8 Budgeting Flashcards

1
Q

What are six types of budgeting systems?

A
  • Top down vs bottom up budgeting
  • Incremental budgeting
  • Zero based budgeting
  • Rolling budgets
  • Activity based budgeting
  • Feed-forward control
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2
Q

What does imposed style top down budgeting?

A

Budget allowance set without permitting the ultimate budget holder to have a say.

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3
Q

What are the advantages of an imposed style budget?

A
  • Involving managers is time consuming
  • Managers may not have the skills or motivation
  • Senior managers have a better understanding
  • May build budgetary slack or bias into the budget
  • Fresh perspective is managers don’t get involved
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4
Q

What is a participative budget?

A

All budget holders are given the opportunity to participate in setting their own budget

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5
Q

What advantages are there to participative budgeting?

A
  • managers feel their opinions matter
  • more likely to make achievable plans
  • lower level managers will have more knowledge
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6
Q

What are the 8 reasons for a budget?

A
  • Planning
  • Control
  • Communication
  • Co-ordination towards goal
  • Evaluation
  • Motivation
  • Authorisation
  • Delegation
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7
Q

Three levels of the performance hierarchy?

A

Strategic planning, tactical planning, operation planning

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8
Q

What is strategic planning?

A

Strategic planning is long term, looks at the whole organisation and
defines resource requirements

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9
Q

What is tactical planning?

A

Tactical planning is medium term, looks at the department/divisional
level and specifies how to use resources

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10
Q

What is operational planning?

A

Operational planning is very short term, very detailed and is mainly
concerned with control

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11
Q

What are hopwoods three management styles?

A

Budget constrained style
Profit conscious style
Non accounting style

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12
Q

What is budget constrained style in terms of performance evaluation?

A

Manager evaluated on
ability to achieve budget
in the short term

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13
Q

What is profit conscious style in terms of performance evaluation?

A

Manager evaluated on
ability to reduce costs
and increase profit in
the long term

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14
Q

What is non-accounting style in terms of performance evaluation?

A
Manager evaluated 
mainly on non
accounting 
performance indicators 
such as quality and 
customer satisfaction
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15
Q

What are the behavioural aspects of budget constrained style?

A
  • Job related pressure
  • may result in short term decision making at the expense of long term goals
  • Can result in poor working relations with colleagues,
  • can result in manipulation of data
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16
Q

What are the behavioural aspects of profit conscious style?

A
  • Less job pressure
  • better working relations
  • Less manipulation of data
17
Q

What are the behavioural aspects of non accounting style?

A
- Similar to profit 
conscious style but 
there is less concern for 
accounting information
- Requires significant 
and stringent monitoring 
of performance against 
budget
18
Q

What is an expectation budget?

A

An expectations budget is a budget set at current achievable levels. This is unlikely to motivate managers to improve but may give more accurate forecasts for resource planning, control and performance evaluation.

19
Q

What is an aspirations budget?

A

An aspirations budget is a budget set at a level which exceeds the level currently achieved. This may motivate managers to improve if it is seen as attainable but may also result in an adverse variance if it is too difficult to achieve

20
Q

What is an imposed budget?

A

An imposed/topdown budget is ‘a budget allowance which is set without permitting the ultimate budget holder to have the opportunity to participate in the budgeting process

21
Q

What is a participative budget?

A

Participative/bottom up budgeting is ‘A budgeting system in which all budget holders are given the opportunity to participate in setting their own budget

22
Q

What is an incremental budget?

A

An incremental budget starts with the previous period’s budget or actual results and adds (or subtracts) an incremental amount to cover inflation and other known changes

23
Q

What are the stages of zero based budgeting?

A

)Managers should specify, for their responsibility centres, those activities that can be individually evaluated.

(2) Each of the individual activities is then described in a decision package. The decision package should state the costs and revenues expected from the given activity.
(3) Each decision package is evaluated and ranked usually using cost/benefit analysis.(4)The resources are then allocated to the various packages

24
Q

What is a rolling budget?

A

A budget (usually annual) kept continuously up to date by adding another accounting period (e.g. month or quarter) when the earliest accounting period has expired.

25
Q

What is a rolling budget useful for?

A

for any area of business that needs tight control

26
Q

What is activity based budget?

A

, preparing budgets using overhead costs from activity based costing methodology

27
Q

What is feedback control?

A

‘the measurement of differences between planned outputs and actual outputs achieved, and the modification of subsequent action and/or plans to achieve future required results’

28
Q

What is positive feedback?

A

Positive feedback is feedback taken to reinforce a deviation from standard. The inputs or processes would not be altered

29
Q

What is negative feedback?

A

Negative feedback is feedback taken to reverse a deviation from standard. This could be by amending the inputs or process, so that the system reverts to a steady state.

30
Q

How does a feedforward control system operate?

A

Comparing budgeted results against a forecast.

31
Q

What is control action triggered by?

A

Differences between budgeted and forecast results

32
Q

What are the six principles of beyond budgeting?

A
  1. Clear principles and boundaries
  2. Relative success
  3. High degree of freedom
  4. Front line teams
  5. Relationships
  6. Transparent and ethical
33
Q

What are the benefits of beyond budgeting?

A
  1. Faster response time
  2. Better innovation
  3. Lower costs
  4. Improved customer and supplier loyalty