Title: A PHILOSOPHICAL APPROACH TO BUDGETING
1A PHILOSOPHICAL APPROACH TO BUDGETING
- Sorrel R Paskin CMA
- Presenter
- Resource Associates Inc.
- Professional Services to Independent Schools
- 737 Olive Way Suite 2405
- Seattle WA 98101
- (206) 453-4529
2INTERGENERATIONAL EQUITY
- Maintain financial equilibrium
- Prepare a strategic financial plan and update the
plan annually to reflect changing circumstances - Annual budgets represent annual instantiations of
the strategic financial plan - Analyze the specific cost drivers operating in
your school
3INTERGENERATIONAL EQUITY
- Optimize faculty and administrative assignments
to achieve optimal productivity to cost ratios - Analyze planned additions to plant and
enhancements of program services to determine
future budgetary impact
4INTERGENERATIONAL EQUITY
- Ensure that growth rates in tuition reflect the
growth rates in total expenditures inclusive of
reserves funding
5FINANCIAL EQUILIBRIUM
- Annually, revenues equal or exceed expenditures
inclusive of total operating expense, reserves
funding, transfers to plant and reinvestment in
endowment - Year over year, the annual rate of growth in
revenues equals or exceeds the annual rate of
growth in total expenditures and reserves funding
6FINANCIAL EQUILIBRIUM
- The value of financial capital is preserved or
enhanced - The value and functional adequacy of physical
capital are preserved or enhanced - The value of human capital is preserved or
enhanced
7FINANCIAL EQUILIBRIUM
- The quality of the curriculum, programs and
services to students is preserved or enhanced
8A PHILOSOPHICAL APPROACH TO BUDGETING
- Annual budget reveals the priorities and goals of
the school the financial commitments made to
faculty support and professional development to
financial aid to maintain goals of access and
affordability and institutional outreach and
development
9A PHILOSOPHICAL APPROACH TO BUDGETING
- When viewed over a multi-year period, changes in
allocations to the cost centers testifies to the
schools changing needs and the new priorities it
develops to meet those needs - Undertaken within the context and prescriptions
of the strategic financial plan and its
accompanying financial model
10A PHILOSOPHICAL APPROACH TO BUDGETING
- The strategic financial plan and the included
financial planning model covers the ensuing three
to five years and prescribes the principal
objectives to be achieved, the strategies
sufficient to their accomplishment, and
delineates the specific tasks and responsibility
centers for their implementation
11A PHILOSOPHICAL APPROACH TO BUDGETING
- Each year included within the plan represents an
installment of objectives, strategies and tasks
that must be accomplished to ensure that the
overall plan is achieved in this way the annual
budget is informed of its responsibilities with
respect to implementing the strategic financial
plan
12A PHILOSOPHICAL APPROACH TO BUDGETING
- Starting point for budgeting is forecasting the
expenditures (inclusive of reserves funding)
expected to be incurred in the fiscal year - Planned expenditures are developed from the
ground up academic departments and
administrative offices forecast needs in priority
order
13A PHILOSOPHICAL APPROACH TO BUDGETING
- Uses a variant of the zero-based approach to
estimate costs - Provides a significant opportunity to evaluate
programs and services to determine quality and
cost efficiency instead of merely confirming past
decisions
14A PHILOSOPHICAL APPROACH TO BUDGETING
- Asks what resources will be required to
accomplish our mission and achieve our priorities
in the year to come? - Then asks what resources can be made available
to support people and programs next year?
15A PHILOSOPHICAL APPROACH TO BUDGETING
- Even if projected resources cannot support
anticipated expenditures and reserves funding,
the exercise has forced their identification,
ranks them with respect to their importance, and
in the case of those that must be deferred,
promises their future realization
16A PHILOSOPHICAL APPROACH TO BUDGETING
- Only after prioritized expenditures and
appropriate levels of transfers have been
considered are the projected revenues recognized - Results in need for negotiated compromise to
balance the budget
17A PHILOSOPHICAL APPROACH TO BUDGETING
- Financial planning for 2011-2012
- Expenditures and transfers
- Personnel costs
- Salaries and wages
- Benefits expense
- Instructional supplies and expense
- Administration and general
- Development and fund raising
- Occupancy
- Auxiliary services
18A PHILOSOPHICAL APPROACH TO BUDGETING
- Interfund transfers
- Transfers to plant equipment additions
- Transfers to plant PPRRSM
- Transfers to endowment -- reinvestment
- Total Expenditures and transfers
19A PHILOSOPHICAL APPROACH TO BUDGETING
- Revenue and Support
- Tuition and fees revenue
- Less financial aid and remission
- Net tuition and fees
- Interest income
- Endowment investment income
- Net gains (losses) on endowment investment
return - Other programs fees revenue
- Annual fund contributions
- Foundation subventions
- Other income (net of expense)
20A PHILOSOPHICAL APPROACH TO BUDGETING
- Net assets released from restriction
- (restricted gifts and endowment investment
return for which the donors stipulations with
respect to use have been satisfied) - Total revenue and support
- Excess (deficiency) revenue and support over
- expenditures and transfers
21A PHILOSOPHICAL APPROACH TO BUDGETING
- Fiscal equilibrium is present when, within a
narrow range - The percentage of total revenue allocable to each
revenue center remains fixed over time, and - The percentage of total expenditures allocable to
each cost center remains fixed over time - Provided that there are no material changes in
operating patterns
22SETTING THE TUITION PRICE
- Science not art relies on the strategic
financial plan - Examine the coverage ratios for the previous five
years - Establish targets for the coverage ratio of each
component of the revenues stream - Determine the target coverage ratio for tuition
revenue net of financial aid - Price tuition accordingly
23SETTING THE TUITION PRICE
- Ensure that the tuition price provides for
reserves funding including a stabilization
reserve to mitigate fiscal distress in the event
of a precipitate decline in enrollment - Cost structure of a school is largely fixed, not
variable, and thus not subject to material
alteration during the school year - Faculty contracts cover the academic year
24SETTING THE TUITION PRICE
- Selling tuition increases
- Critical role of transparency and accountability
- Communications with parents
- Disclosure of prior year operating results and
current year budget - Explanation of factors driving the cost structure
of the school - Public relations initiatives
25SETTING THE TUITION PRICE
- Tuition as a reflection of value received
- Financial aid achieves access and affordability
goals - Absent material improvement in family income, in
the long run financial aid awards will increase
1 to 1-1/2 over the increase in the tuition
price
26SETTING THE TUITION PRICE
- Each student receives an implicit scholarship
reflecting the fact that the tuition covers only
a percentage of the cost of educating that
student the cost is subsidized by foundation
subventions, investment income and other revenue
streams
27SETTING THE TUITION PRICE
- Role of perception of entitlement in setting
the tuition price - In the American economy, price is a reflection of
value received - Economic consequences of differential rates of
productivity growth - Projections of future cost growth in education,
health care and other consumer expenditures
28SETTING THE TUITION PRICE
- In future periods, households will need to
allocate their total expenditures to the growing,
disproportionate increases in education and
health care