Title: Financial Management Training
1County Financial Management
2Annual Budget
- Preparation and Submission of the County Annual
Budget - The County Education Officer (CEO) in
consultation with chair of the County Board,
prepares the Annual Budget. The Budget must be in
line with the countys priorities. The Budget
must be based on the amount allocated for the
county for the fiscal period. The Budget along
with the Annual Work Plan of the county must be
submitted to the Ministry of Education Central to
be included in the overall annual budget of the
Ministry of Education Central. - Objectives of the County annual budget
- The County annual budget will serve the following
purposes - To provide the detailed plan (quantitative and
financial) of the activities of the County
relating to the countys priorities - To provide the basis of determining the fund
required for each work, goods, operating cost and
the cost of contracting the services of clerk of
works to be procured by the County for a given
year - To inform the Ministry of Education and
subsequently the Ministry of Finance and
Development Planning of the results the County is
expected to achieve each fiscal year - To provide the basis for monitoring performance
during the year.
3Chart of Account
- Structure of the Government of Liberia Chart of
Account - The Government of Liberia uses a chart of account
for all budgeting and accounting processes. The
standard Chart of Account contains 39 digits
divided into 9 segments - Segment 1 Agency
- This segment identifies a Ministry/Agency/departme
nt/section that receives funds from the
Consolidated Fund/other funds. Under this segment
the first three (3) digits represent a
Ministry/Agency e.g. Ministry of Education (301)
the next two (2) digits represent a department
e.g. the department of Instruction (17) under the
Ministry of Education. The last two (2) digits
represent a section(bureau) under a department
for example Early Childhood Education (01). - So the Ministry of Education-Department of
Instruction will be written as 3011701
1. Agency Ministry/Agency 3 XXX-XX-XX
Department 2 XXX-XX-XX
Section 2 XXX-XX-XX
Total of digits 7 XXX-XX-XX
4Chart of Account
- Structure of the Government of Liberia Chart of
Account - Segment 2 Budget Classification
- This segment is used to capture the budget type
i.e. recurrent, capital (development) or revenue. - 3011701/1
2. Budget Classification Budget Classification 1 X
Code Description
1 Recurrent
2 Development/Capital
3 Revenue
4 Public Investments (PSIP)
5 Other
5Chart of Account
- Structure of the Government of Liberia Chart of
Account - Segment 3 Fund Type
- This segment is for identifying whether the funds
are from the Consolidated fund or any other fund. - 3011701/1/01
3. Fund Type Fund Type 2 XX
Code Description
01 Consolidated Fund
02 Infrastructure Fund
03 Youth Fund
04 Capacity Fund
05 Reconciliation Fund
6Chart of Account
- Structure of the Government of Liberia Chart of
Account - Segment 4 Funding Source
- The funding source segment is used to capture the
source of funds e.g. Government of Liberia or
Multi-lateral/bi-lateral sources. - 3011701/1/01/001
4. Funding Source Funding Source 3 XXX
Code Range Funding Source Categories
000 Unspecified
001 399 Core funding
400 699 Contingent funding
700 999 Borrowing
7Chart of Account
- Structure of the Government of Liberia Chart of
Account - Segment 5 Projects
- This six (6) digit segment is used to identify
and capture project related transactions. The
first four (4) digits represent the Project name
and the last two (2) digits represent a Project
component (group of related activities). - 3011701/1/01/001/020000
5. Project Projects Name 4 XXXX-XX
Project Components 2 XXXX-XX
Total No of digits 6 XXXX-XX
0000-00 Unspecified
0200-00 Legislative Support to Education
0201-00 Legislative Support to Health
8Chart of Account
- Structure of the Government of Liberia Chart of
Account - Segment 6 MTEF
- This segment is used to capture Sectors and
Policy Areas for the Medium Term Expenditure
Framework (MTEF). The first two (2) digits
represent the Sector, the next two (2) digits
represent the Policy Area and last two (2) digits
are spare. - 3011701/1/01/001/020000/070300
MTEF Sector 2
Policy Area 2
Spare 2
Total No of digits 6
07 Education
07-01 Student counseling, health and hygiene and extra-curricular activities
07-02 Vocational education services
07-03 Secondary education
9Chart of Account
- Structure of the Government of Liberia Chart of
Account - Segment 7 Function Segment
- The function segment is used for coding
transactions in line with the Classification of
Functions of Government (COFOG) as per the
Government Finance Statistics Manual, 2001. It is
a detailed classification of the functions, or
socioeconomic objectives, that general government
units aim to achieve through various kinds of
outlays. Examples include General Public Services
(01), Defense (02), Health (07), Education (09)
etc. The segment consists of four (4) digits. The
first two (2) digits represent the Division, the
next one (1) represents Group and the last one
(1) represents Class. - 3011701/1/01/001/020000/070300/0922
Function 1st Level/Division 2 XX-X-X
Group 1 XX-X-X
Class 1 XX-X-X
Total No of digits 4 XX-X-X
09 Education
091 Pre-Primary and Primary Education
0911 Pre-Primary and Primary Education (IS)
092 Secondary Education
0921 Lower-secondary education (IS)
0922 Upper-secondary education (IS)
10Chart of Account
- Structure of the Government of Liberia Chart of
Account - Segment 8 Location Segment
- The location segment is used for capturing
County/district information at the transaction
level. The first two (2) digits represent a
County and the last two (2) digits represent a
district. - 3011701/1/01/001/020000/070300/0922/0201
02 BONG COUNTY
01 Gbarnga
02 Fuamah
03 Jorquelleh
04 Kokoyah
05 Kpaai
06 Panta
07 Salala
08 Sanoyeah
09 Suakoko
10 Tukpahblee
11 Yeallequelleh
12 Zota
05 GRAND CAPE MOUNT
01 Commonwealth-C
02 Garwula
03 Golakonneh
04 Porkpa
05 Tewor
04 GRAND BASSA
01 Commonwealth-B
02 District No 1
03 District No 2
04 District No 3
05 District No 4
06 Neekreen
07 Owensgrove
08 St. John River City
11Chart of Account
- Structure of the Government of Liberia Chart of
Account - Segment 9 Economic Classification Segment
- This segment identifies the General Ledger
accounts for revenues (class 1), expenses (class
2) assets (class 3), liabilities (class 4) and
reserves (class 5) for the Government of Liberia. - 3011701/1/01/001/020000/070300/0922/0201/221104
- However, for Budgeting at the County Level, our
concentration shall be on the location and
economic classification segments.
3011404 Grand Bassa County
221401 Fuel and Lubricants - Vehicles 13,000.00
221501 Repair and MaintenanceCivil 96,635.00
221502 Repairs and Maintenance - Veh. 7,250.00
221602 Stationery 3,880.00
221901 Educational Materials and Supp 79,550.00
312203 Furniture and Fixtures 25,710.00
3011404 Grand Bassa County Total 226,025.00
Class 2 Expenses
21 COMPENSATION OF EMPLOYEES
211 Wages and Salaries
2111 Wages and Salaries in Cash
211101 Basic Salary - Civil Service
22 USE OF GOODS AND SERVICES
221 General Expenses
2211 Travel Expenses
221101 Foreign Travel - Means of travel
221104 Domestic Travel - Means of Travel
12 3011404 Grand Bassa County
221401 Fuel and Lubricants - Vehicles 13,000.00
221501 Repair and MaintenanceCivil 96,635.00
221502 Repairs and Maintenance - Veh. 7,250.00
221602 Stationery 3,880.00
221901 Educational Materials and Supp 79,550.00
312203 Furniture and Fixtures 25,710.00
3011404 Grand Bassa County Total 226,025.00
13Bank and Cash Management
- Opening County bank accounts and the disbursement
of fund into the account - All county accounts shall be resided at the
Central Bank of Liberia. - The Ministry of Education works closely with
Ministry of Finance and Development Planning
(MFDP) to create a separate bank account for each
county. Government of Liberia funds will only be
disbursed to county accounts, not individual
account. - Procedures for bank related transactions
- Bank transaction documentation
- A cash book or ledger - to record all
transactions relating to receipts and payments at
the bank. - All bank documentation such as examples of
signatory cards, bank statements, etc. shall be
kept in a secure location. - Collection of money and documents from the bank
must be restricted to delegated finance personnel
only.
14Bank and Cash Management
- Checks and Electronic Funds Transfer (EFT)
- At least two signatories are required at all
times to sign checks from the countys bank
account - Signatory A - the County Board Chair and the
Financial Comptroller of the Ministry of
Education - Signatory B - the County Education Officer and
the County Finance Officer (FO) For the bank to
accept and process a check from a County s bank
account, the check must be signed by the School
Board Chair (Signatory A) and have a second
signature from the County Education (signatory
B). In the absence of School Board Chair
(signatory A), the Financial Comptroller, MoE
(signatory A) can sign. In the absence of the
CEO, the County Finance Person can sign in
Category B. - Blank checks should never be pre-signed under any
circumstances. - Check books are to be kept secure by a specified
responsible person with restricted access
exclusively. - Cancelled checks are to be retained, crossed or
marked cancelled and stored securely. - All checks received on behalf of the County
should be deposited in the County s bank account
promptly and not more than 3 working days after
receipt.
15Bank and Cash Management
- Bank reconciliation.
- There shall be a monthly reconciliation of County
accounts undertaken not later than 7 working days
after the end of the month. The monthly
reconciliation should be prepared by the County
Finance Person in consultation with the CEO. - Procedures for Receipt of Cash/Checks
- Issue receipt for all cash/checks received by the
County. - Deposit all cash/checks received in the County s
account/petty cash vault promptly and within at
most 3 working days. - Record the cash/checks received in the cash
book/ledger.
16Bank and Cash Management
- Check payment process.
- When all of the documentations have been
completed from the procurement stages, the next
action is making the payment. Check payments
should be used wherever possible when making
payments from the County s bank account. The
following steps must be followed when preparing a
check payment - Registrar/Cashier completes a payment request
form - Payment request form is reviewed by the Board
Chair or Resident DEO (in the absence of the
Board Chair) and then approved by the CEO - A payment voucher is prepared in the name of the
Payee/Vendor by the Finance Person. The payment
voucher should include - the purpose of the payment
- the check number (after the approval of the
voucher) - the amount in words figures
17Bank and Cash Management
- Check payment process.
- The following documentation should be attached to
the payment voucher - Copy of the approved payment request (which
authorized the Works or services to be procure) - Copies of three quotations from reputable vendors
- Vendor selection evaluation report (to show how
vendor was selected) - Copy of Approved Purchase Order (PO) to the
vendor - Delivery Note/ Interim payment certificate/Complet
ion Certificate and Invoice from the vendor for
Works completed - The payment voucher should be reviewed and signed
by the internal auditor to ensure all information
and supporting documentation is complete and
appropriate. - The reviewed payment voucher is taken to the CEO
for approval. - When the payment voucher is approved, a check is
prepared by the Finance Person in the
payee/vendors business name. No check should be
prepared until the payment request is approved. - The prepared check is taken to the Board Chair
and CEO for signature and/or taken to the
Comptroller, MoE for signature and approval. When
the check is signed by the CEO and Board Chair or
Comptroller, it is issued to the payee/vendor. - The vendor must issue an official receipt and
sign for the check before the check is released.
The check number and the date it was received
should be written on the receipt and signed by
the vendor. - The transaction should be recorded in the cash
book/ledger immediately after the check is
released.
18Bank and Cash Management
- Filing of the documents.
- When the payment process has been completed, the
Finance Officer must file the documents. - The payment vouchers with all of the supporting
documents attached should be stamped PAID and
filed. - Transactions should be filed per month for ease
of reference. - Petty cash management
- The Finance Officer to the County may maintain a
Petty Cash account at the County to facilitate
the payments for minor activities. The Petty Cash
must be managed according to the guidelines
below. - The petty cash ceiling at the County shall be Two
Hundred Fifty United States Dollar (USD250.00) in
any one calendar month. - The Finance Officer shall be responsible for the
security, balancing and replenishment of this
Petty Cash. - The petty cash may be replenished to the ceiling
amount when the cash balance falls to 25 of this
ceiling level. - Wherever possible payments from the County s
bank account should be made by check. The County
should minimize funds kept as petty cash to
reduce risk.
19Bank and Cash Management
- Procedures for payments from the petty cash
ceiling - Petty cash requests per transaction shall not
exceed USD25.00. - Payments exceeding this amount shall be done
through checks following the procedures outlined
in paragraphs above for check payments. - All purchases via the petty cash system must be
eligible under the categories of items that can
be purchased within Government of Liberia
financial guidelines. - Purchases via the petty cash system which are not
acceptable expenditure under the GoL Financial
Guidelines and which are not included in the
County s Annual Work Plan will be charged back
to the CEO who approved the expenditure. - The Finance Officer must ensure that the petty
cash is kept in a secure locked place and must
validate and reconcile the petty cash amount
weekly. - A written report detailing any discrepancies in
the petty cash must be sent to the CEO within 24
hours of knowledge of the discrepancy.
20Bank and Cash Management
- Procedures for payments from the petty cash
ceiling - The CEO must investigate the discrepancy and
forward a written report to the responsible
officer at the County within 24 hours. - The report must outline the amount of the
shortage and the steps being taken to discover
the reason for the shortage. Petty cash shortages
will be borne by the Finance Officer by way of
immediate cash payment. - The petty cash will be subject to regular and
surprise independent checks by the Board Chair
and a reconciliation of the petty cash ceiling
shall include all monies on hand at the time. - All attached supporting documents must be stamped
paid or cancelled, and must be signed and
dated by the cashier after the transaction has
been completed. - Official receipts collected from third parties in
respect of payment should be attached to the
payment voucher.
21Bank and Cash Management
- Replenishment of petty cash.
- Replenishment of petty cash will be done by
preparing a summary report which gives details of
petty cash spent (requests, vouchers, receipts
plus payments) and the amount of petty cash on
hand. - When cash on hand has been reduced below 25 of
the petty cash ceiling level for the County, the
FO must commence the process to obtain cash from
the bank. - The FO shall keep a total of all petty cash
vouchers included in the reimbursement. - Procedure for disbursing Petty Cash
- The procedures that must be followed for
requesting and disbursing petty cash are - The requesting individual should complete a Petty
Cash Request form detailing the items required to
be purchased using petty cash.
22Bank and Cash Management
- Procedure for disbursing Petty Cash (Contd)
- Each Petty Cash Request should be reviewed by the
Board Chair, who will sign the request if it is
reasonable and an eligible use. - Thereafter the request should be sent to the CEO
for approval. - On approval of the Petty Cash Request, the FO
must prepare a Petty Cash Payment Voucher - This voucher must be reviewed and signed by the
Residence DEO, and then approved and signed by
the CEO before the petty cash is disbursed. - The petty cash vouchers should be filed serially
on a monthly basis. - A receipt must be signed by the person requesting
the petty cash on receipt of the amount
requested, and the signed receipt must be kept
with the petty cash voucher.
23Fixed Assets Register (FAR)
- Fixed assets are tangible assets that have been
procured and held for use by the county over a
period exceeding one accounting year. Such assets
will include furniture, for example, and any
materials that were acquired in the previous
year. - Maintenance of Fixed Asset Register
- A FAR shall be maintained for recording all fixed
assets procured for each county. - The register shall contain detailed information
concerning each asset - The assets shall be code-numbered for proper
identification as to categories and location. - The FAR shall be designed to accommodate
additions and disposals of assets. - A summary of fixed assets shall be extracted from
the FAR and form part of the countys Financial
Reports. - A Fixed Assets Verification exercise shall be
conducted each year to ascertain the existence,
custody, location, ownership and conditions of
the countys fixed assets.
24Reporting
- Financial reports are tools used to assist in
managing and monitoring county financial
activities. The following financial reporting
procedures shall be followed by the County - All counties shall submit to the Division of
Finance, MoE at the end of each quarter Financial
Reports not later than 7 days after the end of
each quarter. - Financial Reports shall include, but not be
limited to the following - Cash Book
- Payment Requests
- Payment Vouchers
- Petty Cash Requests
- Petty Cash Payment Vouchers
- Bank Reconciliation Statements
- Fixed Asset Register
25Internal Financial Control
- An internal financial control process shall be
implemented by all counties to provide assurance
of - Effectiveness and efficiency of operation
- Reliability and integrity of financial and
operational reporting - Compliance with applicable laws and guidelines
and - Transparency of operations to stakeholders and
beneficiaries. - The internal financial controls structure of
counties will consider the following elements - Control procedures
- Risk management
- Information and communication
- Monitoring
- The control environment
26Control Procedures
- Control procedures include application controls
including - proper authorization,
- appropriate documentation and independent checks,
- segregation of duties,
- physical controls and
- performance reviews.
- Authorization procedures shall ensure that all
transactions are authorized by people acting
within their authority as set out by guidelines. - Documents and records shall have reference to the
source documents which provide - evidence of transactions
- the applicable price
- description and terms and conditions of the
transaction.
27Control Procedures
- Documents and records will be designed and
pre-numbered to - maintain control
- accountability and
- to ensure that they capture all relevant
information and authorizations. - The pre-numbering of documents and records will
facilitate the - recording of all transactions and
- prevent duplication of transactions.
- Duties within the countys financial management
system should be segregated so that the work of
one individual automatically provides a cross
check on the work of another such that there are
added benefit of an independent check results. - Signatories to the county bank account must
compare the amounts on checks prepared by the
Finance Officer with amounts on supporting
documents before signing the checks. - Supporting documents and payment vouchers must be
initialed by the signatories as evidence of
performance of independent checks.
28Control Procedures
- Segregation of duties
- Essential to the control system is the concept of
segregation of duties. Every financial
transaction involves five steps - Step 1 Request i.e. request to procure/purchase
from the end user - Step 2 Approval i.e. authorized personnel
approve request - Step 3 Authorization i.e. approval to
procure/purchase, issuance of purchase order, to
make payment - Step 4 Execution i.e. procuring/purchasing,
receiving and payment - Step 5 Recording i.e. accounting
- No one person should handle all aspects of a
single transaction from start to finish. - For each transaction the responsibility for
authorization, accounting for and custody of the
related assets must be separated. - The custody of assets must be separated from the
responsibility for accounting for these assets.
For example The person who maintains the
inventory records should not also be receiving or
issuing supplies.
29Control Procedures
- Segregation of duties (Contd)
- A CEO should not have responsibility for
recording or entering the accounting entries in
the ledger, the Finance Officer should take on
this responsibility. - The authorization of transactions must be
separated from the custody of related assets. - The storeroom staff distributing supplies should
not also be able to approve the distribution of
supplies. - Finance Officer cannot be authorized to approve
cash disbursements. - The CEO approving purchase of supplies may not
also keep the county supplies inventory. - The authorization of transactions must be
separated from the accounting for the
transactions. For example, check signers should
not also be authorized to record accounting
transactions.
30The filing system for financial documentation
- Transactions are the focus of the filing system
for the countys financial documentation as they
represent exchanges of assets and services
between the county and the public. A focus must,
therefore, be to ensure that transactions are
initiated and processed in a way that follows the
procedures set out in GoL financial guidelines
and that prevents misstatements and promotes
transparency. - The County filing system for financial
documentation shall therefore - Identify and record all bank and cash
transactions of the county that occurred in the
current period - Ensure that recorded assets and liabilities are
the result of transactions that produced rights
to or obligations for those items - Measure the value of transactions in a way that
allows their proper monetary value to be
recorded - Capture sufficient detail of all transactions to
allow their proper presentation in the financial
reports - Provide appropriate, timely and accurate
information to the county for efficient
implementation management and Ensure effective
communications with the Division of Finance, MoE,
Supervisory Agencies, suppliers, etc. - The countys filing system for financial
documentation must provide the audit trail for
each transaction.
31Fraud and corruption
- There may be occasions when internal financial
control systems fail to prevent losses through
theft, fraud or other irregularities. - Fraud is defined as a deliberate, improper
action, which leads to financial loss to the
county. This includes - theft of goods or property
- falsifying expenses claims and
- falsification (or destruction) of records to
conceal an improper action. - Fraud does not include
- accounting errors,
- actions condoned by established practice, and
- cases where no loss is incurred.
- Other irregularities include
- unauthorized activities for private gain e.g.,
borrowing from petty cash. - It is the responsibility of all persons to report
any suspicion of fraud. - Anyone who has a suspicion of fraud should
communicate that suspicion without delay to the
school CEO or School Board or, if appropriate, to
the Division of Finance and/or the Ministry of
Education.