Non-cash Budgets - Lecture 7a Flashcards

1
Q

What should a budget inform staff of:

A
  • Where the company is supposed to be (the destination)
  • How it is going to get there (the route map)
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2
Q

What is a budget?

A

A budget is an organisation’s operational plan for a specified period,
expressed in quantitative terms.

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3
Q

6 Functions of budgets:

A
  • planning
  • co-ordinating activities
  • communicating plans
  • motivating managers
  • controlling activities
  • evaluating the performance of managers
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4
Q

Master budgets cannot be drawn up until…

A

The sub-budgets for revenues (e.g. sales income) and for expenses (e.g.
stock, labour, overheads) are drawn up.

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5
Q

Budgeting process:

A
  1. construct the budget
  2. co-ordinate the budget
  3. implement the budget
  4. control and review the budget
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6
Q

Planning cycle:

A
  • original forecast
  • measure actual forecast
  • analyse deviation from original
  • feed new info into next forecast
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7
Q

What are the 3 styles of performance evaluation

A
  • budget contrained style (BC)
  • profit conscious style (PC)
  • non-accounting style (NA)
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8
Q

Budget Constrained Style

A

“…, the evaluation is primarily based upon the cost centre head’s ability to continually meet the budget on a short-term basis. This criterion of performance is stressed at the expense of other valued and important criteria and a cost centre head will tend to receive an unfavourable evaluation if his actual costs exceed the budgeted costs, regardless of other considerations.”

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9
Q

The Profit Conscious Style

A

Budgets provide targets for indicating whether performance is good or bad, but they are used in a flexible manner and viewed as just one indicator of a longer term concern with profits (e.g.
spending over the current budget period can be regarded as favourable if it results in higher than expected future profits).

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10
Q

Non Accounting Style

A

“Accounting data play a relatively unimportant part in the supervisor’s evaluation of the cost centre head’s performance.”

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11
Q

Budgeting as a political process:

A
  1. Owing to scarcity of resources
  2. Owing to differing power and conflicting preferences
  3. Owing to organizational complexity
    * Budgets and organizational politics, e.g., Budgets are often political
    compromises; the result of political contests – and not always a
    rational allocation of resources
    * The budget system is moulded by organizational processes.
    (See Wilson and Chua, Managerial Accounting, pp.264-276)
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12
Q

Performance evaluation at divisional / organisational level

A

Used by top management to evaluate divisional/ business units
Different type of units / divisions according to the level of ‘centralisation’:

  • cost centres (cc’s)
  • profit centres (pc’s)
  • investment centres (ic’s)
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13
Q

Cost Centres (CC’s) definition

A

High level of centralisation. Ability to meet costs is still the primary
performance measurement.

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14
Q

Profit centres (pc’s) definition

A

Responsibility for meeting cost and revenue targets (and therefore profit
targets)

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15
Q

Investment Centres (IC’s) definition

A

Responsibility as in PC’s plus autonomy over own capital budget (i.e can
make its own long-term investment decisions).

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16
Q

Benefits of cost centres:

A
  • Achieves consistency
  • Avoids ‘maverick’ management
  • Individuals given responsibility
    for achieving targets
17
Q

Drawbacks of cost centres (CC’s)

A
  • Inflexibility
  • Opportunity cost of senior managers time
  • Middle managers don’t develop and feel constrained / controlled
  • The budget becomes “the bible”
18
Q

Benefits of profit centres

A
  • increased motivation, job satisfaction for some
19
Q

Drawbacks of profit centres

A
  • achieving the culture change
  • selling autonomy to theory X type staff
20
Q

Benefits of investment centres:

A
  • senior managers manage: middle managers broaden their skill base
  • increased speed of reaction - e.g. copycat brands
21
Q

Drawbacks of investment centres:

A
  • finding appropriately skilled staff –> those prepared to think out of the box
  • achieving goal congruence
  • duplication - e.g. in R&D.