Public Administration Review | 2021

The Motivations for the Adoption of Management Innovation by Local Governments and its Performance Effects

 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


625 Abstract: This article analyses the economic, political, and institutional antecedents and performance effects of the adoption of shared Senior Management Teams (SMTs)—a management innovation (MI) that occurs when a team of senior managers oversees two or more public organizations. Findings from statistical analysis of 201 English local governments and interviews with organizational leaders reveal that shared SMTs are adopted to develop organizational capacity in resource-challenged, politically risk-averse governments, and in response to coercive and mimetic institutional pressures. Importantly, sharing SMTs may reduce rather than enhance efficiency and effectiveness due to redundancy costs and the political transaction costs associated with diverting resources away from a highperforming partner to support their lower-performing counterpart.

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.1111/PUAR.13375
Language English
Journal Public Administration Review

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