1 / 26

Financial management in a glacial age

Financial management in a glacial age. Your name Your title. Entering the glacial age of finance. Pre-school education Power of well being. Positive activities for teens Supporting people. Quantity & scope. Choice based lettings Decent homes. Capital expenditure & PFI

wardah
Download Presentation

Financial management in a glacial age

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. Financial management in a glacial age Your name Your title

  2. Entering the glacial ageof finance

  3. Pre-school education Power of well being Positive activities for teens Supporting people Quantity & scope Choice based lettings Decent homes Capital expenditure & PFI e-enabled services Quality Local political leadership Gershon efficiency Corporate assessment Use of resources FOI, data protection Management Public services have improved, but financial pressure pre-dates the crunch • £3 billion efficiency savings 2004-2007 • Additional £5.5 billion target 2008-2011

  4. 800 700 Cyclically-adjusted Budget Deficit 600 500 £ billion Current Departmental Expenditure Limits 400 300 200 Current Annually Managed Expenditure (including benefits and debt servicing) 100 0 2013/14 2000/01 2001/02 2002/03 2003/04 2004/05 2005/06 2006/07 2007/08 2008/09 2009/10 2010/11 2011/12 2012/13 Council funding is unlikely to escape spending cuts, adding to the pressure Source: HM Treasury – Budget 2009 Full Report

  5. A 20 per cent cut would turn the clock back a few years, but expectations are now higher Source: HM Treasury, Audit Commission calculations

  6. Financial management has improved in recent years UoR KLOE scores for financial planning Source: Audit Commission, Summing Up

  7. The global financial crisis raised questions about basic financial management • The collapse of Icelandic banks caught many by surprise • Risk and return showed that basic treasury management was of variable quality: • The best councils explicitly balanced risk and reward, regularly scrutinised policies and procedures, had well trained staff and engaged members. • Poorer councils had weak governance, depended exclusively on credit ratings, and had inadequately trained staff Source: Audit Commission, Risk and Return

  8. The economic downturn is hitting local finances, especially in district councils Impact of the recession on council finances Source: Audit Commission, When it comes to the crunch

  9. Demand for services is increasing, with more expected Changes in demand for council services Source: Audit Commission, When it comes to the crunch

  10. The impact of the recession will be felt for many years – we are early in Wave 2 Source: Audit Commission, When it comes to the crunch

  11. The underlying financial pressures won’t go away Expenditure on long-term care Source: PSSRU projections

  12. Short term fixes may not solve long term pressures such as pension revaluations • The recession has hit local authority pension funds: • Average funding level in 2007: 85 per cent • Expected funding level in 2010: 70 per cent • Rough rule of thumb: 3 per cent decrease in funding level translates into a 1 per cent increase in payroll costs • CLG is proposing a temporary fix, but councils need to ensure this doesn’t exacerbate their long term financial health • CLG will consult on more radical options

  13. Responding to the colder climate

  14. Reserves are in good shape, but may not help much Local authorities’ reserves (1995/96) Source: CLG

  15. Most local authorities can improve efficiency: few have transformed back offices Source: Audit Commission, Back to front

  16. The need for efficiency drives innovation - “Don’t let a good crisis go to waste” • Staff are often the best source of creativity; partners also contribute new ideas • Few authorities create opportunities for staff to think creatively away from day-to-day pressures • Innovation thrives with cross-cutting structures and customer facing staff with devolved responsibility • Dedicated money is not key: good ideas usually secure funding • Authorities can struggle to deploy adequate managerial capability to implement well Source: Audit Commission, Seeing the light

  17. Partnerships may need to be reshaped to meet the efficiency agenda • There is a temptation to treat partnerships as an ‘optional extra’ in tight financial times • Few LSPs or partners have assessed costs and benefits of joint working • But savings can be found in partnerships: • A review of services for excluded groups in a city resulted in 16 services being decommissioned, saving nearly £1 million per year • A police force achieved a 40 per cent reduction in utility costs by working with regional colleagues • Total Place may identify scope to save Sources include: Audit Commission, Working better together? and CAA

  18. Strategic financial planning is essential, but could be better • Few medium-term financial plans include scenario planning • The financial impact of demographic change is missing from more than half the plans • Few plans are regularly reviewed and there is little emphasis on outcomes • Some councils are using the current situation as an opportunity to restructure services • Some are planning to ‘weather the storm’ – using reserves rather than driving efficiency Source: Audit Commission, emerging findings from Strategic financial management – due Q1/2 2010

  19. Avoiding failure andimproving financial literacy More details in the handout for today’s session

  20. There are common themes which may indicate an organisation is facing financial difficulties • Absence of financial leadership • Problems seen as external, not internal • Finance director taking sole responsibility for recovery • Members lacking skills or knowledge to challenge the chief executive or finance director • Short-term fixes (e.g. asset sales) to divert non-recurrent resources for temporary cover • Reluctance to commit key financial decisions

  21. There are short-term steps that will address immediate problems • Understand the costs of what you do • Clear framework on what to do and who does it • Members accept that financial management is their responsibility • Service managers own their budgets • Effective basic budgetary controls are in place: • Prompt reporting to budget holders of current position • Budget holders required to implement corrective action if variances arise (rather than just give an explanation)

  22. Organisations with good financial health also display similar characteristics • Service managers are held to account for their service budgets • KPIs are monitored on a monthly basis • Financial performance is evaluated against a range of financial ratios • Budget monitoring includes information on outputs and outcomes • Zero based budgeting exercises are undertaken • Cost drivers of high-spend areas are examined to seek cost reductions

  23. Better financial literacy will improve financial management throughout an organisation Free tool at www.audit-commission.gov.uk/fmskills

  24. Twoquestions for discussion

  25. Questions for discussion • How is your approach to financial management changing, given the climate we are now facing? • What is the next unknown financial risk (‘Iceland’) on the horizon?

  26. There is a range of Audit Commission national reports in production that should help you Please take the handout from today’s session

More Related