Overview
A key topic within managerial accounting
• development,
implementation, monitoring
Inevitably a space for conflict
• an
enabling device
• a
control mechanism
Continues to be widely promoted
Need to deploy for greatest benefit
Budgeting and
strategy
What is strategy?
• how
a business seeks to achieve its objectives
• over
the long term
• viewed
to be the ‘best way’ to proceed
Budgets provide an annual plan
Plan is represented in financial terms
·
continual monitoring and refinement
Functions of budgets
A number of functions widely recognised
• a
means of planning future operations
• a
means to coordinate varied activities
• a
vehicle to permit communication
• a
motivating device
• a
means of controlling activities
• a
basis for performance evaluation
• the
authorisation function
Behavioural implications apparent from outset
Departmental/functional
budgets
Every part of the organisation has a budget
Often understood as being imposed from above
In principle budgets developed locally
• financial
management plans at a local level
These plans then need to be amalgamated
Creation of the master budget
• lengthy,
complex and sensitive negotiations
Can identify a logical sequence
Begin with the sales budget
• projected
sales levels over time
• projected
revenue levels
Make use of probability models to fix income
Ideally incorporate a measure of flexibility
• customers
become more powerful over time
Production budget – ensure availability
• needs
to reflect demand
• take
account of other demands on resources
• safe
levels of materials for input
• reliable
levels of finished product
Then you require
• labour
budgets
• materials
budgets
Nowadays many more functional budgets
• marketing
and sales (customer service)
• operations
management (quality)
• research,
design and development
• people
management
• finance/financial
management
• administration
Remember Porter’s value chain
Cash budgets
Need to take account of cash/flow aspects
• sales
revenues: cash/credit/discounts
• creditor
management
• prepayments
and accruals
• salaries
and bonus payments
• periodic
outlays: dividends, interest, tax
Need to ensure cash/overdraft facility available
Capital budgeting techniques
• accounting
rate of return
• payback
• NPV/DCF
These permit investment decision making
Having decided to make an investment
Need to ensure that cash budget is refined
Responsibility
accounting
Recognition that budgeting needs to be inclusive
Managers understand the reality of practice
Secure management buy-in
• insights
from organisational psychology
• involvement/participation
• ‘owning’
budgets
• take
responsibility for targets
Responsibility
centres
Four different types of responsibility centres
Initially responsibility for either
• cost/expense
centre
• revenue
centre
Thirdly responsibility for both elements
• profit
centre
Less commonly additional responsibility
• investment
centre
Controllability
Taking ownership/responsibility means
• accepting
monitoring and evaluation
In return maximise controllability
Take responsibility for controllable items only
Items that cannot be controlled excluded
In cases where significant changes occur
‘Flex’ the original budget - restate
Incremental budgeting
An early budgeting research insight
Ad hoc practice of uprating budget numbers
Managers exploiting their own knowledge
Over time significant budget drift
Resulting loss of efficiency/resource utilisation
Conversely budgeting is not an exact science
Experience can prove highly valuable
Zero-based budgeting
Developed to counter incremental drift
Pioneered at Texas Instruments in late 1960s
Promoted by Jimmy Carter
Basic principle – take all budgets back to zero
Rebuild budgets annually
Highly resource intensive and time consuming
Priority-based budgeting as an alternative
Rolling (continuous)
budgeting
Traditional model of annual budget
• developed
for four quarters
• significant
activity in fourth quarter
Evolution of a continuous process
Makes use of a fifth quarter
Which in time becomes fourth quarter and so on
Accountants adopt an enabling role
Activity-based
budgeting
Activity-based costing technique in later 1980s
Greater level of overhead expenditures
Quickly evolved into activity-based management
ABB is an aspect of ABM
Budgeting for overhead expenditures
Previously overhead absorption rates
Recognised to be too indiscriminate
‘Beyond budgeting’
Became very fashionable around millennium
Relatively late in the relevance debate
• Hope
and Fraser as leading advocates
Rediscovery of the responsibility arguments
Changing emphases of managerial accounting
The need for greater focus on forecasting
And on the balanced scorecard
Forecasting
The new commercial reality
• increased
competition
• need
for flexibility
• rapid
response
• timely
action vs control
Continuous real time iteration of financial plans
Greater involvement from managers needed
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