Title: Master Budgeting
1- Master Budgeting
- And
- Responsibility Accounting
2Purposes of Budgeting Systems
- Budget
- a detailed plan, expressed in quantitative terms,
that specifies how resources will be acquired and
used during a specified period of time.
- Planning
- Facilitating Communication and Coordination
- Allocating Resources
- Controlling Profit and Operations
- Evaluating Performance and Providing Incentives
3Types of Budgets
Capital budgets with acquisitions that normally
cover several years.
L o n g R a n g e B u d g e t s
Continuous or Rolling Budget
2005
2006
2007
2008
This budget is usually a twelve-month budget
that rolls forward one month as the current
month is completed.
4Types of Budgets
Detail Budget
Detail Budget
Detail Budget
Materials
Master Budget Covering all phases of a
companys operations.
Production
Sales
5Sales of Services or Goods
Ending Inventory BudgetWork in Process and
Finished Goods
Production Budget
Direct Materials Budget
Selling and Administrative Budget
Direct LaborBudget
Overhead Budget
Cash Budget
Ending Inventory BudgetDirect Materials
Budgeted Financial Statements
6Sales Budget
- Breakers, Inc. is preparing budgets for the
quarter ending June 30. - Budgeted sales for the next five months are
- April 20,000 units
- May 50,000 units
- June 30,000 units
- July 25,000 units
- August 15,000 units.
- The selling price is 10 per unit.
7Sales Budget
8Production Budget
Completed
Production must be adequate to meet
budgeted sales and provide for sufficient ending
inventory.
9Production Budget
- The management of Breakers, Inc. wants ending
inventory to be equal to 20 of the following
months budgeted sales in units. - On March 31, 4,000 units were on hand.
- Lets prepare the production budget.
10Production Budget
From sales budget
11Production Budget
12Production Budget
March 31 ending inventory
13Production Budget
14Production Budget
15Direct-Material Budget
- At Breakers, five pounds of material are required
per unit of product. - Management wants materials on hand at the end of
each month equal to 10 of the following months
production. - On March 31, 13,000 pounds of material are on
hand. Material cost .40 per pound. - Lets prepare the direct materials budget.
16Direct-Material Budget
From ourproduction budget
17Direct-Material Budget
10 of the following months production
18Direct-Material Budget
March 31 inventory
19Direct-Material Budget
20Direct-Material Budget
21Direct-Labor Budget
- At Breakers, each unit of product requires 0.1
hours of direct labor. - The Company has a no layoff policy so all
employees will be paid for 40 hours of work each
week. - In exchange for the no layoff policy, workers
agreed to a wage rate of 8 per hour regardless
of the hours worked (No overtime pay). - For the next three months, the direct labor
workforce will be paid for a minimum of 3,000
hours per month. - Lets prepare the direct labor budget.
22Direct-Labor Budget
From our production budget
23Direct-Labor Budget
24Direct-Labor Budget
This is the greater of labor hours required
or labor hours guaranteed.
25Direct-Labor Budget
26Overhead Budget
- Here is Breakers Overhead Budget for the quarter.
27Selling and Administrative Expense Budget
- At Breakers, variable selling and administrative
expenses are 0.50 per unit sold. - Fixed selling and administrative expenses are
70,000 per month. - The 70,000 fixed expenses include 10,000 in
depreciation expense that does not require a cash
outflows for the month.
28Selling and Administrative Expense Budget
From our Sales budget
29Selling and Administrative Expense Budget
30Selling and Administrative Expense Budget
31Cash Receipts Budget
- At Breakers, all sales are on account.
- The companys collection pattern is
- 70 collected in the month of sale,
- 25 collected in the month following sale,
- 5 is uncollected.
- The March 31 accounts receivable balance of
30,000 will be collected in full.
32Cash Receipts Budget
33Cash Receipts Budget
34Cash Disbursement Budget
- Breakers pays 0.40 per pound for its materials.
- One-half of a months purchases are paid for in
the month of purchase the other half is paid in
the following month. - No discounts are available.
- The March 31 accounts payable balance is 12,000.
35Cash Disbursement Budget
140,000 lbs. .40/lb. 56,000
36Cash Disbursement Budget
37Cash Disbursement BudgetContinued
- Breakers
- Maintains a 12 open line of credit for 75,000.
- Maintains a minimum cash balance of 30,000.
- Borrows and repays loans on the last day of the
month. - Pays a cash dividend of 25,000 in April.
- Purchases 143,700 of equipment in May and
48,300 in June paid in cash. - Has an April 1 cash balance of 40,000.
38Cash Disbursement BudgetContinued
From our Cash Receipts Budget
39Cash Disbursement BudgetContinued
From our Cash Disbursements Budget
40Cash Disbursement BudgetContinued
From our Direct Labor Budget
41Cash Disbursement BudgetContinued
From our Overhead Budget
42Cash Disbursement BudgetContinued
From our Selling and Administrative Expense Budget
43Cash Disbursement BudgetContinued
To maintain a cash balance of 30,000, Breakers
must borrow 35,000 on its line of credit.
44Cash Disbursement BudgetFinancing and Repayment
Ending cash balance for April is the beginning
May balance.
45Cash Disbursement BudgetContinued
Breakers must borrow an addition 13,800 to
maintain a cash balance of 30,000.
46Cash Disbursement BudgetFinancing and Repayment
47Cash Disbursement BudgetContinued
At the end of June, Breakers has enough cash to
repay the 48,800 loan plus interest at 12.
48Cash Disbursement BudgetFinancing and Repayment
49Cash Disbursement BudgetContinued
50Cash Disbursement BudgetFinancing and Repayment
51Budgeted Income Statement
Completed
After we complete the cash budget, we can
prepare the budgeted income statement for
Breakers.
52Budgeted Ending Inventory
Manufacturing overhead is applied on the basis of
direct labor hours.
rounded
53Budgeted Income Statement
54Budgeted Balance Sheet
- Breakers reports the following account balances
on June 30 prior to preparing its budgeted
financial statements - Land - 50,000
- Building (net) - 148,000
- Common stock - 200,000
- Retained earnings - 46,400
5525of June sales of 300,000
11,500 lbs. at .40 per lb.
5,000 units at 4.60 per unit.
5650 of June purchases of 56,800
57Activity-Based Costing versus Activity-Based
Budgeting
Resources
Resources
Activities
Activities
Cost objectsproducts and servicesproduced,
andcustomers served.
Forecast of productsand services to beproduced
andcustomers served.
58Budget Administration
- The Budget Committee is a standing committee
responsible for . . . - overall policy matters relating to the budget.
- coordinating the preparation of the budget.
59E-Budgeting
- Employees throughout an organizationcan submit
and retrieve budget information electronically.
This tends to streamline the entire budgeting
process.
60Firewalls and Information Security
- Budget information is extremely sensitive and
confidential. A firewall is a computer or router
placed between a companys internal network and
the internet to control all information between
the outside world and the companys local network.
61Zero-Base Budgeting
- To receive funding during the budgeting process,
each activity must be justified in terms of its
continued usefulness.
62International Aspects of Budgeting
- Firms with international operations face special
problems when preparing a budget. - Fluctuations in foreign currency exchange rates.
- High inflation rates in some foreign countries.
- Differences in local economic conditions.
63Budgeting Product Life-Cycle Costs
Product planning and concept Design.
Preliminary design.
Distribution and customer service.
Detailed design and testing.
Production.
64Behavioral Impact of Budgets
- Budgetary Slack Padding the Budget
- People often perceive that their performance will
look better in their superiors eyes if they can
beat the budget. - Bonuses are often based on beating the budget
65Participative Budgeting
Flow of Budget Data
66- Responsibility Accounting
67Responsibility Centers
- A subunit in an organization whose manager is
held accountable for specified financial results.
68Responsibility Centers
- Cost Center
- Segment has control over the incurrence of
costs.
The Paint Department in an automobile plant.
69Responsibility Centers
- Profit Center
- Segment has control over both costs and
revenues.
Company-owned restaurant in a fast-food chain.
70Measuring Management Performance
Evaluation Tool
Cost standards
Contribution income statement
Rate of return on invested funds or residual
income
71Performance Reports
Shows the budgeted and actual amounts, and the
variances between these amounts, of key financial
results appropriate for the type of
responsibility center.
72Activity-Based Responsibility Accounting
Traditional responsibility-accounting systems
tend to focus on the financial performance
measures of cost, revenue, and profit for
subunits of the organization.
Activity-based costing systems associate costs
with the activities that drive those costs. In
activity-based responsibility accounting
attention is directed not only to costs incurred
but also to the activity creating the cost.
73Behavioral Effects of Responsibility Accounting
74Segmented Reporting
- A segment is any part or activity of an
organization about which a manager seeks cost,
revenue, or profit data.
75Segmented Reporting
76Key Features of Segmented Reporting
- Contribution format.
- Controllable versus uncontrollable expenses.
- Segmented income statement.
77Segmented Income Statement
ContributionFormat
Costs that cannot be controlled by the segment
manager are isolated.