π What is a Budget?
Definition: A budget is a financial plan for the future that sets out expected income and expenditure over a given period β usually one year.
Budgets are set in advance and act as targets for managers and departments. They are a key tool for financial planning and control.
- Revenue budget β forecast of expected sales income
- Expenditure budget β planned spending on costs
- Profit budget β expected revenue minus expected costs
- Departmental budgets β specific targets for each department
A budget is a PLAN, not a record of what actually happened. Actual results are compared to the budget to spot differences (variances)! π
π― Purpose and Benefits of Budgets
- Planning β forces managers to think ahead and set financial targets
- Coordination β ensures all departments work toward the same financial goals
- Control β provides benchmarks to measure actual performance against
- Motivation β gives staff targets to aim for (if set at realistic levels)
- Communication β makes financial expectations clear across the business
- Decision-making β helps managers allocate resources effectively
Budgets serve SIX key purposes: Plan, Coordinate, Control, Motivate, Communicate, Decide β remember them as 'PCCMCD'! π§
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π Variance Analysis
Definition: A variance is the difference between the budgeted figure and the actual figure. Variances can be favourable (better than expected) or adverse (worse than expected).
- Favourable variance β actual revenue HIGHER than budgeted, or actual costs LOWER than budgeted (good news!)
- Adverse variance β actual revenue LOWER than budgeted, or actual costs HIGHER than budgeted (bad news!)
Example: Budgeted sales: $50,000 | Actual sales: $55,000 β $5,000 favourable β Budgeted costs: $30,000 | Actual costs: $35,000 β $5,000 adverse β
For REVENUE: actual > budget = favourable. For COSTS: actual > budget = adverse. Don't mix them up! π
β οΈ Limitations of Budgets
While budgets are essential management tools, they have limitations:
- Based on estimates β predictions may be inaccurate
- Can demotivate β if targets are set too high (unrealistic) or too low (unchallenging)
- Time-consuming β preparing detailed budgets takes significant management time
- Inflexible β rigid budgets may prevent managers from responding to opportunities
- Gaming β managers may deliberately set easy targets to guarantee a favourable variance
- Rapidly changing markets β budgets quickly become outdated
The best businesses use flexible budgets that are updated as conditions change, rather than sticking rigidly to a plan made months ago π