Stephen Vajs Effective Cash Management Brussels PDF
Stephen Vajs Effective Cash Management Brussels PDF
Stephen Vajs Effective Cash Management Brussels PDF
Stephen M. Vajs
Brussels, April 4, 2014
Overall Plan
3
Cash is the mechanism that allows the government to operate. When a government
has no cash, it cannot act.
To obtain the most usefulness of its cash resource, cash management practices are
adopted.
Use the appropriate tools and practices to move funds; it may be advantageous
to use banks as financial agents.
4
A key practice of cash management is to structure funds repositories so that
the government always knows what funds are at its disposal and where they
are and that it can move these funds at will. This is most easily accomplished
by a TSA.
There are recognized good practices for borrowing (e.g., public auctions)
and investing (e.g., collateralization) public funds.
5
The key tool for balance management is the cash forecast. This should be
distinguished from the budgetary schedule.
The forecast should be daily, based on trends, and not limited to the
current fiscal year.
Any forecast will be imperfect. Measure the forecast’s errors and seek
ways to reduce them. In delivering the forecast, include a measure of
variability.
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Document ALL processes.
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Effective Cash Management
8
Sometimes the biggest hurdle in doing something new is knowing where
to begin.
One guide may be to look at the cash flows that are the most expensive.
Expensive? Yes. Transferring funds between parties may require time and
explicit transfer costs. Good cash management strives to minimize the costs
associated with funds transfers.
9
The Receipts Network
,
Remitter
TSA
10
The Receipts Network
An Internal System
,
Remitter
TSA
11
The Receipts Network
Using Agents, e.g., Banks
Taxpayer ,
for
example
Remitter
The
taxpayer’s
bank .
Agent # 1
TSA
A bank
contracted
by the
treasury .
Agent # 2
12
The Receipts Network
Full System
Taxpayer,
for
example
Remitter
The
taxpayer’s
bank.
Agent #1
TSA
A bank
contracted
by the
treasury.
Agent #2
13
What is the cost of receiving funds?
14
Float
15
Total collections cost
16
Managing costs
17
Comparing Agents
18
Making your selection
19
Each bank has a zone of advantage
20
The Receipts Network
Taxpayer,
for
example
Remitter
The
taxpayer’s
bank.
Agent #1
TSA
A bank
contracted
by the
treasury.
Agent #2
21
Banks may provide tools to improve collections
22
Banking Products
23
Effective Cash Management
24
Forecasting Cash Balances
This is needed to understand when and how much money must be
borrowed to maintain adequate resources to meet net cash flows.
25
A complex, aggregate series can be difficult to model.
26
The General Balance Forecast Problem
27
Aggregate Cash Models have other challenges
28
Fourier’s Theorem provides a clue -
29
It is easier to model component sub-flows.
These nine simple flows created the complex structure given in the earlier slide.
30
They form this …
31
Disaggregation may ease the forecasting problem.
32
Triage for cash flows
33
Disaggregation
34
The cash balance forecast would be updated each
day.
• The closing cash balance for the most recent day will be the
starting point for the new forecast.
35
The forecasting team members would specialize in
particular sub-flows.
36
Effective Cash Management
37
The cash balance will vary across the year, but
there may be larger patterns to exploit.
Treasury Daily Operating Balance
1992-2010
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
Year
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
21.00
14.00
7.00
0.00
42.00
35.00
28.00
63.00
56.00
49.00
70.00
91.00
84.00
77.00
112.00
105.00
98.00
140.00
133.00
126.00
119.00
161.00
154.00
147.00
182.00
175.00
168.00
189.00 2010
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Week of Year
38
Maintaining the correct cash balance
39
What is a safe balance range?
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How to set a target.
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How to maintain a target value.
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Handling surplus funds
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Handling a funds shortfall
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