Budgeting - 1 BUDGETING Sales projections Business trends Inventory needs New competition ? ? ? ?

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
MANAGEMENT ACCOUNTING
Advertisements

Traditions and Innovations
5 C H A P T E R Operational Budgets.
Using Budgets for Planning and Coordination
Cost Management Chapter 10 Static and Flexible Budgets
© The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2002 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Operational Budgeting Chapter 22.
PowerPoint Authors: Susan Coomer Galbreath, Ph.D., CPA Charles W. Caldwell, D.B.A., CMA Jon A. Booker, Ph.D., CPA, CIA Cynthia J. Rooney, Ph.D., CPA Copyright.
Types of Budgets l A master budget is a comprehensive set of budgets that covers all phases of an organization’s operations for a specified period of time.
Chapter 15 Fundamentals of Variance Analysis Learning Objectives 4.Prepare and use a profit variance analysis. 2.Develop and use flexible budgets.
Master Budget and Responsibility Accounting
OPERATIONAL BUDGETING
Budgeting.
Chapter 9 BUDGETING A budget is a formal written statement of management’s plans for a specified future time period, expressed in financial terms Control.
Functional and Activity-Based Budgeting
Intro to Master Budget AGEC 489/689 Spring 2009 Slide Show #4.
CHAPTER 10: STATIC AND FLEXIBLE BUDGETS Cost Management, Canadian Edition © John Wiley & Sons, 2009 Chapter 10: Static and Flexible Budgets Cost Management,
Should you always use a budget as a tool to guide your spending priorities? 1.Yes 2.No.
Chapter 10 Budgetary Planning and Control Presentation Outline I.An Overview of Budgeting II.The Master Budget and Selected Budget Formats.
6 - 1 Benefits of Budgeting Essentials of Effective Budgeting Master Budgetster Budget Budgeted Income Statement Cash Budget BudgetingBudgeting in a nonmanufac-
COST MANAGEMENT Accounting & Control Hansen▪Mowen▪Guan COPYRIGHT © 2009 South-Western Publishing, a division of Cengage Learning. Cengage Learning and.
Budgeting and Financial Planning Chapter 15. Why budgets?  Planning  Controlling  Coordination  Allocation of resources  Evaluation.
Chapter 7 The Master Budget.
Operational Budgeting and Profit Planning
1 PowerPointPresentation by PowerPoint Presentation by Gail B. Wright Professor Emeritus of Accounting Bryant University © Copyright 2007 Thomson South-Western,
Chapter 20 The Budgeting Process.
Managing Financial Resources FCS 387. The Purpose of Budgeting What is a budget? The organization’s business plan expressed in financial terms. Based.
Chapter 41 Cash, Short-term Investments and Accounts Receivable Chapter 4.
Budgeting and Standard Cost Systems Chapter 13. Budgeting A budget is a financial and quantitative plan for the acquisition and use of resources Use for.
Chapter 11 Using Budgets to Achieve Organizational Objectives.
Management Accounting ACCT 481 Michael Dimond. Michael Dimond School of Business Administration Budgets Budget: What’s the plan? Types of budgets and.
22 Budgeting Accounting 26e C H A P T E R Warren Reeve Duchac
5 C H A P T E R Operating Budgets.
Sales, Production, and Purchases Budgets Managerial Accounting Prepared by Diane Tanner University of North Florida Chapter 38.
Managerial Accounting: An Introduction To Concepts, Methods, And Uses Chapter 10 Profit Planning and Budgeting Maher, Stickney and Weil.
The Use of Budgets in Planning and Decision Making
8-1 HANSEN & MOWEN Cost Management ACCOUNTING AND CONTROL.
Chapter 22 Master Budgets
8 -1 Functional and Activity- Based Budgeting CHAPTER.
Budgetary Planning and Control
3.4 Budgeting HL Chapter 21. What is a Budget? A budget is a detailed financial plan for the future. A budget holder is the individual responsible for.
Managerial Accounting by James Jiambalvo Chapter 8: Budgetary Planning and Control Slides Prepared by: Scott Peterson Northern State University.
 2001 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Management Accounting, 3/E, Atkinson, Banker, Kaplan, and Young Using Budgets to Achieve Organizational.
Chapter 13 Planning and Budgeting. Budgeting A quantitative plan of what we expect in the future Personal budgets Purposes –Planning –Control.
14-1 CHAPTER 14 McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved. Cost Analysis for Planning.
Budgetary Planning and Control. BudgetsBudgets  The formal documents that quantify a company’s plans for achieving its goals.  For many companies, the.
3020 Chapter 9 Profit Planning. Budgeting A quantitative plan of what we expect in the future Personal budgets Purposes –Planning –Control Responsibility.
Budgeting Student Version Describe budgeting, its objectives, and its impact on human behavior
8 BUDGETING FOR PLANNING & CONTROL
UNIT C ECONOMIC FOUNDATIONS AND FINANCING
©2013 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.
© 2014 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part, except for use as permitted in a license.
Needles Powers Crosson Principles of Accounting 12e The Budgeting Process 22 C H A P T E R ©human/iStockphoto.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2007 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 17 Budgeting.
Foundations and Evolutions
Budgeting Describe budgeting, its objectives, and its impact on human behavior.
1 BUDGETING Accounting Principles II Fall, BUDGETS A plan expressed in numbers Financial plans for the future.
1 Copyright © 2008 Cengage Learning South-Western. Mowen/Hansen Profit Planning Chapter Seven Fundamental Cornerstones of Managerial Accounting.
7 - 1 Chapter 7 The Master Budget Objective 1 Explain the major features and advantages of a master budget.
Cornerstones of Managerial Accounting, 6e.
The Budgeting Process 7. OBJECTIVE 1: Define budgeting, and explain budget basics.
CHAPTER 14 COST ANALYSIS FOR PLANNING McGraw-Hill/Irwin©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2002.
Master Budget.
Prepared by Debby Bloom-Hill CMA, CFM
Chapter 21 Budgeting Student Version
Budgeting for Planning and Control
CHAPTER 21: BUDGETARY PLANNING
Budgeting for Planning and Control
BUDGETING ? ? ? ? Sales projections Inventory needs Business trends
Presentation transcript:

Budgeting - 1 BUDGETING Sales projections Business trends Inventory needs New competition ? ? ? ?

Budgeting - 2 What is a budget? A formalized plan describing the use and source of financial and operating resources over a given time period

Budgeting - 3 PURPOSES OF BUDGETING Forces management planning Motivation Evaluation and control Communication Coordination Education

Budgeting - 4 FEATURES OF A SOUND BUDGETARY SYSTEM  Participative budgeting  Frequent feedback on performance  Realistic standards  Controllability  Flexible budgeting  Multiple measures of performance  Monetary and nonmonetary incentives

Budgeting - 5 The Budgeting Process

Budgeting - 6 Strategic Plan Short-Term Objectives Short-Term Plan Budgets Feedback Corrective Action Investigation Comparison of Actual & Planned Monitoring of Actual Activity Long-Term Objectives

Budgeting - 7 The MASTER BUDGET is a collection of various types of budgets  Sales  Production  Purchases (Direct materials)  Labor  Manufacturing overhead  Administrative  Cash

Budgeting - 8 Master Budget Outputs

Budgeting - 9 OPERATING BUDGETS  Sales plan  Production plan  Materials purchasing plan  Labor hiring and training plan  Capital spending plan  Administrative and discretionary spending plan

Budgeting - 10 Sales Budget The sales budget represents the expected quantity of each type of product/service to be sold multiplied by its expected selling price.

Budgeting - 11 Generic budget format  Amount needed for current requirements  + Amount desired for future needs  = Total needs  - What is already on hand  = Amount to be acquired

Budgeting - 12 Production  Predicted sales quantity  + Desired ending inventory  Total needed units  - Amount already on hand (beginning inventory)  Units to be produced Note the sales budget figure will be the starting point for this budget.

Budgeting - 13 Direct Materials (Purchasing)  This budget is for planning the acquisition of raw materials to support the organization’s production needs identified in the production budget.  Units to be produced  x Raw material required per unit produced  Total raw material needed for production  + Desired ending inventory  = Total raw material needed  - Inventory on hand  = Raw materials to be acquired

Budgeting - 14 CAPITAL BUDGET  Purpose is to plan for the acquisition of land, buildings, and capital equipment for expansion and/or replacement.

Budgeting - 15 FINANCIAL BUDGETS Master Budget usually presented in three forms:  A statement of expected cash flows  The projected balance sheet  The projected income statement

Budgeting - 16 FLEXIBLE vs. STATIC BUDGETS  Flexible budgets - those that vary with the activity level in the firm  Static budgets - those that do not change with changes in activity levels The use of the budget data determines which type of budget is most appropriate

Budgeting - 17 BUDGETING APPROACHES  Incremental budgeting –A budgeting approach that assumes the starting point for each budget item is the amount spent on it in the previous budget –The new budget is seen as last year’s +/- a specified increment –Less costly but may not be strategically sound  Zero-based budgeting –A budgeting approach that assumes the starting point for each budget item is zero –Essential feature is a review of the necessity of each expenditure element/activity as part of the budgeting process –More costly but more strategically sound

Budgeting - 18 Behavioral Aspects of Budgeting

Budgeting - 19 DESIGNING THE BUDGET PROCESS  How should budgets be determined?  Who should be involved in the budgeting process?  At what level of difficulty should the budget be set to have the greatest positive influence on people’s motivation and performance?

Budgeting - 20 Top management wants our budget figures for the month. What should we tell them?