1 / 24

Budgeting and Costing of Government Services

13. Chapter. Budgeting and Costing of Government Services. Learning Objectives. After studying Chapter 13, you should be able to: Explain the objectives of budgeting and cost determination in relation to measuring performance. Explain the differences among various budgeting approaches.

lam
Download Presentation

Budgeting and Costing of Government Services

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 13 Chapter Budgeting and Costing of Government Services

  2. Learning Objectives After studying Chapter 13, you should be able to: • Explain the objectives of budgeting and cost determination in relation to measuring performance. • Explain the differences among various budgeting approaches. • Identify the procedures involved in specific types of budgets including appropriation budgets, revenue budgets, cash budgets, and capital budgets.

  3. Learning Objectives (Cont’d) • Describe budgeting for performance: • Total quality management (TQM). • Service efforts and accomplishments (SEA). • Explain unique aspects of costing governmental services: • Federal contracts and grants. • Activity-based costing (ABC). • Cost accounting and expenditure accounting.

  4. Managing for Results Ill. 13-1 • Governments and other entities are integrating management and accounting functions in order to improve results. These functions include • Strategic planning • Budgeting • Costing and measurement • Analysis and evaluation of financial and operational performance • Reporting

  5. GASB Budgeting, Budgetary Control, and Budgetary Reporting Principle • An annual budget should be adopted • The accounting system should provide the basis for appropriate budgetary control • Budgetary comparisons should be included in the financial statements for the funds for which an annual budget has been adopted

  6. Various Budgeting Approaches • Incremental budgeting • Performance budgeting • Program budgeting • Planning-Programming-Budgeting System (PPBS) • Zero-Based budgeting

  7. Incremental Budgeting • Simple and widely used • Focuses on departmental expenditures by applying a percentage increase “across the board” to all line-items • The increase may be the annual rate of inflation, or specific adjustments that relate to expected salary increases or shrinkage relating to scaling back operations • Doesn’t relate inputs to outputs or outcome, so is not considered one of the rational approaches

  8. Performance Budgeting • A plan for relating resource inputs to the efficient production of outputs • Dates back to the Hoover Commission in 1949 • Performance auditing is the subsequent evaluation to determine that resources were in fact used efficiently and effectively in accordance with the plan

  9. Program Budgeting • Discloses the full costs of programs or functions without regard to the number of organizational units that might be involved • Often considered synonymous with performance budgeting; however, that method typically focuses on the relation between inputs and outputs of each organizational unit, rather than programs

  10. Planning-Program-Budgeting System (PPBS) • Comprehensively integrates planning and control into one system • Provides legislators and public administrators with output-oriented information that can be used in evaluating how successful the government is in meeting strategic objectives • Developed in the 1960s at the federal level; however, fell out of favor in the 1970s because it is difficult to implement

  11. Zero-Based Budgeting (ZBB) • Requires that the very existence of each activity be justified each year, as well as the amount of resources that will be allocated to it • Many organizations use combinations of budgeting techniques, such as applying ZBB to a set of programs each year so that all programs are justified over a period of time, although not each year

  12. Budgeting Appropriations : • Appropriations budgets—administration’s requests for authorization to incur liabilities for goods, services, and facilities • Budget calendar—schedule of activities in the process including public hearings to ensure participation by all • Budget officer—person responsible for providing technical assistance to operating personnel who prepare the budgets

  13. Budgeting Revenues The revenue budget is the plan for financing proposed appropriations • Budget for sources of inflows of financial resources, including revenues, interfund transfers, debt issue proceeds • Sources of revenues may be controlled by state or local laws and ceilings, e.g., limits on property tax rates and assessments

  14. Budgeting Capital Expenditures Develop multi-year budgets for capital expenditures that are expected to benefit more than one period, e.g., land, buildings, and equipment. • Capital improvement plans include: • Improvement of streets • Construction of bridges and buildings • Acquisition of land for recreational use, parking lots, future building sites • Urban renewal

  15. Budgeting for Performance Several techniques have been developed over the last few decades to ensure that various components of the management and accounting processes are connected in order to maximize the quality of the goods or services being produced by an organization. Two such techniques are: TQM — Total Quality Management SEA — Service Efforts and Accomplishments

  16. Budgeting for Performance • TQM — Total Quality Management • links customer satisfaction(taxpayer and other resource providers) to improvements in the operating systems • and • processes used to provide goods and services

  17. Elements of a TQM System • Support of top-level officials • Customer orientation • Employee involvement • Rewards for employees’ improvement • Training provided to employees • Reduction of barriers to productivity • Productivity and quality measures • Written mission statements leading to targets

  18. Customer Relationship Management (CRM) • CRM systems create an integrated view of a customer to coordinate services from all channels of the organization • The purpose is to improve the long-term relationship the organization has with its customer • Governments are finding CRM systems helpful in managing services provided to citizens over time

  19. Service Efforts and Accomplishments Measures fall into three categories: • Service efforts (resources used) • Service accomplishments (outputs and outcomes) • Those that relate service efforts to accomplishments

  20. EXAMPLE: SEA Measures in a Police Department • Service efforts - number of police employed and dollars paid to them • Service outputs - number of patrols responding to calls or investigations • Service outcomes - reduction of deaths and thefts, level of safety felt by citizens

  21. Expenditures on Federal Grants Must Meet the Allowable Cost Guidelines in • OMB Circular A-87 for state and local governments • OMB Circular A-21 for educational institutions • OMB Circular A-122 for not-for-profit organizations

  22. Allowable Costs in Federal Grants • Allowable costs are those that are necessary and reasonable for efficient performance of the federal award, such as, compensation of employees, cost of materials, and depreciation • Unallowable costs include alcoholic beverages, bad debt expense, and salaries of the chief executive officer

  23. Activity Based Costing (ABC) • ABC traces the cost of specific process-related activities to specific outputs of goods and services • In ABC, resource “cost drivers” replace the traditional step-down allocations of indirect costs with cause-and-effect relationships at the activity level COSTS  DRIVERS  OUTPUTS

  24. Concluding Comments • An entity that integrates the financial management functions of • Strategic planning • Budgeting • Costing • Analysis of performance (financial and operational) • is more likely to produce higher quality results more efficiently than one in which those functions stand alone. • END

More Related