The document discusses budgeting, including definitions, significance, approaches, types of budgets, and the budgetary process. It outlines three common budgeting approaches - top-down, bottom-up, and iterative budgeting - and compares their merits and demerits. The document also discusses features of an effective budget, linking budgets to project activities through earned value analysis, and measures for budgetary control.
2. PRESENTATION OUTLINE
• Definition of Budgeting,
• Significance of Budgeting,
• Approaches to Budgeting, merits and demerits
• Types of Budgets,
• Outline of the Budgetary process,
• Features of an effective Budget
• Link between budget planning and project
activity(Earned Value Analysis-EVA).
31-Mar-14 Akol Pedo Peter
3. BUDGETING
• A plan translated in financial terms for the
resource and operations of a business,
organisation or project for a stated period
in the future.
• Or simply a statement of incomes and
expenditures.
• Budget = Quantitative expression of a plan
31-Mar-14 Akol Pedo Peter
4. SIGNIFICANCE OF
BUDGETING
• To help management in the planning of
annual operations.
• To co-ordinate the activities of the various
parts of the organisation/project and ensure
that the parts are in harmony with each
other.
• To communicate plans to the various
responsibility centre managers.
31-Mar-14 Akol Pedo Peter
5. SIGNIFICANCE…………2
• To motivate managers to strive to achieve
the organisational/project goals/objectives
• To control activities (organisational or
project)
• To evaluate the performance of managers,
• To generate activity schedule forecasts
31-Mar-14 Akol Pedo Peter
6. Approaches to Budgeting
• There are three common budgeting
methods:
Top-down Budgeting,
Bottom-up Budgeting,
Iterative Budgeting,
31-Mar-14 Akol Pedo Peter
7. Top Down Budgeting(TDB)
is the term given to a budgeting process based
on estimating the cost of higher level tasks first
and using these estimates to constrain the
estimates for lower level tasks.
A crucial factor for successfully implementing
this method for estimating budgets is the
experience and judgment of those involved in
producing the overall budget estimate.
31-Mar-14 Akol Pedo Peter
8. MERITS OF TDB
Takes less time
Promotes upper-level commitment
Involves no multilevel participation
Lower management better understands
what upper management expects
Individual activities need not to be
identified prior to approval
Aggregate budget can be reasonably
accurate.31-Mar-14 Akol Pedo Peter
9. DEMERITS OF TDB
Translating long-range budgets into short-
range budgets.
Problems scheduling projects in a "sub-
optimal way" to meet the strategic goals
Result of top management's limited
knowledge of specifics of project tasks and
activities
31-Mar-14 Akol Pedo Peter
10. Bottom Up Budgeting(BUB)
• Sometimes called Zero Based Budgeting
(ZBB)
• Bottom-up budgeting begins with
identifying all the constituent tasks that are
involved in implementing a project and
working out the resources and funding
required for each activity.
31-Mar-14 Akol Pedo Peter
11. BUB….2
• Provides the opportunity to create
organisation level budgets by rolling up
project budgets.
• Create centralized project level budgets
from their sub-project budgets (WBS)
• Applicable to recurring programmes in the
public sector.
31-Mar-14 Akol Pedo Peter
12. ADVANTAGES OF BUB
accuracy of the budgets for individual tasks is
enhanced
Clear flow of information
Use of detailed data available at project
management level as basic source of cost,
schedule, and resource requirement
information.
Participation in the process leads to ownership
and acceptance
31-Mar-14 Akol Pedo Peter
13. DISADVANTAGES OF BUB
More persuasive managers sometimes get a
disproportionate share of resources
A significant portion of budget building is in the
hands of the junior personnel in the organisation
Sometimes critical activities are missed and left
unbudgeted
Difficult to control aggregate spending
Allocations may not be optimal
Hard to keep multi-year perspective
Tendency to overstate the needs is common
31-Mar-14 Akol Pedo Peter
14. Bottom-up and Top-down
compared
• Bottom-up • Top-down
- Multi-year - Annual
Delegated authority - Time consuming
joint ownership - ownership of proposal
specific
Proactive - Reactive
31-Mar-14 Akol Pedo Peter
15. ITERATIVE BUDGETING(IB)
Iterative – to repeat or do again
A combination of top-down and bottom-up
budget building
Higher project level estimated (top down)
Lower level costed (bottom up)
The two costs negotiated and reconciled
31-Mar-14 Akol Pedo Peter
16. ADVANTAGES OF IB
• It promotes employee involvement and
stimulates a high degree of information
flow between those involved in the project
at different levels
• Both senior management and lower level
managers closer to the actual process
participate in the budgeting process
31-Mar-14 Akol Pedo Peter
17. DISADVANTAGES OF IB
• there’re relative inefficiencies and time
consuming nature of the negotiations over
the budgets.
• Process may not work well when
communication channels are either
informal or blocked between lower-level
managers and senior management
31-Mar-14 Akol Pedo Peter
18. TYPES OF BUDGETS
Operating Budgets – Recurrent
Capital Budgets – Development
Financial Budgets (cash budgets, projected
income and expenditure statement and
projected balance sheet).
31-Mar-14 Akol Pedo Peter
19. SCOPE BUDGET PLANNING
Scoping can be an expression of a budget.
Budgets of specify the following;
Performance measures
Incentives for efficiency
Project selection criteria i.e. numeric &
non-numeric
Expression of organizational policy &
commitment
31-Mar-14 Akol Pedo Peter
20. ..2
Plans for how resources are to be expended
Catalyst for productivity improvement
Control basis for mangers and
administrators
Standardization of operations within a
given horizon.
31-Mar-14 Akol Pedo Peter
21. BUDGETARY PROCESS
A budgetary process is a system of rules
governing the decision-making that leads to a
budget, from its formulation, through its
legislative approval, to its execution.
31-Mar-14 Akol Pedo Peter
22. Budgetary Process outline
a. Identification of the budget committee
b. Derive key forecasts,
c. Prepare “quantity” budgets with appropriate
Managers,
d. Check for feasibility to policies,
e. Amend if necessary,
f. Produce financial budget,
g. Submit budget to CEO for approval
31-Mar-14 Akol Pedo Peter
23. Features of an effective budget
1. Accurate forecasting
2. Based on organisational goals
3. Information is timely and accurate
4. Formed with multilevel input
5. Regular reviews are built-in
31-Mar-14 Akol Pedo Peter
24. Problems with budgeting
a) The process is too long
b) There is a lot of game playing
c) Business decisions change but the budget
does not
d) People in charge of budget are held
accountable in areas where they have no
responsibility
e) Applying an arbitrary percentage to prior
actual period.
31-Mar-14 Akol Pedo Peter
25. Budgetary control
• Publish agreed budgets
• Recording of actual results
• Comparison and identification of variances
• Reporting to budget holders and senior
management about existing variances
• Variance investigation
• Developing solutions to problems revealed
by budgetary control.
31-Mar-14 Akol Pedo Peter
26. Linking Budgets and Activities
Budget deviation analysis (variance analysis)
regularly compares what you expected or
planned to earn and spend with what you
actually spent and earned.
Variation analysis can help greatly when
detecting how well you’re tracking your plans,
how much to accurately budget in the future,
where there might be upcoming problems in
spending.
31-Mar-14 Akol Pedo Peter
27. Example of a variance report
Date: June 30, 2006
Account: Product Development MONTH TO DATE
ACCOUNT REF. ACTUAL BUDGET VARIANCE %
SALARIES 5025 £48,000 £43,750 - £4,375 - 10
TRAVEL 6442 £1,500 £1,200 - £300 - 25
SUPPLIES 532 £500 £700 £200 28.5
Respectfully submitted,
John Travolta Bumlanseki
Programme Manager.
31-Mar-14 Akol Pedo Peter
28. QUESTION ON EVA
Clovis road under construction by UNRA is
expected to be completed in 5 weeks up to
17th
march 2012, they would have
constructed 10 km of tarmac at a unit cost of
US$4/km. assuming that today is 17th
march
2012, and they have actually constructed 7
km at a total cost of US$35.
31-Mar-14 Akol Pedo Peter
29. QUIZ….2
Required:
Calculate;
a)BCWS( a.k.a Planned value)
b)BCWP( a.k.a Earned value)
c)ACWP( a.k.a Actual cost)
d)Comment on the schedule and cost variance
e)The SPI and CPI
f)What advise would you offer UNRA to correct any
problems if any?
31-Mar-14 Akol Pedo Peter
30. SOLUTION TO QUIZ
a) BCWS=10 x 4
=$ 40
b) BCWP=7 x 4
=$ 28
c) ACWS=$ 35
d) SV=BCWP-BCWS
=28-40
=-$12, Comment: this means the project
is behind schedule.31-Mar-14 Akol Pedo Peter
33. ….4
Poor procurements
Lack of skills by staff leading to reworks
Bad luck
Insecurity
Poor weather
Poor planning
Inflation
Poor machinery, etc
31-Mar-14 Akol Pedo Peter
34. Benefits of Variance
Analysis(EVA)
1. Strengthens M & E
2. It’s a planning and budgeting tool
3. It’s a fraud detection tool
4. It helps managers detect errors
5. Enhances accountability/transparency
6. It’s a cost control tool
7. It’s a tool used in risk assessment and mgt
31-Mar-14 Akol Pedo Peter
35. Budgetary control Measures
• procedures put in place by an organization
to prevent and detect errors and fraud.
Accounting Controls (Internal and external
audit controls) involves the following
procedures like Approval and control of
documents, Reconciliation Statements
among others).
31-Mar-14 Akol Pedo Peter
36. …..2
Administrative Controls (Quality Controls,
Stated conflict of interest policy,
Performance statistics checks, Annual
leave and job rotation among others)
31-Mar-14 Akol Pedo Peter
37. REFERENCES
1. Karl-Martin, et al, November 2000:
Budget Processes: Theory and
Experimental Evidence, Harvard school
of Business, Massachusetts. USA
2. Wright.D 1994 :“A practical foundation
in costing” ,Routledge, London
3. MOFPED, 2007: The Local
Governments Financial and Accounting
Manual. Kampala.
31-Mar-14 Akol Pedo Peter