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1 Purpose of budgets What is a budget? Name 8 purposes of a budget?
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1 Purpose of budgets - a quantitative plan prepared for a specific time period. It is normally
expressed in financial terms and prepared for one year. 1) Planning - A budgeting process
forces a business to look to the future. This is essential for survival since it
stops management from relying on ad hoc or poorly co-ordinated planning.2) Control - Actual results are compared against the budget and action is taken as
appropriate.3) Communication - The budget is a formal communication channel that allows junior and senior
managers to converse.4) Co-ordination - The budget allows co-ordination of all parts of the business towards a common
corporate goal.5) Evaluation - Responsibility accounting divides the organisation into budget centres, each of
which has a manager who is responsible for its performance. The budget may be
used to evaluate the actions of a manager within the business in terms of the
costs and revenues over which they have control.6) Motivation - The budget may be used as a target for managers to aim for. Reward should be
given fo operating within or under budgeted levels of expenditure. This acts
as a motivator for managers.7) Authorisation - The budget acts as a formal method of authorisation to a manager for
expenditure, hiring staff and the pursuit of plans contained within the budget.8) Delegation - Managers may be
involved in setting the budget. Extra responsibility may motivate the managers.
Management involvement may also result in more realistic targets.
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2 The performance hierarchy What is: - Strategic planning - Tactical planning- Operational planning
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2 The performance hierarchy - long term, looks at the whole organisation and defines resource requirements.
For example, to develop new products in response to changing customer needs. - medium term, looks at the department / divisional level and specifies how to use
resources. For example, to train staff to deal with the challenges that this new
product presents. - very short term, very detailed and is mainly concerned with control. Most
budgeting activities fall within operational planning and control. For example,
a budget is set for the new product to include advertising expenditure, sales
forecasts, labour and material expenditure etc.
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3 Behavioural aspects of budgeting Management styles (Hopwood 1973) Budget constrained style- Peformance evaluation- Behavioural aspects
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3 Behavioural aspects of budgeting - Manager evaluated on ability to achieve budget in the short term. Manager will be criticised for poor results. For example, if spending exceeds
the limit set - Job related pressure, Can result in poor working relations with colleagues, Can result in manipulation of data.
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3 Behavioural aspects of budgeting Management styles (Hopwood 1973) Profit conscious style- Peformance evaluation- Behavioural aspects
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3 Behavioural aspects of budgeting - Manager evaluated on ability to reduce costs and increase profit in the long
term. For example, a manager will be prepared to exceed the budgetary limit in the
short term if this will result in an increase in long term profit. - Less job related pressure, Better working relations with colleagues and Less manipulation of data
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3 Behavioural aspects of budgeting Management styles (Hopwood 1973) Non-accounting style- Peformance evaluation- Behavioural aspects
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3 Behavioural aspects of budgeting - Manager evaluated mainly on non-accounting performance indicators such as
quality and customer satisfaction - Similar to profit conscious style but there is less concern for accounting
information
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3 Behavioural aspects of budgeting Management styles (Otley 1978) - What were the findings of the study?
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3 Behavioural aspects of budgeting Subsequent studies by
Otley (1978) involving profit centre managers in the UK coal mining
industry contradicted Hopwood’s earlier findings. One particular area of
difference was that the UK study showed a closer link between the
budget-constrained style and good performance. The manager evaluated on a rather
tight budget-constrained basis tended to meet the budget more closely than if it
was evaluated in a less rigid way.
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3 Behavioural aspects of budgeting What is an expectations budget?
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3 Behavioural aspects of budgeting 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.
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3 Behavioural aspects of budgeting What is an aspirational budget?
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3 Behavioural aspects of budgeting 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. This must be managed
carefully.
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4 Conflicting objectives Example: Company versus division- Conflict- Resolution
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4 Conflicting objectives Examples:- The company wishes to increase shareholder wealth. This should involve the use
of NPV but divisions are assessed on accounting targets such as profit.- Similarly shareholder wealth is determined by the long term but divisions are
set short term targets (see below).- Managers reject projects that dilute divisional performance, even though they
beat company targets. Resolutions:- Some companies try to insist that projects are assessed using NPV but then still
impose accounting targets.- Give managers share options so they focus on shareholder wealth.- Use performance measures that encourage the division to accept projects which
meet or exceed company target. For example, residual income
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4 Conflicting objectives Example: Division versus division.- Conflict- Resolution
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4 Conflicting objectives Conflict:-Divisions may compete for limited financial resources when setting budgets Resolution:- Prioritisation- Negotiation and compromise.
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4 Conflicting objectives Example: Short-termism- Conflict- Resolution
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4 Conflicting objectives Conflict: - Managers cut R&D to hit short term targets but erode long term competences- Managers reject projects that are “slow starters” even though they have positive
NPV Resolution:- Use more non-financial indicators that focus on key long term issues such as
quality, productivity, etc.- Link bonuses to longer time periods.
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4 Conflicting objectives Example: Individualism- Conflict- Resolution
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4 Conflicting objectives Conflict: - The risk of budgetary slack. This is when managers participate in target
setting and, as a result, make the budget too easy to achieve. Resolution: - Greater scrutiny of budgets- Better training of managers
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