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BUDGETING CHAPTER 6.

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Presentation on theme: "BUDGETING CHAPTER 6."— Presentation transcript:

1 BUDGETING CHAPTER 6

2 PURPOSES Budgets are proposed as having two uses PLANNING CONTROL

3 PLANNING I agree that budgets are useful for planning.
Everyone budgets, it is simply a question of how formally. By formalizing the budget process, one is more likely to plan and have a direction in which to go.

4 CONTROL I don’t agree. If one uses the budget for control purposes, I think they damage the use of budgets for planning. If someone is held to the budget, then they will “play games with their estimates.” For example, assume that you are the sales manager and for year X you estimate that sales will be $10 million. Sales for year X are only $9.7 million. The CEO asks, “what went wrong?” Two weeks later, you are asked for your estimate of sales for year Y. You think sales will probably be $10.5 million. What estimate would you give? I believe that planning is so important, one should not do anything that might interfere with it.

5 ADVANTAGES OF BUDGETS Compels strategic planning
Provides a basis for measuring performance Motivates managers and employees Promotes coordination and communication among subunits

6 MY SOLUTION TO PERFORMANCE MEASURES
Compare actual results with what you think they should have been, given the information you now have. That is, in year Y, decide what you think performance should have been. You have more information in year Y than you had in year W (the year before year X). E.g., a new competitor may have entered the market or an old competitor may have left the market. You also know more about year X’s economic situation in year Y than in year W.

7 BUDGET PROCESS Prepare the sales budget
Estimate beginning inventory and determine the desired levels of ending inventory Prepare the production/purchases budget Prepare the labor budget Prepare the overhead budget Prepare the operating budget Prepare the cash budget

8 OTHER OPERATING BUDGETS
BUDGETING PROCESS SALES BUDGET PRODUCTION BUDGET OTHER OPERATING BUDGETS CASH BUDGET

9 OTHER OPERATING BUDGETS
PROCESS SALES BUDGET OTHER OPERATING BUDGETS BUDGETED INCOME STATEMENT BUDGETED BALANCE SHEET

10 CASH BUDGET An extremely important budget
Consider how a lender (banker) would view a loan request if you provided a cash budget long before you requested the loan. It is important to have enough cash, to pay bills, but not have excess cash, it should be invested.

11 CASH BUDGET JAN FEB MAR BEG. BALANCE 10 RECEIPTS 230 240 225 25 30
DISBURSEMENTS END. BALANCE 25 30 30 25 20

12 EXAMPLE OF CASH RECEIPTS BUDGET
Cash is expected to be $10,000 on Oct. 31. Collection on sales has been: 10% in month of sale 50% in next month 35% in next month 5% is never collected Expected sales are: Sept. $50,000 Oct. $60,000 Nov. $70,000

13 SOLUTION for NOVEMBER CASH BUDGET
Cash collected from sales in: Cash Balance: Nov $10,000 November Receipts ,500 Cash Available $64,500 Nov. Oct. Sept Total 0.1 X 70,000 7,000 0.5 X 60,000 30,000 0.35 X 50,000 17,500 54,500

14 KAISAN BUDGETING Incorporates continuous improvement into the process. The budget estimates improved sales or reduced costs over time. An alternative is to set goals of reduced costs or improved revenues.

15 ACTIVITY BASED BUDGETING
Prepare the budget on the basis of activities, e.g., costs that are based on labor hours, rather than functions, e.g., material purchases.

16 BUDGET BY TYPE OF CENTER
Cost Centers Compares actual costs with budgeted costs Revenue Centers Compares actual revenues with budgeted revenues Profit Centers Compares actual profits with budgeted profits Investment Centers Measures profits in relation to investments

17 BUDGETING FOR RETAIL PURCHASES
Estimate retail value of beginning inventory Determine targeted ending inventory, at retail Forecast (budget) sales for period, at retail Ending inventory + Sales - Beginning inventory = Amount of goods needed Divide amount of goods needed by estimated percentage of orders delivered =OPEN TO BUY (at retail) Times Cost Ratio = OPEN TO BUY (at cost)

18 EXAMPLE OF RETAIL PURCHASES BUDGET
Estimated beginning inventory ($10,000) Estimated sales ,000 Targeted ending inventory ,000 Goods needed $45,000 Estimated delivery is 80% of goods ordered OPEN TO BUY = $56,250 at retail Cost to retail ratio is 45% OPEN TO BUY = $25,312 at cost

19 PRODUCTION BUDGET Same process as the retail budget process except that we would use units instead of dollars.

20 EXAMPLE OF PRODUCTION BUDGET
Estimated beginning inventory (4,000) Forecasted (budgeted) sales ,000 Targeted ending inventory ,000 Production budget ,000

21 OTHER BUDGETS All budgets use the same basic process.


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