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Principles and Practices of Management




                    Notes

                                      Task       Take  example of  a centralised  organisation  and  analyse  whether  the
                                                 advantages of centralisation to it.

                                   8.4.2  Decentralisation

                                   The term decentralisation is understood differently by different individuals or groups. Louis A.
                                   Allen refers to it as one of the most confused and confusing of the administrative techniques that
                                   characterises the art and science of professional management. To quote Pfeiffer and Sherwood,
                                   ''In some respects decentralisation has come to be a 'gospel' of management.''

                                   Firstly, it is regarded as a way of life to be adopted as least partially on faith;
                                   Secondly, it is an idealistic concept, with ethical roots in democracy,
                                   Thirdly, it is in the beginning a more difficult way of life because it involves a change in behaviour
                                   running counter to historically-rooted culture patterns of mankind.
                                   That is why the new literature of decentralisation dwells on how  to bring about change in
                                   organisation behaviour. Men find it difficult to delegate, to think in terms of the abstractions
                                   required by long-term planning, to listen rather than to give orders, to evaluate other men and
                                   their work in terms of overall results instead of irritations and tensions of the moment. Yet this
                                   is the very key to the behaviour required of leaders in a decentralised organisation".
                                   It is  amply clear that decentralization  is not only a device for the delegation or dispersal  of
                                   administrative authority, but it is also a democratic method of devolution of political authority.
                                   Further, in a decentralised organisation it is also essential to adopt the democratic norms. Such
                                   norms help  the various  levels of  the  administrative  organisation  to  develop a reasonable
                                   capability for the exercise of authority to reach the most desired decisions. Moreover, they help
                                   to assimilate in them the virtues of greater interactions not only among the various organisational
                                   levels but also between the organisation and the clientele among the general public.
                                   It has been opined that decentralisation refers to the physical location of facilities and the extent
                                   of dispersal of authority throughout an organisation.  Hence, it is an arrangement by which the
                                   ultimate authority to command and the ultimate responsibility for results is localized in units
                                   located in different parts of the country. It is argued that assigning of functions and responsibility,
                                   for their efficient and effective performance, to the subordinates or sub-divisions is the essence
                                   of decentralisation.
                                   We may say that in a decentralised organisation lower levels are allowed to decide most of the
                                   matters matters and a few cases involving major policies or interpretations are referred to the
                                   higher levels of the organisation. Decentralisation covers the political, legal and administrative
                                   spheres of authority.


                                          Example: Each store of Tesco  has a  store manager  who can  make certain  decisions
                                   concerning their store. The store manager is responsible to a regional manager.















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