Book:The Budgeting Process Flashcards

1
Q

What are the purposes of a budget

A

It serves as a coordinating plan to motivate managers that can serve as a benchmark and base for revision.

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2
Q

What is the benefit of having a common plan for the guture

A

Among other things managers gain an understanding of things outside their department and can better serve the organization as a whole

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3
Q

What is a rolling or continuous budget

A

A budget that always looks a year forward every quarter

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4
Q

How is revision done on a rolling budget

A

One compares the changed budget with the previous budget

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5
Q

By what process are budgets often set

A

A department head advised by accountants plans a budget that has to bee approved by a budget committee often headed by the ceo

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6
Q

What is a fixed budget

A

A budget that is planned annually and not changed

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7
Q

What factors might restrict performance in a budget

A

Demand, retail space, production capacity

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8
Q

What does it mean that a budget should be a participatory process

A

That department heads should submit their budgets to superiors with an overview and negotiate

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9
Q

What is a sales budget

A

A plan of how many products the firm wants to sell and at what selling price it intends to sell.

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10
Q

What is a production budget

A

The budget on how much will be produced at what time, budgeted inventory levels based on the sales budget

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11
Q

What is a direct material usage budget

A

The budget entailing the material requirements to fulfill the production budget

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12
Q

What is the direct material purchase budget

A

The plan entailing at what price materials should be purchased at what quantities and when to fulfill the direct material usage budget

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13
Q

What is a direct labor budget

A

The budget entailing the required cost of labor to meet the demanded production

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14
Q

What is production overhead budget

A

The budgeted allowance for indirect variable costs related to production

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15
Q

What are selling and administration budgets

A

As they sound, the budgeted cost of this particular labor

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16
Q

What are departmental budgets

A

The combined labor, material and overhead budgets divided by departments. Often broken down into monthly budgets

17
Q

What is the cash budget

A

The plan that ensures that there is always enough cash to meet the budgeted requirements

18
Q

What conflicting visions might one have with the budget

A

To use budget as a plan and motivator can be contradictory. Is accurate challenging?

19
Q

What is incremental budgeting

A

To use the past budget as a base for the new budget

20
Q

What is the disadvantage of incremental budgeting

A

That it assumes that most of the activity stays the same and is not evaluated which can lead to perpetuation of redundancy as the budget fails to motivate managers

21
Q

What is ABB

A

Activity based budgeting is when you use activity based cost objects as a base for the budget

22
Q

How is activity based budgeting performed

A

Estimate the sales volume and the demand for activities that entails. Estimate the volume of resources that are required to fulfill the activities and adjust supply to meet demand

23
Q

How are non profits budgeted

A

They don’t use revenue as a base of performance so the main focus lies in getting an overview of expenses

24
Q

What is line item budgeting

A

A budget that almost exclusively focuses on expenses, often used by non profits

25
What is zero based or priority based budgeting
Start the budget from zero, managers need to justify all expenditure
26
How does one do ZBB
Describe each activity as a decision package that is then ranked. Allocate all resources based on level of importance until they reach the spending cut off level
27
What are the benefits of zero bases budgeting
It questions past costs and creates an environment of improvement at the cost of time
28
What are priority based incremental budgets
A more in depth version of incremental budgets requiring managers to motivate their budgets in detail if changed sufficiently
29
What are the flaws of budgeting
Encourages rigid short term incremental thinking, it is time consuming, it can limit motivation, it lock down a commitment, it can lead to arbitrary spending
30
How can budgets lead to arbitrary spending
If a manager manages under budget and don’t want their budget decreased next period they might want to justify an increase
31
What is beyond budgeting
An attempted improved way of budgeting entailing decentralization, a rolling forecast, ambitious target setting and external evaluation
32
What are discretionary costs
Avoidable costs, costs that can be avoided without harm to the business
33
How do you get the adjustment for non cash items in the cashflow from operating activities budget
You add what was removed in depreciation and other operating accruals in the result budget
34
How do you see increases in provisions when adding it to the cashflow budget
You observe changes year on year in the balance budget
35
What is tie capital
Accounts receivable that should be removed when translated to cash
36
What should you do to calculate changes in operating receivables in the cashflow budget
Remove sales short term assets and add short term liabilities
37
How do you calculate investing activities for the cashflow budget from the result budget
You add back depreciation and then check changes in assets
38
What should you do in the cashflow budget if you see a decrease in long term liabilities
Subtract that amount as it is likely a loan payback
39
How do you calculate dividends payed in the cashflow budget from the results budget
You check the difference between retained earnings + net income last year and this years retained earnings