Fiscal Planning
Fiscal Planning
Fiscal Planning
Introduction
Definition:
Feature of budget
institution.
-operation of executives/
department heads at different levels of management.
and expenditure.
Income limits expenditure; hence income should be estimated prior to the
estimation expenditure.
ns of the faculty.
Purposes of budget:
dget is needed for planning for future course of action and to have a
control over all activities in the organization.
us departments and
sections for realizing organizational objectives.
Principles of Budget:
3. Budget should ensure the most effective use of scarce financial and non
financial resources.
5. Budgetary process requires consistent delegation for which fixed duties and
responsibilities are required to be allocated to managers at different level for
framing and executing budget.
7. Setting budget target requires an adequate checks and balance against the
adoption of too high or too low estimate. Utmost care is a must for fixing
targets.
11. Budget necessitates a review of the performance of the previous year and an
evaluation of its adequacy both in quantity and quality.
12. While developing a budget, the provision should be made for its flexibility.
STEPS IN BUDGETING:
Step 1 : Determine your monthly income Take into consideration your payroll
deductions (health insurance or other group benefits, income taxes, union dues,
pension) and other sources of income.
Add together all income, less deductions. On a piece of paper record the
resulting
figure as VALUE A.
Step 2: List your “fixed” and “variable” monthly expenses ,Such as housing,
utilities, food and transportation. Remember to allocate funds for clothing,
medical care, child care, personal expenses, recreation and emergencies/repairs.
– Add all of your expenses–this is VALUE B.
– By subtracting your total expenses (B) from your total net income (A).
• The monthly payments and the balances. If you don„t know your exact debt
amount, now is the time to determine it.
• If this figure is a negative number, you are not ready for Step 6 – setting goals.
Consult a personal financial counsellor and work on getting this figure into the
positive numbers.
• Review the budget appropriation and actual expenditure for the current year
• Contemplated changes
• Salary fixation
• Requirement estimation
• Review of budget
• Ascertain changes
• Preparing requirements
NURSING AUDIT:
Definition:
standards from their point of view and describe the actual practice of nursing.
“Goster Walfer”
Characteristics:
Objectives:
quality of care.
worldwide.
Methods of Audit:
Audit cycle:
lation of evaluation
1. set Standards
4. implement Change
Advantages:
done.
Disadvantages:
- legal importance- They feel that they will be used in court of law as
any
Introduction
Cost effectiveness and cost accounting are important aspects in the managerial
level. If these factors are not being monitored properly the profit of the
organization may be drastically affected. So each administrator should be aware
of this. Thus it forms an important aspect in the part of administration.
Cost accounting has long been used to help managers understand the
costs of running a business. Modern cost accounting originated during the
industrial revolution, when the complexities of running a large scale business
led to the development of systems for recording and tracking costs to help
business owners and managers make decisions. In the early industrial age, most
of the costs incurred by a business were what modern accountants call "variable
costs" because they varied directly with the amount of production. Money was
spent on labor, raw materials, power to run a factory, etc. in direct proportion to
production. Managers could simply total the variable costs for a product and use
this as a rough guide for decision-making processes.
Some costs tend to remain the same even during busy periods, unlike
variable costs, which rise and fall with volume of work. Over time, the
importance of these "fixed costs" has become more important to managers.
Examples of fixed costs include the depreciation of plant and equipment, and
the cost of departments such as maintenance, tooling, production control,
purchasing, quality control, storage and handling, plant supervision and
engineering. In the early twentieth century, these costs were of little importance
to most businesses. However, in the twenty-first century, these costs are often
more important than the variable cost of a product, and allocating them to a
broad range of products can lead to bad decision making. Managers must
understand fixed costs in order to make decisions about products and pricing.
Definition:
Cost accounting:
Cost accounting is the process that supports the budget reporting system and the
agency efforts for cost containment.
Cost accounting is a set of techniques for associating costs with the purpose
for which obtained.
1. Raw materials
2. Labor
3. Indirect expenses/overhead
Elements of cost
A. Direct material
2. Labor
A. Direct labor
3. Overhead
A. Indirect material
B. Indirect labor
Classification of costs:
-variable
There are various managerial accounting approaches:
-based costing
-volume-profit analysis
Activity-based costing:
As it is a tool for a more accurate way of allocating fixed costs into product,
these fixed costs do not vary according to each month's production volume. For
example, an elimination of one product would not eliminate the overhead or
even direct labor cost assigned to it. ABC better identifies product costing in the
long run, but may not be too helpful in day-to-day decision- making.
Lean accounting:
There are two main thrusts for Lean Accounting. The first is the application
of lean methods to the company's accounting, control, and measurement
processes. This is not different from applying lean methods to any other
processes. The objective is to eliminate waste, free up capacity, speed up the
process, eliminate errors & defects, and make the process clear and
understandable. The second (and more important) thrust of Lean Accounting is
to fundamentally change the accounting, control, and measurement processes so
they motivate lean change & improvement, provide information that is suitable
for control and decision-making, provide an understanding of customer value,
correctly assess the financial impact of lean improvement, and are themselves
simple, visual, and low-waste. Lean Accounting does not require the traditional
management accounting methods like standard costing, activity-based costing,
variance reporting, cost-plus pricing, complex transactionalcontrol systems, and
untimely & confusing financial reports. These are replaced by:
-focused performance measurements
-based pricing
Marginal costing:
product)
Thus, it does not attempt to allocate fixed costs in an arbitrary manner to
different products. The short-term objective is to maximize contribution per
unit. If constraints exist on resources, then Managerial Accounting dictates that
marginal cost analysis be employed to maximize contribution per unit of the
constrained resource.
Throughput Accounting
Advantages:
Disadvantages:
It is the fact that it is difficult for a manager to justify the cost of a nursing care
programme.
Cost effectiveness
Cost-effectiveness analysis
Cost-effectiveness analysis is a form of economic analysis that compares the
relative costs and outcomes (effects) of two or more courses of action. Cost-
effectiveness analysis is distinct from cost-benefit analysis, which assigns a
monetary value to the measure of effect. Cost-effectiveness analysis is often
used in the field of health services, where it may be inappropriate to monetize
health effect. Typically the CEA is expressed in terms of a ratio where the
denominator is a gain in health from a measure (years of life, premature births
averted, sight- years gained) and the numerator is the cost associated with the
health gain.
It is a tool with great potential for the decision maker so long as he or she
recognises the difficulty in determining the true costs and benefits of various
alternatives. This tool can be especially useful when trying to decide between
alternative expenditure of money.
A cost benefit ratio (z) is defined as the ratio of the value of benefits of an
alternative to the value of alternative cost.
General objectives:
By the end of the presentation on fiscal planning the peer group will be
able to gain the depth knowledge regarding the fiscal planning.
Specific objectives:
Define budget
Explain about features of budget
Enlist the purpose of budget
Enumerate the importance of budget
Enlist the principles of budget
Explain about steps in budgetting
Explain about general budget
Roles and responsibilities of nurse administrator/ principal in
budgetting
Discuss about nursing audit
Define nursing audit
Describe the characteristics of nursing audit
Enlist the objectives of nursing audit
Explain about methods of nursing audit
Explain about audit cycle
Enlist advantages of nursing audit
Enlist the disadvantages of nursing audit
Explain about cost effectiveness and cost counting
Define accounting
Enumerate Classification of cost
Explain about cost benefit analysis.
PRESENTATION ON FISCAL
PLANNING
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