Title: Using Budgets to Achieve Organizational Objectives
1Using Budgets to Achieve Organizational Objectives
2Resource Flexibility
- In many business decisions, especially decisions
affecting the short-term, the firms
capacity-related costs are considered as given
and fixed - Relevant costs in the short run are flexible
costs - Ideally, the supply of capacity resources is
based on the amount needed to produce the
projected volume of product - The budgeting process makes clear that some
resources, once acquired, cannot be disposed of
easily if demand is less than expected
3The Budgeting Process (1 of 5)
- The process that determines the planned level of
most flexible costs - Budgeting for capacity-related resources is
discussed as a separate topic in another chapter - Budgeting also includes discretionary spending
such as for RD, advertising, and employee
training - These do not supply the firm with capacity but
they do provide support for the organizations
strategy by enhancing its performance potential - Once authorized, discretionary spending budgets
are committed or fixed they do not vary with
level of production or service
4The Budgeting Process (2 of 5)
- Budgets serve as a control for managers within
the business units of an organization - Planning and control are the core of the design
and operation of management accounting systems - Budgets play a central role in the relationship
between planning and control - Budgets reflect in quantitative terms how to
allocate financial resources to each part of an
organization, based on the planned activities and
short-run objectives of that part of the
organization
5The Budgeting Process (3 of 5)
- A budget is a quantitative expression of the
money inflows and outflows that reveal whether a
financial plan will meet organizational
objectives - Budgeting is the process of preparing budgets
- Budgets provide a way to communicate the
organizations short-term goals to its members
6The Budgeting Process (4 of 5)
- Budgeting the activities of each unit can
- Reflect how well unit managers understand the
organizations goals - Provide an opportunity for the organizations
senior planners to correct misperceptions about
the organizations goals - Budgeting also serves to coordinate the many
activities of an organization - In this sense, budgeting is a tool that forces
coordination of the organizations activities and
helps identify coordination problems
7The Budgeting Process (5 of 5)
- Budgets help to anticipate potential problems and
can serve to help provide solutions - Budgeting reflects the cash cycle and provides
information to help the organization plan any
borrowing needed to finance the inventory buildup
early in the cash cycle - If budget planning indicates that the
organizations sales potential exceeds its
manufacturing potential, then the organization
can develop a plan to put more capacity in place
or to reduce planned sales - Managers need to be able to anticipate problems
since putting new capacity in place can take
several months to several years
8Forecasting Demandfor Resources (1 of 2)
- Budgeting involves forecasting the demand for
four types of resources over different time
periods - Flexible resources that create variable costs (or
flexible costs) - May be acquired or disposed of in the short term
- Intermediate-term capacity resources that create
capacity-related costs - For example, forecasting the need for rental
storage space that might be contracted on a
quarterly, semi-annual, or annual basis
9Forecasting Demandfor Resources (2 of 2)
- Resources that, in the intermediate and long run
enhance the potential of the organizations
strategy - Discretionary expenditures, which include
research and development, employee training,
maintenance of capacity resources, advertising,
and promotion - Long-term capacity resources that create
capacity-related costs - For example, a new fabrication facility for a
computer chip manufacturer, which might take
several years to plan and build and might be used
for ten years
10Master Budget
- Two major types of budgets comprise the master
budget - Operating budgets
- Summarize the level of activities such as sales,
purchasing, and production - Financial budgets
- Identify the expected financial consequences of
the activities summarized in the operating budgets
11Operating Budgets (1 of 3)
- The sales plan
- Identifies the planned level of sales for each
product - The capital spending plan
- Specifies the long-term capital investments, such
as buildings and equipment, that must be paid in
the current budget period to meet activity
objectives - The production plan
- Schedules all required production
- The materials purchasing plan
- Schedules all required purchasing activities
12Operating Budgets (2 of 3)
- The labor hiring and training plan
- Specifies the number of people the organization
must hire or release to achieve its activity
objectives, as well as all hiring and training
policies - The administrative and discretionary spending
plan - Includes administration, staffing, research and
development, and advertising - These plans specify the expected resource
requirements of selling, capital spending,
manufacturing, purchasing, labor management, and
administrative activities during the budget period
13Operating Budgets (3 of 3)
- Operations personnel use the plans represented in
the operating budget to guide and coordinate the
level of various activities during the budget
period - Operations personnel also record data from
current operations that can be used to develop
future budgets
14Financial Budgets
- Planners prepare the financial budgets to
evaluate the financial consequences of
investment, production, and sales plans - Projected balance sheet
- Projected income statement
- Projected statement of cash flows
- Planners use the projected statement of cash
flows in two ways - To plan when excess cash will be generated
- They can use it to make short-term investments
rather than simply holding cash - To plan how to meet any cash shortages
15Demand Forecast
- An organizations goals provide the starting
point and the framework for evaluating the
budgeting process - To assess the plans acceptability, planners
compare the tentative operating plans projected
financial results with the organizations
financial goals - The budgeting process is influenced strongly by
the demand forecast - An estimate of sales demand at a specified
selling price
16Developing the Demand Forecast
- Organizations develop demand forecasts in many
ways - Market surveys conducted either by outside
experts or by internal sales staff - Statistical models to generate demand forecasts
from trends and forecasts of economic activity in
the economy and the relation of past sales
patterns to this economic activity - Assume that demand will either grow or decline by
some estimated rate over previous demand levels - Regardless of the approach used, the organization
must prepare a sales plan for each key line of
goods and services
17Importance of Sales Plans
- The sales plans provide the basis for other plans
to acquire the necessary factors of production - Labor
- Materials
- Production capacity
- Cash
- Because production plans are sensitive to the
sales plans, most organizations develop budgets
on computers - Planners can readily explore the effects of
changes in the sales plans on production plans
18Level of Detail in Budget (1 of 2)
- Choosing the amount of detail to present in the
budget involves making trade-offs - More detail in the forecast improves the ability
of the budgeting process to identify potential
bottlenecks and problems by specifying the exact
timing of production flows - Forecasting and planning in great detail for each
item can be extremely expensive and overwhelming
to compute
19Level of Detail in Budget (2 of 2)
- Production planners use their judgment to strike
a balance between - The need for detail
- The cost and practicality of detailed scheduling
- Planners do this by grouping products into pools
- Each product in a given pool places roughly
equivalent demands on the organizations
resources - Planning is simplified
20The Production Plan
- Planners determine a production plan by matching
the completed sales plan with the organizations
inventory policy and capacity level - The plan identifies the intended production
during each of the interim periods comprising the
annual budget period - Interim periods may be defined as days, weeks, or
months - Depending on how regularly the people managing
the acquisition, manufacturing, selling, and
distribution activities need information
21Inventory Policy (1 of 3)
- The inventory policy is critical and has a unique
role in shaping the production plan - Planners use the inventory policy and the sales
plan to develop the production plan - One policy is to produce goods for inventory and
attempt to keep a target number of units in
inventory at all times - This level production strategy is characteristic
of an organization with highly skilled employees
or equipment dedicated to producing a single
product - Reflects a lack of flexibility
22Inventory Policy (2 of 3)
- Another inventory policy is to produce for
planned sales in the next interim period within
the budget period - Organizations moving toward a just-in-time
inventory policy produce goods to meet the next
interim periods demand as an intermediate step
in moving to a full just-in-time inventory system - Each interim period becomes shorter and shorter
until the organization achieves just-in-time
production - The scheduled production is the amount required
to meet the inventory target of the level of the
next interim periods planned sales
23Inventory Policy (3 of 3)
- Another inventory policy is a just-in-time (JIT)
inventory policy - In a JIT inventory strategy, demand directly
drives the production plan - Production in each interim period equals the next
interim periods planned sales - A JIT inventory policy requires
- Flexibility among employees, equipment, and
suppliers - A production process with little potential for
failure
24Aggregate Planning
- Aggregate planning compares
- The production plan
- The amount of available productive capacity
- This comparison assesses the feasibility of the
proposed production plan - It does not develop a detailed production
schedule to guide daily production in the
organization - It determines whether the proposed production
plan can be achieved by the capacity the
organization either has in place or can put in
place during the budget period - Planners may need to consider ways to modify
existing facilities
25The Spending Plan (1 of 4)
- Once planners identify a feasible production
plan, they may make tentative resource
commitments - The purchasing group prepares a plan to acquire
the required raw materials and supplies - Since sales and production plans change, the
organization and its suppliers must be able to
adjust their plans quickly based on new
information - At some point the plans have to be locked in
place and no additional changes made - For example, commitment to a production schedule
in a large automotive assembly plant occurs about
eight weeks before production takes place - Provides managers the time to put raw materials
supply in place and schedule the production
26The Spending Plan (2 of 4)
- The personnel and production groups prepare the
labor hiring and training plans - Works backward from the date when the personnel
are needed to develop hiring and training
schedules that will ensure the availability of
the needed personnel - When an organization is contracting, it will
- Use retraining plans to redeploy employees to
other parts of the organization, or - Develop plans to discharge employees
- Because they involve moral, ethical, and legal
issues and may involve high severance costs,
layoffs are usually avoided unless no alternative
can be found
27The Spending Plan (3 of 4)
- Other decision makers in the organization prepare
an administrative and discretionary spending plan - Summarizes the proposed expenditures on
activities such as for RD, advertising, and
training - Discretionary expenditures provide the required
infrastructure for the proposed production and
sales plan - Discretionary means the actual sales and
production levels do not drive the amount spent - The senior managers in the organization determine
the amount of discretionary expenditures - Once determined, the amount to be spent on
discretionary activities becomes fixed for the
budget period and is unaffected by product volume
and mix
28The Spending Plan (4 of 4)
- The appropriate authority approves the capital
spending plan to acquire new productive capacity - A long-term planning process rather than the
one-year cycle of the operating budget drives the
capital spending plan - Capital spending projects usually involve time
horizons longer than the period of the operating
budget
29Choosing Capacity Levels (1 of 4)
- Three types of resources determine capacity
- Flexible resources that the organization can
acquire in the short term - If suppliers do not deliver the resources or
deliver unacceptable products, production may be
disrupted - Capacity resources that the organization must
acquire for the intermediate term - Capacity resources that the organization must
acquire for the long term - The level chosen reflects the organizations
assessment of its long-term growth trend
30Choosing Capacity Levels (2 of 4)
- Organizations develop sophisticated approaches to
balance the use of short, intermediate, and
long-term capacity to minimize the waste of
resources - We may classify resource-consuming activities
into three groups - Activities that create the need for resources
(and resource expenditures) in the short-term - Activities undertaken to acquire capacity for the
intermediate-term - Activities undertaken to acquire capacity needed
for the long-term - Planners classify activities by type because they
plan, budget, and control short, intermediate,
and long-term expenditures differently
31Choosing Capacity Levels (3 of 4)
- Analysts evaluate short-term activities by
considering efficiency and asking - Is this expenditure necessary to add to the
product value perceived by customers? - Can the organization improve how it does this
activity? - Would changing the way this activity is done
provide more satisfaction to the customer? - Choosing the production plan (i.e., choosing the
level of the short-term activities) fixes the
short-term expenditures that the master budget
summarizes
32Choosing Capacity Levels (4 of 4)
- Analysts evaluate intermediate- and long-term
activities by using efficiency and effectiveness
considerations and asking - Are there alternative forms of capacity available
that are less expensive? - Is this the best approach to achieve our goals?
- How can we improve the capacity selection
decision to make capacity less expensive or more
flexible? - Choosing the capacity plan (i.e., making the
commitments to acquire intermediate and long-term
capacity) commits the firm to its intermediate
and long-term expenditures
33Handling Infeasible Production Plans
- Planners use forecasted demand to plan activity
levels and provide required capacity - If planners find the tentative production plan
infeasible, then they have to make provisions to - Acquire more capacity, or
- Reduce the planned level of production
- Occurs when projected demand exceeds available
capacity
34Interpreting The Production Plan
- Production is the lesser of
- Total demand
- Production capacity
- Demand is the quantity customers are willing to
buy at the stated price - Production capacity is the minimum of
- The long-term capacity
- The intermediate-term capacity
- The short-term capacity
35The Financial Plans
- Once the planners have developed the production,
staffing, and capacity plans, they can prepare a
financial summary of the tentative operating
plans - The projected balance sheet serves as an overall
evaluation of the net effect of operating and
financing decisions during the budget period - The income statement serves as an overall test of
the profitability of the proposed activities - A cash flow forecast helps an organization
identify if and when it will require external
financing
36The Cash Flow Statement
- The cash flow statement has three sections
- Cash inflows from cash sales and collections of
receivables - Cash outflows
- For flexible resources that are acquired and
consumed in the short term - For capacity resources that are acquired and
consumed in the intermediate and long term - Results of financing operations
37Financing Operations
- Summarizes the effects on cash of transactions
that are not a part of the normal operating
activities - Includes the effects of
- Issuing or retiring stock or debt
- Buying or selling capital assets
- Short-term financing
- Often involves obtaining a line of credit,
secured or unsecured, with a financial
institution - The line of credit allows a company to borrow up
to a specified amount at any time
38Using The Financial Plans (1 of 2)
- Organizations can raise money from outsiders by
borrowing from banks, issuing debt, or selling
shares of equity - Based on the information provided by the cash
flow forecast, organizations can plan the
appropriate mix of external financing to minimize
the long-run cost of capital
39Using The Financial Plans (2 of 2)
- A cash flow forecast helps an organization
- Identify if and when it will require external
financing - Determine whether any projected cash shortage
will be - Temporary or cyclical
- Can be met by a line-of-credit arrangement, or
- Permanent
- Would require a long-term loan from a bank,
further investment by the current owners, or
investment by new owners (or a combination)
40What If Analysis
- Using a computer for the budgeting process,
managers can explore the effects of alternative
marketing, production, and selling strategies - For example, a manager may consider raising
prices, opening a retail outlet, or using
different employment strategies - Alternative proposals like these can be evaluated
in a what-if analysis - The structure and information required to prepare
the master budget can be used easily to provide
the basis for what-if analyses
41Sensitivity Analysis (1 of 2)
- What-if analysis is only as good as the model
used to represent what is being evaluated - The model must be complete, it must reflect
relationships accurately, and it must use
accurate estimates - Otherwise, it will not provide good estimates of
a plans results - Planners test planning models by varying the
model estimates - If small changes in an estimate used in the
production plan have a dramatic effect on the
plan, the model is said to be sensitive to that
estimate
42Sensitivity Analysis (2 of 2)
- Sensitivity analysis is the process of
selectively varying a plans or a budgets key
estimates for the purpose of identifying over
what range a decision option is preferred - Sensitivity analysis enables planners to identify
the estimates that are critical for the decision
under consideration
43Variance Analysis (1 of 2)
- To help interpret production and financial
outcomes, organizations compare planned (or
budgeted) results with actual results - A process called variance analysis
- Variance analysis has many forms and can result
in complex measures, but its basis is very
simple - An actual cost (or revenue) amount is compared
with a target cost (or revenue) amount to
identify the difference
44Variance Analysis (2 of 2)
- Accountants call the difference a variance
- A variance represents a departure from what was
budgeted or planned - An investigation will try to determine
- What caused the variance
- What should be done to correct that variance
45Sources of Budgeted Costs
- Budgeted or planned costs can come from three
sources - Standards established by industrial engineers
- Such as cost of steel that should go into the
door of an automobile based on the doors
specifications - Previous periods performance
- For example, the cost of steel per door that was
made in the last budget period - A benchmark, the best in class results achieved
by a competitor - The cost of steel per comparable door achieved by
the competitor that is viewed as the most
efficient
46Variances (1 of 4)
- The financial numbers are the product of a price
and a quantity component - Budgeted amount expected price expected
quantity - Actual amount actual price actual quantity
- Variance analysis explains the difference between
planned and actual costs by evaluating - Differences between planned and actual prices
- Differences between planned and actual quantities
47Variances (2 of 4)
- Accountants focus separately on prices and
quantities because in most organizations - One department or division is responsible for the
acquisition of a resource - Determining the actual price
- A different department uses the resource
- Determining the quantity
- A variance is a signal that is part of a control
system for monitoring results - A variance provides a signal that operations did
not go as planned
48Variances (3 of 4)
- Supervisory personnel use variances as an overall
check on how well the people who are managing
day-to-day operations are doing what they should
be doing - When compared to the performance of other
organizations engaged in comparable tasks,
variances show the effectiveness of the control
systems that operations people are using
49Variances (4 of 4)
- If managers learn that specific actions they took
helped lower the actual costs, then they can
obtain further cost savings by repeating those
actions on similar jobs in the future - If they can identify the factors causing actual
costs to be higher than expected, then they may
be able to take the necessary actions to prevent
those factors from recurring in the future - If they learn that cost changes are likely to be
permanent, they can update their cost information
when bidding for future jobs
50First-Level Variances
- The first-level variance for a cost item is the
difference between the actual costs and the
master budget costs for that cost item - Variances are favorable (F) if the actual costs
are less than estimated master budget costs - Unfavorable (U) variances arise when actual costs
exceed estimated master budget costs
51Planning Variances
- A flexible budget adjusts the forecast in the
master budget for the difference between planned
volume and actual volume - It reflects a cost target based on the level of
volume that is actually achieved, rather than the
planned volume that underlies the master budget - Cost differences between the master and the
flexible budget are called planning variances - They reflect the difference between planned
output and actual output - They arise entirely because the planned volume of
activity was not realized
52Flexible Budget Variances
- Flexible budget variances are the differences
between the flexible budget and the actual
results - Reflect variances from the target level of costs
adjusted for the actual level of activity - A managers focus should be on these variances to
determine whether cost-cutting activities have
been successful - Flexible budget variances reflect
- Quantity variances -- the difference between the
planned and the actual use rates per unit of
output - Cost variances -- the difference between the
planned and the actual price or cost per unit of
the various cost items
53Second Third-Level Variances
- The second-level variances are the planning
variance and the flexible budget variance - Together they add up to the first-level variance
- The direct material flexible budget variances and
direct labor flexible budget variances can be
decomposed further into third-level variances - Efficiency variances
- Price variances
- Together they explain the flexible budget
component of the second-level variance
54Direct Material Variances (1 of 2)
- The material quantity variance is calculated as
- Quantity variance (AQ-SQ) x SP
- Where
- AQ actual quantity of materials used
- SQ standard (estimated) quantity of materials
required - SP standard (estimated) price of materials
55Direct Material Variances (2 of 2)
- The material price variance is calculated as
- Price variance (AP-SP) x AQ
- Where
- AP actual price of materials
- SP standard (estimated) price of materials
- AQ actual quantity of materials used
- The sum of these two second-level variances is
the total flexible budget variance for direct
materials - The price variance may, however, be calculated
using the quantity purchased rather than the
quantity used
56Direct Labor Variances
- The labor cost variances are determined in a
manner similar to the material quantity and price
variances - Efficiency variance (AH-SH) x SR
- Rate variance (AR-SR) x AH
- Where
- AH actual number of direct labor hours
- AR actual wage rate SR standard rate
- SH standard (estimated) number of direct labor
hours - The sum of the rate variance and the efficiency
variance equals the total flexible budget direct
labor variance
57Support Activity Cost Variances (1 of 2)
- Support costs can reflect either flexible or
capacity-related costs - The quantity of capacity-related costs may not
change from period to period, but the spending on
them may fluctuate - E.g., engineers can travel, take courses,
vacation, quit, and be replaced with someone else - Monitoring spending variances on capacity-related
resources is possible and desirable - Even if one cannot monitor efficiency variances,
which will show up as changes in used and unused
capacity
58Support Activity Cost Variances (2 of 2)
- Flexible support costs reflect behind-the-scenes
operations that are proportional to the volume of
activity but are not directly a part of the
product or service provided to the customer - For example, an indirect support cost in a
factory would be the wages paid to employees who
move work in process around the factory floor as
the product is being made - Flexible support costs consist of a quantity (or
usage) component and a price component - Flexible support cost variances may be analyzed
in a manner similar to direct material or direct
labor variances
59Budgeting In Nonmanufacturing Organizations (1 of
3)
- As in manufacturing organizations, budgeting
helps nonmanufacturing organizations perform
their planning function by coordinating and
formalizing responsibilities and relationships
and communicating the expected plans - Budgeting serves a slightly different but equally
relevant role in natural resource companies,
service organizations, not-for-profit
organizations, and government agencies
60Budgeting In Nonmanufacturing Organizations (2 of
3)
- In the natural resources sector, the focus is on
balancing demand with the availability of natural
resources - Because the natural resource supply often
constrains sales, success requires managing the
resource base effectively to match supply with
potential demand - In the service sector, the focus is on balancing
demand and the organizations ability to provide
services, which is determined by the
organizations level and mix of skills - People rather than machines usually represent the
capacity constraint in the service sector - Planning is critical in high-skill organizations
because people capacity is expensive and services
cannot be inventoried when demand falls below
capacity
61Budgeting In Nonmanufacturing Organizations (3 of
3)
- In not-for-profit organizations, the focus of
budgeting has been to balance revenues raised by
taxes or donations with spending demands - In government agencies planned cash outflows, or
spending plans, are called appropriations - Appropriations limit a government agencys
spending - Many governments are looking for ways to
eliminate unnecessary expenditures and to make
necessary expenditures more efficient - These agencies must establish priorities for
their expenditures and improve the productivity
with which they deliver services to constituents
62Periodic Budgeting
- The basic budgeting process described in this
chapter involves many organizational design
decisions, such as the length of the budget
process, the basic budget spending assumptions,
and the degree of top management control - In a periodic budget cycle, the planners prepare
budgets periodically for each planning period - Periodic budgeting is typically performed once
per budget periodusually once a year - Planners may, however, update or revise the
budgets
63Continuous Budgeting
- In continuous budgeting, as one budget period
passes, planners drop that budget period from the
master budget and add a future budget period in
its place - Usually a month or a quarter
- The length of the budget period reflects the
competitive forces, skill requirements, and
technology changes that the organization faces - Long enough for the organization to anticipate
important environmental changes and adapt to them - Short enough to ensure that estimates for the end
of the period will be reasonable and realistic
64Periodic v. Continuous Budgeting
- Advocates of periodic budgeting argue that
continuous budgeting takes too much time and
effort and that periodic budgeting provides
virtually the same benefits at a smaller cost - Advocates of continuous budgeting argue that it
keeps the organization planning, and assessing,
and thinking, strategically year-round rather
than just once a year at budget time
65Controlling Discretionary Expenditures
- Organizations generally use one of three general
approaches to budget discretionary expenditures - Incremental budgeting
- Zero-based budgeting
- Project funding
- Each has benefits distinct from the others
66Incremental Budgeting
- Incremental budgeting bases a periods
expenditure level on the amount spent during the
previous period - If the total budget for discretionary items
increases by 10, then - Each discretionary item is allowed to increase
10, or - All items may experience an across-the-board
increase of, for example, 5 and the remaining 5
increase may be allocated based on merit - Some people have criticized incremental budgeting
because it does not require justification of the
organizations goals for discretionary
expenditures
67Zero-Based Budgeting (1 of 2)
- Zero-based budgeting (ZBB) requires that
proponents of discretionary expenditures
continuously justify every expenditure - Zero-based budgeting is not appropriate for
budgeting that relates to engineered costs that
vary in proportion to production - The starting point for each line item is zero
- Zero-based budgeting arose, in part, to combat
indiscriminate incremental budgets where projects
that take on a life of their own and resist going
out of existence
68Zero-Based Budgeting (2 of 2)
- Under ZBB, planners allocate the organizations
resources to the spending proposals they think
will best achieve the organizations goals - This approach to project budgeting has been used
primarily to assess government expenditures - In profit-seeking organizations, ZBB has been
applied only to discretionary expenditures - Even for engineered costs, ZBB could be effective
when combined with the reengineering approach - Critics of ZBB complain it is expensive because
it requires so much employee time to prepare
69Project Funding
- Some critics of ZBB have proposed an intermediate
solution to mitigate the disadvantages of ZBB and
incremental budgeting - The intermediate solution is called project
funding - A proposal is made for discretionary expenditures
with a specific time horizon or sunset provision - Projects with indefinite lives (sometimes called
programs) should be continuously reviewed to
ensure that they are living up to their intended
purposes - Requests to extend or modify the project must be
approved separately
70Activity-Based Budgeting
- A recent approach to budgeting is activity-based
budgeting, which is based on activity-based
costing - Activity-based budgeting uses knowledge about the
relationship between the quantity of production
units and the activities required to produce
those units to develop detailed estimates of
activity requirements underlying the proposed
production plan - The two main benefits of activity-based budgeting
are - It identifies situations when production plans
require new capacity - It provides a more accurate way to project future
costs
71Managing the Budgeting Process (1 of 2)
- Many organizations use a budget team, headed by
the organizations budget director or the
controller, to coordinate the budgeting process - The budget team usually reports to a budget
committee, which generally includes the chief
executive officer, the chief operating officer,
and the senior executive vice presidents - The composition of the budget committee reflects
the role of the budget as the planning document
that reflects and relates to the organizations
strategy and objectives
72Managing the Budgeting Process (2 of 2)
- The danger of using a budget committee is that it
may signal to other employees that budgeting is
something that is relevant only for senior
management - Senior management must take steps to ensure that
the organization members affected by the budget
do not perceive the budget and the budgeting
process as something beyond their control or
responsibility
73Behavioral Aspects of Budgeting
- Because of the human factor involved in the
process, budgets often do not develop smoothly - Social scientists have engaged in extensive study
about the human factors involved in budgeting - Two related areas are of particular importance
with respect to the behavioral issues they raise - Designing the budget process
- Influencing the budget process
74Designing the Budget (1 of 2)
- How should budgets be determined and who should
be involved in the budgeting process? - Three common methods of setting budgets are
- Authoritarian
- A superior simply tells subordinates what their
budget will be - Participation
- All parties agree about setting the budget
targets, using a joint decision-making process - Consultation
- Managers ask subordinates to discuss their ideas
about the budget but determine the final budget
alone
75Designing the Budget (2 of 2)
- Research shows that the most motivating types of
budgets are those that are tight - With targets that are perceived as ambitious but
attainable - Recently, companies such as Boeing and General
Electric have implemented what are known as
stretch targets - Stretch targets exceed previous targets by a
significant amount and usually require an
enormous increase in a goal over the next
budgeting period - The theory is that only in this manner will
companies completely reevaluate the ways in which
they develop and produce products and services
76Influencing The Budget Process
- When incentives and compensation are tied to the
budget, some managers have been known to play
budgeting games in which they attempt to
manipulate information and targets to achieve as
high a bonus as possible (or the best evaluation) - Participation provides employees the opportunity
to affect their budgets in ways that may not
always be in the best interests of the
organization - Subordinates might ask for resources above and
beyond what they need to accomplish their budget
objectives
77Budget Slack
- Budget slack is created by requiring excess
resources or distorting performance information - If subordinates succeed in creating budget slack,
they will find it easy to meet or exceed their
budgeted objectives - Budgeting games can never be eliminated, although
some organizations have devised methods to
decrease the amount of budget slack - Management can use a long, iterative process to
formulate the budget to remove much slack - An incentive system may provide higher levels of
bonuses based on attaining higher targets
78If you have any comments or suggestions
concerning this PowerPoint presentation, please
contactTerry M. Lease(terry.lease_at_sonoma.edu)S
onoma State University