42 | CMA | 11 | 2 | - | 2 | noted |
ERP manager | P5 | politician | 52 | ACCA | 15 | 1 | 1 | 1.45–2 | recorded |
Sustainability risk manager | A4 | public administrator | 49 | ACMA | 13 | 1 | - | 1.30 | recorded |
Sustainability financial manager | A5 | public administrator | 45 | MSc, CIA | 14 | - | 1 | 1 | recorded |
Sustainability performance manager | P6 | politician | 47 | Diploma | 11 | - | 1 | 1.15 | recorded |
Sustainability internal controls manager | A6 | public administrator | 43 | MBA | 17 | - | 1 | 1.20 | noted |
SMA reporting manager | P7 | politician | 48 | MBA | 15 | - | 1 | 1.45 | recorded |
Military delegate for urban development | M4 | military | 53 | PhD | 16 | 1 | - | 2 | noted |
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Alsaid, L.A.Z.A.; Mutiganda, J.C. Sustainability Management Accounting in Urban Development: A Case Study of an Egyptian State-Owned Enterprise. Sustainability 2024, 16, 8235. https://doi.org/10.3390/su16188235
Alsaid LAZA, Mutiganda JC. Sustainability Management Accounting in Urban Development: A Case Study of an Egyptian State-Owned Enterprise. Sustainability. 2024; 16(18):8235. https://doi.org/10.3390/su16188235
Chicago/Turabian StyleAlsaid, Loai Ali Zeenalabden Ali, and Jean Claude Mutiganda. 2024. "Sustainability Management Accounting in Urban Development: A Case Study of an Egyptian State-Owned Enterprise" Sustainability 16, no. 18: 8235. https://doi.org/10.3390/su16188235
APA StyleAlsaid, L. A. Z. A., & Mutiganda, J. C. (2024). Sustainability Management Accounting in Urban Development: A Case Study of an Egyptian State-Owned Enterprise. Sustainability, 16(18), 8235. https://doi.org/10.3390/su16188235