This article examines the effect of specific new public management (NPM)-related characteristics to explain innovation-oriented culture within public sector organizations. According to NPM doctrines, an enhanced managerial autonomy combined with result control will stimulate a more innovation-oriented culture in such organizations. Using multi-country survey data of over 200 public sector agencies, we test for the influence of organizational autonomy, result control and their interactions, on innovation-oriented culture. High levels of managerial autonomy and result control have independent and positive effects. However, the interaction between high personnel management autonomy and high result control has a negative effect.

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doi.org/10.1080/14719037.2013.790273, hdl.handle.net/1765/40527
Public Management Review: an international journal of research and theory
Erasmus School of Economics

Wynen, J., Verhoest, K., Ongaro, E., & van Thiel, S. (2013). Innovation-Oriented Culture in the Public Sector: Do managerial autonomy and result control lead to innovation?. Public Management Review: an international journal of research and theory, 1–24. doi:10.1080/14719037.2013.790273