Tag: CPA COURSE

  • Measuring performance in divisionalised businesses

    Measuring performance in divisionalised businesses

    Responsibility centres

    The area of operations for which a manager is responsible might be called a responsibility centre. Within an organisation, there could be a hierarchy of responsibility centres.

    A large organisation can be structured in one of two ways: functionally (all activities of a similar type within a company, such as production, sales, research, are under the control of the appropriate departmental head) or divisionally (split into divisions in accordance with the products or services made or provided).

    A divisional structure will lead to decentralisation of the decision-making process and divisional managers may have the freedom to set selling prices, choose suppliers, make product mix and output decisions and so on.

     

    Decentralisation or divisionaliation

    Decentralisation seeks to overcome the problem of managing a large organisation by creating a structure based on several autonomous decision-making units.

    Objectives

    1. Ensure goal congruence
    2. Increase motivation of management
    3. Reduce head office bureaucracy
    4. Provide better training for junior and middle management

    Advantages of divisionalisation

    1. Divisionalisation can improve the quality of decisions made and decisions should be taken more quickly.
    2. The authority to act to improve performance should motivate divisional managers.
    3. Divisional organisation frees top management from detailed involvement in day-to-day operations and allows them to devote more time to strategic planning.

    The major disadvantage of decentralisation is the potential for dysfunctional decision making, i.e. where divisions make decisions in their own best interests, but which are not good from the company point of view.

    The problem is overcome by introducing a suitable system of performance evaluation.

    Performance evaluation 

    Objectives

    1. Promote goal congruence
    2. Encourage initiative and motivation
    3. Provide feedback to management
    4. Encourage long-term rather than short term views

    These objectives can only be achieved with the introduction of responsibility centres.

     

    Responsibility accounting

    Responsibility accounting is a system of accounting that segregates revenue and costs into areas of personal responsibility in order to monitor and assess the performance of each part of an organisation.

    Dividing an organization into different areas or segments based on areas of responsibility is known as responsibility accounting.

    It is usual in budgeting to apply the principles of responsibility accounting. In responsibility accounting, a specific manager is given the responsibility for a particular aspect of the budget, and within the budgetary control system, he or she is then made accountable for actual performance.

    There are a number of types of responsibility accounting unit or responsibility centre that can be used within a system of responsibility accounting.

    In the weakest form of decentralisation a system of cost centres might be used. As decentralisation becomes stronger, the responsibility accounting framework will be based around profit centres. In its strongest form investment centres are used.

    Each cost centre, profit centre and investment centre should have its own budget, and its manager should receive regular budgetary control information relating to the centre, for control and performance measurement purposes.

    Attributable costs and controllable costs

    If the principle of controllability is applied, a manager should be made responsible and accountable only for the costs (and revenues) that the manager is in a position to control. In responsibility accounting, an attributable cost is a cost that can be specifically identified with a particular responsibility centre. No arbitrary apportionment is necessary to share the cost over a number of different responsibility centres. Most attributable costs will be controllable costs.

    Controllable costs are generally assumed to be variable costs, and directly attributable fixed costs.

    An item that is uncontrollable for one manager could be controllable by another. In responsibility accounting, it is important to identify areas of responsibility. Within a system of responsibility accounting, there should be cost centre managers accountable for these costs.

     

    Cost centres

    If a manager is responsible for a particular aspect of operating costs, the responsibility centre is a cost centre. The manager has no responsibility for earning revenues or for controlling the assets and liabilities of the centre.

    A cost centre could be large or small, such as an entire department or the activities associated with a single item of equipment.

    Functional departments such as production, personnel and marketing might be treated as cost centres and made responsible for their costs.

    A performance report for a cost centre might look like this:

    Two important points to note about this report are as follows:

    1. The report should include only controllable costs and, there should be a clear distinction in the report between controllable costs and uncontrollable costs.
    2. The actual costs are compared with a budget that has been flexed to the actual activity level achieved.

     

    Revenue centres

    The manager of a revenue centre is responsible only for raising revenue but has no responsibility for forecasting or controlling costs. Such responsibility would pass to a more senior manager to whom the revenue centre manager reports.

    Revenue centres are often used for control purposes in not-for-profit organisations such as charities.

    Profit centres

    A profit centre is a part of a business accountable for both costs and revenues. If a manager is responsible for revenue as well as costs, the responsibility centre is a profit centre.

    A profit centre’s performance report, in the same way as that for a cost centre, would identify separately the controllable and non-controllable costs. A profit centre performance report might look like this:

    The budget for the sales revenue and variable cost of sales will be flexed according to the activity level achieved and the variances could be analysed in further detail for the profit centre manager.

    Notice that three different ‘profit levels’ are highlighted in the report.

    1. Contribution, which is within the control of the profit centre manager.
    2. Directly attributable gross profit, which is also within the manager’s control
    3. Net profit, which is after charging certain uncontrollable costs and which is therefore not controllable by the profit centre manager.

    *There could be several cost centres within a profit centre, with the cost centre managers responsible for the costs of their particular area of operations, and the profit centre manager responsible for the profitability of the entire operation.

     

    Investment centres

    An Investment Centre is a ‘Profit centre with additional responsibilities for capital investment and possibly for financing, and whose performance is measured by its return on investment’. If a manager is responsible for investment decisions as well as for revenues and costs, the responsibility centre is an investment centre.

    *There could be several profit centres within an investment centre.

    Return on investment (ROI)

    Return on investment (ROI) is usually used to monitor the performance of an investment centre.

    Return on investment (ROI) is generally regarded as the key performance measure. The main reason for its widespread use is that it ties in directly with the accounting process, and is identifiable from the statement of profit or loss and statement of financial position.

    Return On Investment (ROI) or Return On Capital Employed (ROCE) shows how much profit has been made in relation to the amount of capital invested and is calculated as:

    PBIT          x 100

    Capital employed

    • Profit is usually taken after depreciation but before interest and tax.
    • Capital employed is total assets less current liabilities or total equity plus long term debt. Use net assets if capital employed is not given.

    There is no generally agreed method of calculating ROI and it can have behavioural implications and lead to dysfunctional decision making when used as a guide to investment decisions. It focuses attention on short-run performance, whereas investment decisions should be evaluated over their full life.

    Advantages

    1. Widely used and accepted.
    2. As a relative measure it enables comparisons to be made with divisions or companies of different sizes.
    3. It can be broken down into secondary ratios for more detailed analysis.

    Disadvantages

    1. May lead to dysfunctional decision making.
    2. Different accounting policies can confuse comparisons.
    3. ROCE increases with age of asset if NBVs are used, thus giving managers an incentive to hang on to possibly inefficient, obsolescent.

     

    ROI and decision-making

    If investment centre performance is judged by ROI, managers of investment centres will probably decide to undertake new capital investments only if these new investments are likely to increase the ROI of their centre.

    ROI should not be used to guide investment decisions, but there is a difficult motivational problem. If management performance is measured in terms of ROI, any decisions which benefit the company in the long term but which reduce the ROI in the immediate short term would reflect badly on the manager’s reported performance. In other words, good investment decisions would make a manager’s performance seem worse than if the wrong investment decision were taken instead.

    Residual income (RI)

    Residual Income (RI) is ‘Profit minus a charge for capital employed in the period’

    Residual income (RI) can also be used to measure the performance of investment centres.  However, it has a number of weaknesses that make it less preferable than ROI as a performance measure.

    RI can sometimes give results that avoid the behavioural problem of dysfunctionality. Its weakness is that it does not facilitate comparisons between investment centres, nor does it relate the size of a centre’s income to the size of the investment.

     

    Calculating RI

    An alternative way of measuring the performance of an investment centre, instead of using ROI, is residual income (RI). Residual income is a measure of the centre’s profits after deducting a notional or imputed interest cost.

    • The centre’s profit is after deducting depreciation on capital equipment.
    • Notional interest on capital = the capital employed in the division multiplied by a notional cost of capital or interest rate.

    Advantages

    1. It reduces ROCE’s problem of rejecting projects with a ROCE in excess of the company’s target, but lower than the division’s current ROCE.
    2. The cost of financing a division is brought home to divisional managers.

    Disadvantages

    1. Does not facilitate comparisons between divisions.
    2. Does not relate the size of a division’s profit to the assets employed in order to obtain that profit.

     

    RI versus ROI: marginally profitable investments

    Residual income will increase if a new investment is undertaken which earns a profit in excess of the imputed interest charge on the value of the asset acquired. Residual income will go up even if the investment only just exceeds the imputed interest charge, and this means that ‘marginally profitable’ investments are likely to be undertaken by the investment centre manager.

    In contrast, when a manager is judged by ROI, a marginally profitable investment would be less likely to be undertaken because it would reduce the average ROI earned by the centre as a whole.

    Economic value added (EVA)

    Economic value added (EVA) is a measure of performance similar to residual income, except the profit figure used is the ECONOMIC profit and the capital employed figure used is the ECONOMIC capital employed.

    The basic concept of EVA is that the performance of a company as a whole, or of investment centres within a company, should be measured in terms of the value that has been added to the business during the period. It is a measure of performance that is directly linked to the creation of shareholder wealth.

    In order to add to its economic value, a business must make an economic profit in excess of the cost of the capital that has been invested to earn that profit.

     

    Calculating EVA

    EVA Summary:

    PAT is adjusted to give the Net Operating Profit after tax (NOPAT)                             XX

    Less: The economic value of the capital employed x cost of capital                             (XX)

     

    Measuring EVA

    The difficulties in applying EVA in practice arise from the problem of establishing the economic profit in a period, and the economic value of capital employed. These values are estimated by making adjustments to accounting profits and accounting capital employed.

    • Accounting profits are based on the accruals concept of accounting, whereas NOPAT for EVA is based on cash flow profits. Adjustments have to be made to convert from an accruals basis to a cash flow basis.
    • Depreciation of non-current assets is a charge in calculating EVA as well as accounting profit. Economic depreciation is the fall in the economic value of an asset during the period.
      • It might be assumed that the accounting charge for depreciation is a good approximation of the economic cost of depreciation, in which case no adjustment to accounting profit is necessary.
      • Alternatively, it might be assumed that the economic value of the assets are their net replacement cost, in which case economic depreciation will be based on replacement cost. An adjustment to accounting profit should then be made for the amount by which economic depreciation exceeds the accounting charge for depreciation.
    • Similarly, an adjustment might be necessary for intangible non-current assets such as goodwill.
    • Where a company had made a provision for doubtful debts, this should be reversed. Any adjustment in the income for an increase or decrease in the provision for doubtful debts should be reversed, and NOPAT increased or reduced accordingly.
    • Spending by the company on development costs should not be charged in full against profit in the year the expenditure occurs. Instead, it should be capitalised because it has added to the economic value of capital employed, and it should then be amortised over an appropriate number of years. In practice, the adjustment can be made by:
      • increasing NOPAT by the net increase in capitalised development costs, and
      • increasing the economic value of capital employed by the same amount.
    • All leases should be capitalised. Finance leases will have been capitalised already, but operating leases should be capitalised too, and the economic value of capital employed increased to include the current value of operating leases.

    Using EVA

    Economic value added can be used to:

    1. set targets for performance for investment centres (divisions) and the company as a whole.
    2. measure actual performance.
    3. plan and make decisions on the basis of how the decision will affect EVA.

     

    Advantages of EVA

    The advantages of EVA are as follows:

    1. It is a performance measure that attempts to put a figure to the increase (or decrease) that should have arisen during a period from the operations of a company or individual divisions within a company.
    2. Like accounting return and residual income, it can be measured for each financial reporting period.
    3. It is easily understood by non-accountants.
    4. It is based on economic profit and economic values of assets, not accounting profits and asset values.

     

    EVA versus RI

    EVA and RI are similar because both result in an absolute figure which is calculated by subtracting an imputed interest charge from the profit earned by the investment centre. However, there are differences as follows:

    1. The profit figures are calculated differently. EVA is based on an ‘economic profit’ which is derived by making a series of adjustments to the accounting profit.
    2. The notional capital charges use different bases for net assets. The replacement cost of net assets is usually used in the calculation of EVA.
  • Performance Evaluation

    Performance Evaluation

    Financial performance indicators (FPIs)

    An organisation should have certain targets for achievement. Targets can be expressed in terms of key metrics. The term ‘metric’ is now in common use within the context of measurement of performance. It is a basis for analysing performance (both budgeted and actual).

    A budget should not be approved by senior management unless budgeted performance is satisfactory, as measured by the key metrics. Actual performance should then be assessed in comparison with the targets.  The term ‘key performance indicators’ might be used.

    Financial performance indicators analyse:

    1. Profitability
    2. Liquidity
    3. Risk

     

    Profitability

    A company should of course be profitable, and there are obvious checks on profitability.

    The primary objective of a company is to maximise profitability. Profitability ratios can be used to monitor the achievement of this objective.

    A key metric for profitability might be the profit/sales ratio (profit margin), or the contribution/sales ratio (contribution margin).

    Gross profit margin

    A high gross profit margin is desirable. It indicates that either sales prices are high or that production costs are being kept well under control.

    Gross profit margin =  Gross profit  x100

                                    Turnover

     

    Net profit margin

    A high net profit margin is desirable. It indicates that either sales prices are high or that all costs are being kept well under control.

    Net profit margin =   Net profit x 100

                                     Turnover

     

    Return on capital employed (ROCE)

    This is a key measure of profitability. It is the net profit as a percentage of the capital employed. ROCE is sometimes calculated using operating profit (profit before finance charges and tax) instead of net profit. If net profit is not given in the question, use operating profit instead.

    A high ROCE is desirable. An increase in ROCE could be achieved by:

    • Increasing net profit, e.g. through an increase in sales price or through better control of costs.
    • Reducing capital employed, e.g. through the repayment of long-term debt.

    ROCE = Net profit x 100

        Capital employed

    *Where capital employed = total assets less current liabilities or total equity plus long term debt.

    The ROCE can be understood further by calculating the net profit margin and the asset turnover:

    ROCE = net profit margin × asset turnover

    Asset turnover

    This is the turnover divided by the capital employed. A high asset turnover is desirable. An increase in the asset turnover could be achieved by:

    • Increasing turnover, e.g. through the launch of new products or a successful advertising campaign.
    • Reducing capital employed, e.g. through the repayment of long-term debt.

    There is a direct relationship between the key profitability indicators (ROCE, the asset turnover and the profit/sales percentage). Profit margin and asset turnover together explain the ROCE, and if the ROCE is the primary profitability ratio, these other two are the secondary ratios. The relationship between the three ratios is as follows:

    Profit margin     x                             Asset turnover                  =                             ROCE

    PBIT                       x                                   Sales                                =                             PBIT

    Sales                                                     Capital employed                                            Capital employed

     

    Liquidity

    A company needs liquid assets so that it can meet its debts when they fall due.

    Liquidity is the amount of cash a company can obtain quickly to settle its debts (and possibly to meet other unforeseen demands for cash payments too).

    Liquid funds include:

    • Cash
    • Short-term investments for which there is a ready market, such as investments in shares of other companies
    • Fixed-term deposits with a bank or building society, for example six-month deposits with a bank
    • Trade receivables
    • Bills of exchange receivable

    In summary, liquid assets are current asset items that will or could soon be converted into cash, and cash itself. Two common definitions of liquid assets are all current assets or all current assets with the exception of inventories.

    Current ratio

    Liquidity comes from current assets, including cash. The need for liquidity comes from the need to settle current liabilities.

    The current ratio is simply a ratio that compares short-term sources of cash (current assets) with short-term needs for cash (current liabilities).

    Current assets

    Current liabilities

    As a very rough guide, an ‘ideal’ current ratio may be 1.5:1 or 2:1. A ratio of less than 1:1 could indicate liquidity problems, because the entity might be unable to obtain cash from normal business activities to settle its current liabilities.

     

    Quick ratio (acid test ratio)

    Inventory turnover could be very slow. In such cases, inventory is not a liquid asset and will not generate cash within a fairly short period of time in order to pay off the current obligations due in the next month or so.

    The quick ratio or acid test ratio is similar to the current ratio, but it excludes inventory from current assets.

    Current assets (less) Inventory

    Current liabilities

    By eliminating inventory, the quick ratio measures a worst-case-scenario. It can be used to ask the question: Does the entity appear to have sufficient cash and near cash assets (including receivables) to provide the money to settle all current liabilities on time?

    ‘Ideally’ the quick ratio should be about 0.8:1 to 1.0:1.

    Inventory turnover

    Inventory turnover is a measure of how quickly an entity uses its inventory. It is also a measure of how slowly an entity uses its inventory, and how long items are held in inventory before they are eventually used or sold.

    Inventory turnover may be measured as ‘x times a year’.

    Cost of Sales

    Average Inventory

    A low turnover indicates inefficient use of resources. The slower inventory turnover, the greater the risk of obsolescence.

    Inventory turnover may also be measured as an average number of days, rather than as ‘x times a year’.

    Average Inventory x 365

    Cost of Sales

    This calculates the number of days a company takes to sell its average holding of inventory.

    Separate turnover ratios could be calculated for:

    • raw materials
    • work in progress (the production cycle), and
    • finished goods

     

    Receivables turnover

    It is sometimes called ‘debtor days’ or ‘days sales outstanding’. The receivables turnover ratio is usually measured in days. It is the average time that it takes an entity to collect amounts due from customers.

    Average Trade Receivables x 365

    Credit Sales

    The ratio should ideally use credit sales, but the financial statements do not provide an analysis of sales into cash sales and credit sales. Therefore, total sales must normally be used, and this may produce an unrealistic ratio.

    A change in the ratio from one year to the next may be due to:

    • A change in settlement terms for credit customers, to encourage new business
    • the introduction of debt factoring, which will reduce the average receivables collection period
    • exceptional factors, such as one large new customer being offered extended credit.

    Payables payment period

    It is the average payment period to suppliers. It is normally measured in days.

    Average Trade Payables x 365

    Credit Purchases

    The ratio should ideally use purchases on credit. However, this figure is not available from the financial statements, and the figure for the annual cost of sales should be used instead.

     

    Risk

    In addition to managing profitability and liquidity it is also important for a company to manage its risk. A company finances its net assets with a combination of equity and reserves and long-term debt. An entity is ‘high geared’ when a large proportion of its long-term capital is in the form of debt. High financial gearing is seen as a high-risk strategy.

    Gearing’ examines the financing structure of a business and indicates to shareholders the level of financial risk to which the company is exposed because of its long-term capital structure.

    These ratios, and changes in the ratios over time, can help them to assess the credit risk in their investment.

     

    Gearing ratio

    The gearing ratio (or leverage ratio) is usually calculated as follows:

    Debt or    Debt x 100

    Equity    Equity + Debt

    Debt = Loans + Preference shares 

    Equity = Equity share capital + reserves + non-controlling interest

    Notes on financial gearing
    • A highly geared company, with a substantial proportion of its capital in the form of debt, is seen by investors as ‘more risky’.
    • High gearing is acceptable if it is accompanied by stable annual profits (PBIT) or increasing profits.
    • A highly-geared company may find it more difficult to raise additional debt capital.

    Interest cover

    The interest cover ratio measures the ability of a company to meet its obligations to pay interest on debt (out of its profits).

    The ratio therefore compares profit before interest and tax with the annual interest charges.

    Profit before interest

    Interest

    A high interest cover suggests a sensible financing structure.

    An interest cover of 2 times or less generally indicates that the company might have difficulty paying its interest if there is a fall in its profits.

     

    Dividend cover

    The dividend cover ratio measures the earnings of a company relative to the size of its dividend payments.

    EPS/Net Profit

    Net dividend per share

    A decrease in the dividend cover indicates that the company is facing an increased risk of not being able to make its dividend payments to shareholders.

     

    Non-financial performance indicators (NFPIs)

    Changes in cost structures, the competitive environment and the manufacturing environment have led to an increased use of non-financial performance indicators (NFPIs).

    As well as evaluating performance using financial performance indicators, companies can use non- financial indicators. NFPIs can usefully be applied to employees and product/service quality.

    Non-Financial Performance Indicators (NFPIS) – are ‘measures of performance based on non-financial information that may originate in, and be used by, operating departments to monitor and control their activities without any accounting input’.

    As with any performance indicator, an NFPI has to be viewed in some context in order to be most meaningful. A good control report will express indicators in terms of a deviation from plan, relative to an industry benchmark or as part of a trend analysis covering comparable earlier periods. 

    Further, it is best to consider performance indicators as part of a package giving a multidimensional impression of how the organisation is performing.

    One of the many criticisms of traditional accounting performance measurement systems is that they do not measure the skills, morale and training of the workforce, which can be as valuable to an organisation as its tangible assets.

    The Balanced scorecard

    The balanced scorecard is an approach to performance measurement and control emphasises the need to provide management with a set of information which covers all relevant areas of performance.

    The balanced scorecard approach is an ‘Approach to the provision of information to management to assist strategic policy formulation and achievement. It emphasises the need to provide the user with a set of information which addresses all relevant areas of performance in an objective and unbiased fashion. The information provided may include both financial and non-financial elements, and cover areas such as profitability, customer satisfaction, internal efficiency and innovation.’

    The traditional performance measure for a business is of course financial, but one problem is that the financial measures relate to the past. The Balanced Scorecard incorporates non-financial measures of the drivers of future performance as well as financial measures of past performance.

    The balanced scorecard focuses on four different perspectives, as follows:

    1. Customer – what is it about us that new and existing customers value?
    2. Internal – what processes must we excel at to achieve our financial and customer objectives?
    3. Innovation and learning – how can we continue to improve and create future value?
    4. Financial – how do we create value for our shareholders?

    The scorecard is ‘balanced’ in the sense that managers are required to think in terms of all four perspectives, to prevent improvements being made in one area at the expense of another.

    Within each of these perspectives a company should seek to identify a series of goals and measures.

    The important features of balanced scorecard approach are:

    1. It looks at both internal and external matters concerning the organisation.
    2. It is related to the key elements of a company’s strategy.
    3. Financial and non-financial measures are linked together.

    Benefits of the balanced scorecard:

    1. It focuses on factors, including non-financial ones, which will enable a company to succeed in the long-term.
    2. It provides external as well as internal information.

    Problems with the balanced scorecard:

    1. The selection of measures can be difficult.
    2. Information overload due to the large number of measures that may be chosen.
    3. Conflict between measures.

    Benchmarking

    Analysing performance by a single comparison of data (e.g.: current year vs prior year) can be difficult. Benchmarking is a type of comparison exercise through which an organisation attempts to improve performance. The idea is to seek the best available performance against which the organisation can monitor its own performance.

    ‘Benchmarking is the establishment, through data gathering, of targets and comparators, through whose use relative levels of performance (and particularly underperformance) can be identified. By the adoption of identified best practices it is hoped that performance will improve.’

    Benchmarking is an attempt to identify best practices and to achieve improved performance by comparison of operations.

    Financial information about competitors is easier to acquire than non-financial information. Information about processes (how an organisation deals with customers or suppliers) is more difficult to find. Such information can be obtained through the following channels:

    1. In intra-group benchmarking, groups of companies in the same industry agree to pool data on their processes. The processes are benchmarked against each other and an ‘improvement taskforce’ is established to undertake strategic benchmarking to identify and transfer ‘best practice’ to all members of the group.
    2. In inter-industry benchmarking, a non-competing business with similar processes is identified and asked to participate in a functional benchmarking exercise. The participants in the scheme are able to benefit from the experience of the other and establish ‘best practice’ in their common business processes.

    The reasons for benchmarking may be summarised as:

    1. To receive an alarm call about the need for change
    2. Learning from others in order to improve performance
    3. Gaining a competitive edge (in the private sector)
    4. Improving services (in the public sector)

     

    Approaches to Benchmarking

    Three distinct approaches to benchmarking are:

    1. Metric benchmarking – The practise of comparing appropriate metrics to identify possible areas for improvement. For example, IT investment as a percentage of total assets may be compared across different departments within the same company to identify areas of the company where additional investment is required.
    2. Process benchmarking – The practise of comparing processes with a partner as part of an improvement process. For example, a distributor of personal computers may analyse a competitor’s supply chain function in the hope of identifying successful elements of the process that it can use to its advantage.
    3. Diagnostic benchmarking – The practise of reviewing the processes of a business to identify those which indicate a problem and offer a potential for improvement. For example, a company may critically assess each element of the value chain and conclude that there is potential for improvement within the marketing and sales function.

    Types of benchmarking

    1. Internal benchmarking – With internal benchmarking, other units or departments in the same organisation are used as the benchmark. This might be possible if the organisation is large and divided into a number of similar regional divisions. Internal benchmarking is also widely used within government.
    2. Competitive benchmarking – With competitive benchmarking, the most successful competitors are used as the benchmark. Competitors are unlikely to provide willingly any information for comparison, but it might be possible to observe competitor performance.
    3. Functional benchmarking – In functional benchmarking, comparisons are made with a similar function (for example selling, order handling, despatch) in other organisations that are not direct competitors.
    4. Strategic benchmarking – Strategic benchmarking is a form of competitive benchmarking aimed at reaching decisions for strategic action and organisational change. Companies in the same industry might agree to join a collaborative benchmarking process, managed by an independent third party such as a trade organisation. With this type of benchmarking, each company in the scheme submits data about their performance to the scheme organiser. The organiser calculates average performance figures for the industry as a whole from the data supplied. Each participant in the scheme is then supplied with the industry average data, which it can use to assess its own performance.

     

    Benchmarking – the Disadvantages

    There a number of potential disadvantages that businesses should consider prior to performing a benchmarking exercise.

    1. Businesses may experience difficulties in deciding which activities to benchmark.
    2. Businesses may find it difficult to identify the ‘best in class’ for each activity.
    3. It is often difficult to persuade other organisations to share information.
    4. Successful practices in one organisation may not transfer successfully to another.
    5. There is a risk of drawing incorrect conclusions from inappropriate comparisons.

     

    The building block model – Performance evaluation in Service industry

    The building block model is based on three building blocks:

    1. Dimensions
    2. Standards
    3. Rewards

     

    Dimensions

    Dimensions are the goals for the business and suitable measures must be developed to measure each performance dimension. Dimensions are the areas that yield specific performance metrics for a company.

    The six dimensions in the building block model can be split into two categories:

    1. downstream results (competitive and financial performance) and
    2. upstream determinants (quality of service, flexibility, resource utilisation and innovation) of those results.

    The last four are the drivers of the top two.

    Standards

    Standards are the targets set for the metrics chosen from the dimensions. To ensure success it is vital that employees view standards as achievable, fair and take ownership of them.

    Rewards

    Rewards are the motivators for the employees to work towards the standards set. The reward system should be clearly understood by the staff and ensure their motivation. The rewards should be related to areas of responsibility that the staff member controls in order to achieve that motivation.

  • Budgets and Budgetary control

    Budgets and Budgetary control

    Budgetary Control

    Budgetary control is carried out via a MASTER BUDGET devolved to responsibility centres, allowing continuous monitoring of actual results versus budget. These budget and budgetary control notes are prepared by mindmaplab team and covering budgetary control system, meaning, definition, the types of budgetary control, the methods of budget monitoring and control with examples. These cost management budgetary control notes includes budgeting and budgetary control questions and answers with pdf notes. We have also prepared the Budgetary control pdf version download.

    Flexible budgets and Budgetary control

    Flexible budgets

    A fixed budget contains information on costs and revenues for one level of activity. Whereas, a flexible budget shows the same information, but for a number of different levels of activity. Flexible budgets are useful for both planning purposes and control purposes.

    A flexible budget is a budget which, by recognising different cost behaviour patterns, is designed to change as volume of activity changes.

    Flexible budgets are prepared using marginal costing and so mixed costs must be split into their fixed and variable components (possibly using the high/low method).

    Flexible budgets should be used to show what cost and revenues should have been for the actual level of activity. Differences between the flexible budget figures and actual results are variances.

    Flexible budgets may be prepared in order to plan for variations in the level of activity above or below the level set in the fixed budget.

    The BUDGET COST ALLOWANCE/FLEXIBLE BUDGET is the budgeted cost ascribed to the level of activity achieved in a budget centre in a control period. It comprises variable costs in direct proportion to volume achieved and fixed costs as a proportion of the annual budget.

    Flexible budgets are essential for control purposes.  They represent the expected revenues, costs and profits for the actual units produced and sold and are then compared to actual results to determine any differences (or variances).

    Care must be taken to distinguish between controllable costs and uncontrollable costs in variance reporting

     

    Flexible budgets using ABC data

    Instead of flexing budgets according to the number of units produced or sold, in an ABC environment it is possible to use more meaningful bases for flexing the budget. The budget cost allowance for each activity can be determined according to the number of cost drivers.

     

    The link between standard costing and budget flexing

    The calculation of standard cost variances and the use of a flexed budget to control costs and revenues are very similar in concept.

    However, there are differences between the two techniques:

    1. Standard costing variance analysis is more detailed e.g. the total cost variance is analysed further to determine how much of the total variance is caused by a difference in the price paid (e.g. the material price variance) and how much is caused by the usage of material being different from the standard. In flexible budget comparisons only total cost variances are derived.
    2. For a standard costing system to operate, it is necessary to determine a standard unit cost for all items of output. All that is required to operate a flexible budgeting system is an understanding of the cost behaviour patterns and a measure of activity to use to flex the budget cost allowance for each cost element.

     

    Budgetary control

    Budgetary control is carried out via a MASTER BUDGET devolved to responsibility centres, allowing continuous monitoring of actual results versus budget, either to secure by individual action the budget objectives or to provide a basis for budget revision’.

    Budgetary control is based around a system of budget centres. Each budget centre will have its own budget and a manager will be responsible for managing the budget centre and ensuring that the budget is met.

    Budget Centre – A budget centre is ‘A section of an entity for which control may be exercised through budgets prepared’.

    Budgetary control and budget centres are therefore part of the overall system of responsibility accounting within an organisation.

    The correct approach to budgetary control is to compare actual results with a budget which has been flexed to the actual activity level achieved.

     

    Feedback and Feed Forward controls

    Feedback Control

    Feedback is the comparison of actual results against expected results and if there is a significant difference, then it is investigated and if possible and desirable it is corrected. This is the most common type of control system.

    Feedback control is the measurement of differences between planned outputs and actual outputs achieved, and the modification of subsequent action and/or plans to achieve future required results.

    Corrective action that brings actual performance closer to the target or plan is called negative feedback. With negative feedback, the control action is intended to bring actual performance back into line with the budget. For example, if actual costs are higher than budget, control action might be taken to cut costs.

    Corrective action that increases the difference between actual performance and the target or plan is called positive feedback. With positive feedback, control action would be intended to increase the differences between the budget and actual results. For example, if actual sales are higher than budget, control action might be taken to make this situation continue.

    *Budgetary control systems are feedback control systems.

     

    Feedforward Control

    Feedforward is the comparison of the results that are currently expected (budgeted) in the light of the latest information and the desired results (forecast). If there is a difference, then it is investigated and corrected.

    Feedback happens after the event and discovers that something has gone wrong (or right). Whereas, Feedforward is more proactive and aims to anticipate problems and prevent them from occurring.

    Feedforward control a feedforward control system operates by comparing budgeted results against a forecast. Control action is triggered by differences between budgeted and forecast results.

    Whereas feedback is based on a comparison of historical actual results with the budget for the period to date, feed-forward looks ahead and compares:

    • the target or objectives for the period, and
    • what actual results are now forecast.

    Target costing is an example of feed-forward control.

     

    Behavioural implications of budgeting

    Although the principal purpose of a budgetary control system is to assist in planning and control, it can also have an effect on the behaviour of those directly affected by the budget.

    The purpose of a budgetary control system is to assist management in planning and controlling the resources of their organisation by providing appropriate control information. The information will only be valuable, however, if it is interpreted correctly and used purposefully by managers and employees.

    The correct use of control information therefore depends not only on the content of the information itself, but also on the behaviour of its recipients. A number of behavioural problems can arise:

    1. The managers who set the budget or standards are often not the managers who are then made responsible for achieving budget targets.
    2. The goals of the organisation as a whole, as expressed in a budget, may not coincide with the personal aspirations of individual managers.

    The management accountant should therefore try to ensure that employees have positive attitudes towards setting budgets, implementing budgets (that is, putting the organisation’s plans into practice) and feedback of results (control information).

     

    Participation in budgeting

    It has been argued that participation in the budgeting process will improve motivation and so will improve the quality of budget decisions and the efforts of individuals to achieve their budget targets.

    There are basically two ways in which a budget can be set:

    1. top down (imposed budget)
    2. bottom up (participatory budget)

     

    Imposed style – Top down

    An imposed/top-down budget is ‘A budget allowance which is set without permitting the ultimate budget holder to have the opportunity to participate in the budgeting process.

    In this approach to budgeting, top management prepare a budget with little or no input from operating personnel, which is then imposed upon the employees who have to work to the budgeted figures.

    The times when imposed budgets are effective:

    1. In newly formed organisations
    2. In very small businesses
    3. During periods of economic hardship
    4. When operational managers lack budgeting skills
    5. When the organisation’s different units require precise co-ordination

    Advantages of imposed style

    There are a number of reasons why it might be preferable for managers not to be involved in setting their own budgets:

    1. Involving managers in the setting of budgets is more time consuming than if senior managers simply imposed the budgets.
    2. Managers may not have the skills or motivation to participate usefully in the budgeting process.
    3. Managers may build budgetary slack or bias into the budget in order to make the budget easy to achieve and themselves look good.

    Disadvantages of imposed style

    1. The feeling of team spirit may disappear.
    2. The acceptance of organisational goals and objectives could be limited.
    3. The feeling of the budget as a punitive device could arise.
    4. Lower-level management initiative may be stifled.

     

    Participative Budgets – Bottom up

    Participative/bottom up budgeting is ‘A budgeting system in which all budget holders are given the opportunity to participate in setting their own budgets’.

    In this approach to budgeting, budgets are developed by lower-level managers who then submit the budgets to their superiors. The budgets are based on the lower-level managers’ perceptions of what is achievable and the associated necessary resources.

    Advantages of participative budgets

    1. The morale of the management is improved. Managers feel like their opinion is listened to, that their opinion is valuable.
    2. The lower level managers will have a more detailed knowledge of their particular part of the business than senior managers and thus will be able to produce more realistic budgets.

    Disadvantages of participative budgets

    1. They consume more time.
    2. They may cause managers to introduce budgetary slack and budget bias.
    3. They can support ’empire building’ by subordinates.
    4. An earlier start to the budgeting process could be required

    If managers are involved in preparing a budget, poor attitudes or hostile behaviour towards the budgetary control system can begin at the planning stage:

    1. Managers may complain that they are too busy to spend much time on budgeting.
    2. They may build ‘slack’ into their expenditure estimates.
    3. They may argue that formalising a budget plan on paper is too restricting and that managers should be allowed flexibility in the decisions they take.

     

    Negotiated style of budgeting

    A negotiated budget is a ‘Budget in which budget allowances are set largely on the basis of negotiations between budget holders and those to whom they report’.

    At the two extremes, budgets can be dictated from above or simply emerge from below but, in practice, different levels of management often agree budgets by a process of negotiation.

    Final budgets are therefore most likely to lie between what top management would really like and what junior managers believe is feasible. The budgeting process is hence a bargaining process and it is this bargaining which is of vital importance, determining whether the budget is an effective management tool or simply a clerical device.

     

    Budget slack

    Budget slack is the ‘Intentional overestimation of expenses and/or underestimation of revenues during the budget setting’.

    Budget slack occurs when managers deliberately underestimate sales or overestimate costs to avoid being blamed for future poor results.

     

    The use of budgets as targets

    Once decided, budgets become targets. As targets, they can motivate managers to achieve a high level of performance:

    • There is likely to be a demotivating effect where an ideal standard of performance is set.
    • A low standard of efficiency is also demotivating,
    • A budgeted level of attainment could be ‘normal’: that is, the same as the level that has been achieved in the past.

    Budgets which are set for motivational purposes need to be stated in terms of aspirations rather than expectations, budgets for planning and decision purposes need to be stated in terms of the best available estimate of expected actual performance. The solution might therefore be to have two budgets:

    1. A budget for planning and decision-making based on reasonable expectations (expectations budget)
    2. A second budget for motivational purposes, with more difficult targets of performance (that is, targets of an intermediate level of difficulty) (aspirations budget)

    In certain situations, it is useful to prepare an expectations budget (for planning and decision-making purposes) and an aspirations budget (to act as a motivational tool).

     

    Budgets and motivation

    Budgets serve many purposes, but in some instances their purposes can conflict and have an effect on management behaviour. There are no ideal solutions to the conflicts caused by the operation of a budgetary control system. Management and the management accountant have to develop their own ways of dealing with them, taking into account their organisation, their business and the personalities involved.

    How senior management can offer support:

    1. Making sure that a system of responsibility accounting is adopted
    2. Allowing managers to have a say in formulating their budgets
    3. Offering incentives to managers who meet budget targets
    4. Not regarding budgetary control information as a way of apportioning blame.

    Budget centre managers should accept their responsibilities – In-house training courses could be held to encourage a collective, co-operative and positive attitude among managers.

    Support from the management accountant

    The management accountant can offer support in the following ways:

    1. Explain the meaning of budgets and control reports.
    2. Keep accounting jargon in these reports to a minimum.
    3. Provide control information with a minimum of delay.
    4. Make sure that actual costs are recorded accurately.

     

    Beyond budgeting

    The argument for abolishing budgets, referred to as ‘beyond budgeting’.

    Beyond Budgeting is ‘the idea that companies need to move beyond budgeting because of the inherent flaws in budgeting especially when used to set incentive contracts. It is argued that a range of techniques, such as rolling forecasts and market-related targets, can take the place of traditional budgets.’

    The two fundamental concepts of the BB approach are the use of adaptive management processes rather than fixed annual budgets and a move to a more decentralised way of managing the business with a culture of personal responsibility.

    The Beyond Budgeting Round Table (BBRT), an independent research collaborative lists the following ten criticisms of budgeting:

    1. Budgets are time-consuming and expensive.
    2. Budgets provide poor value to users.
    3. Budgets fail to focus on shareholder value.
    4. Budgets are too rigid and prevent fast response.
    5. Budgets protect rather than reduce costs.
    6. Budgets stifle product and strategy innovation.
    7. Budgets focus on sales targets rather than customer satisfaction.
    8. Budgets are divorced from strategy.
    9. Budgets reinforce a dependency culture.
    10. Budgets lead to unethical behaviour.

    Two fundamental concepts underlie the beyond budgeting (BB) approach.

    1. Use adaptive management processes rather than the more rigid annual budget. Traditional annual plans tie managers to predetermined actions which are not responsive to current situations. Managers should instead be planning on a more adaptive, rolling basis, but with the focus on cash forecasting rather than purely on cost control. Performance is monitored against world-class benchmarks, competitors and previous periods.
    2. Move towards devolved networks rather than centralised hierarchies. The emphasis is on encouraging a culture of personal responsibility by delegating decision making and performance accountability to line managers.

     

    BB implementation

    A BB implementation should incorporate the following six main principles:

    1. The responsibilities of managers within an organisation should be clearly defined.
    2. Managers should be given goals and targets which are based on key performance indicators and benchmarks. These targets should be linked to shareholder value.
    3. Managers should be given a degree of freedom to make decisions. A BB organisation chart should be ‘flat’.
    4. Responsibility for decisions that generate value should be placed with ‘front line teams’ in line with the concept of TQM.
    5. Front line teams should be made responsible for relationships with customers, associate businesses and suppliers.
    6. Information support systems should be transparent and align with the activities that managers are responsible for.

     

    Rolling budgets

    A rolling budget is a ‘budget continuously updated by adding a further accounting period (month or quarter) when the earliest accounting period has expired’.  Rolling budgets are also called ‘continuous budgets. Rolling budgets are for a fixed period, but this need not be a full financial year.

    Suitable if:

    1. accurate forecasts cannot be made. For example, in a fast-moving environment, or
    2. for any area of business that needs tight control.

    A typical rolling budget might be prepared as follows:

    If rolling annual budgets are prepared quarterly, four rolling budgets will be prepared each year, each for a 12-month period. A new quarter is added at the end of the new budget period, to replace the current quarter just ending:

    • One budget might cover the period 1 January – 31 December Year 1.
    • The next rolling budget will cover 1 April Year 1 to 31 March Year 2.
    • The next rolling budget will cover 1 July Year 1 to 30 June Year 2.
    • The next quarterly rolling budget will cover 1 October Year 1 to 30

    The reason for preparing rolling budgets is to deal with the problem of uncertainty in the budget, when greater accuracy and reliability are required.

    Advantages of rolling budgets

    1. They reduce uncertainty in budgeting.
    2. They can be used for cash management.
    3. They force managers to look ahead continuously.
    4. When conditions are subject to change, comparing actual results with a rolling budget is more realistic than comparing actual results with a fixed annual budget.

    Disadvantages of rolling budgets

    1. Preparing new budgets regularly is time-consuming.
    2. It can be difficult to communicate frequent budget changes.

     

    Spreadsheets and budgeting

    It is also true to say that budgets are a planning device designed to assist in the achievement of an organisation’s longer-term plans.

    • There are likely to be a number of alterations made to the first draft of the budget to see the effects of such changes.
    • The alteration of one value will cause many other values to alter.

    The use of a spreadsheet allows these alterations to be made accurately and very quickly by the use of formulae. This is often referred to as ‘What If’ analysis.

    A spreadsheet is a computer package which stores data in a matrix format where the intersection of each row and column is referred to as a cell. They are commonly used to assist in the budgeting process.

    Advantages of spreadsheets

    1. Large enough to include a large volume of information
    2. Formulae and look up tables can be used so that if any figure is amended, all the figures will be immediately recalculated. This is very useful for carrying out sensitivity analysis.
    3. The results can be printed out or distributed to other users electronically quickly and easily.
    4. Most programs can also represent the results graphically e.g. balances can be shown in a bar chart.

    Disadvantages of spreadsheets

    1. Data can be accidentally changed (or deleted) without the user being aware of this occurring.
    2. Educating staff to use spreadsheets / models and which areas /cells to use as inputs can be time consuming.
    3. Version control issues can arise.
    4. Errors in design, particularly in the use of formulae, can produce invalid output.
  • Short term decisions

    Short term decisions

    Short-term decisions are decisions where the financial consequences occur soon after the decision is taken. For example, a short-term decision may result in an immediate increase in profit (additional net cash inflows), or an increase in annual profits and cash flows.

    It is often assumed that marginal costs are relevant costs for the purpose of decision-making.

     

    Limiting factor decisions

    It is often assumed in budgeting that a company can produce as many units of its products (or services) as is necessary to meet the available sales demand. Sales demand is therefore normally the factor that sets a limit on the volume of production and sales in each period.

    Sometimes, however, there could be a shortage of a key production resource, such as an item of direct materials, or skilled labor, or machine capacity. In these circumstances, the factor setting a limit to the volume of sales and profit in a particular period is the availability of the scarce resource, because sales are restricted by the amount that the company can produce.

    Decision-making techniques for limiting factor situations are based on the following assumptions:

    • The objective is to maximize profit and this is achieved by maximizing contribution;
    • Marginal costs (variable costs) are the only relevant costs to consider in the model; and
    • Fixed costs will be the same whatever decision is taken; therefore, fixed costs are not relevant to the decision.

     

    Identifying limiting factors

    Identify the limiting factor by calculating the budgeted availability of each resource and the amount of the resource that is needed to meet the available sales demand.

     

    Maximizing profit when there is a single limiting factor

    When there is just one limiting factor (other than sales demand), total profit will be maximized in a period by maximizing the total contribution earned with the available scarce resources.

    The approach is to select products for manufacture and sale according to the contribution per unit of scarce resource in that product.

    Step 1: Calculate the contribution per unit of each type of good produced.

    Step 2: Identify the scarce resource.

    Step 3: Calculate the amount of scarce resource used by each type of good produced.

    Step 4: Divide the contribution earned by each good by the scarce resource used by that good to give the contribution per unit of scarce resource for that good.

    Step 5: Rank the goods in order of the contribution per unit of scarce resource.

    Step 6: Construct a production plan based on this ranking. The planned output and sales are decided by working down through the priority list until all the units of the limiting factor (scarce resource) have been used.

     

    Make-or-buy decisions: outsourcing

    A make-or-buy decision is a decision about:

    • whether to make an item internally or to buy it from an external supplier, or
    • whether to do some work with internal resources, or to contract it out to another organization such as a sub- contractor or an outsourcing organization.

    The economic basis for the decision whether to make internally or whether to buy externally (outsource production) should be based on relevant costs. The preferred option from a financial viewpoint should be the one that has the lower relevant costs.

    A financial assessment of a make-or-buy decision typically involves a comparison of:

    • the costs that would be saved if the work is outsourced or sub-contracted, and
    • the incremental costs that would be incurred by outsourcing the work.

     

    Make-or-buy decisions with scarce resources

    A different situation arises when an entity is operating at full capacity, and has the opportunity to outsource some production in order to overcome the restrictions on its output and sales. For example, a company might have a restriction, at least in the short-term, on machine capacity or on the availability of skilled labor. It can seek to overcome this problem by outsourcing some work to an external supplier who makes similar products and which has some spare machine time or labor capacity.

    The decision is about which items to outsource, and which to retain in-house. The profit-maximizing decision is to outsource those items where the costs of outsourcing will be the least.

    To identify the least-cost outsourcing arrangement, it is necessary to compare:

    • the additional costs of outsourcing production of an item with
    • the amount of the scarce resource that would be needed to make the item in-house.

    Costs are minimized (and so profits are maximized) by outsourcing those items where the extra cost of outsourcing is the lowest per unit of scarce resource ‘saved’.

     

    One-off contract decisions (Accept or reject an order decisions)

    Management might have an opportunity to carry out a contract or job for a customer, where the job is ‘once only’ and will not be repeated in the future. The decision is therefore to decide whether to agree to do the job at the price offered by the customer, or to decide a selling price at which an incremental profit would be made.

    If it is a one-off contract, rather than regular production work, it would be worthwhile undertaking the contract if the extra revenue from the contract is higher than the relevant costs of doing the work (including any opportunity costs).

    The incremental profit from the one-off contract is the revenue that would be obtained minus the relevant costs.

     

    Shutdown decisions

    Part of a business, for example a department or a product, may appear to be unprofitable.  A shutdown decision is a decision about whether or not to shut down a part of the operations of a company. From a financial viewpoint, an operation should be shut down if the benefits of shutdown exceed the relevant costs.

    The quantifiable cost or benefit of closure

    The relevant cash flows associated with closure should be considered. For example:

    • the lost contribution from the area that is being closed (= relevant cost of closure)
    • savings in specific fixed costs from closure (= relevant benefit of closure) known penalties and other costs resulting from the closure, e.g. redundancy, compensation to customers (= relevant cost of closure)
    • any known reorganisation costs (= relevant cost of closure)
    • any known additional contribution from the alternative use for resources released (= relevant benefit of closure).

    If the relevant benefits are greater than the relevant costs of closure then closure may occur. However, before a final decision is made the business should also consider the non-quantifiable factors.

    Non-quantifiable costs and benefits of closure

    Some of the costs and benefits discussed above may be non- quantifiable at the point of making the shut-down decision:

    • penalties and other costs resulting from the closure (e.g. redundancy, compensation to customers) may not be known with certainty
    • reorganisation costs may not be known with certainty
    • additional contribution from the alternative use for resources released may not be known with certainty.

     

    Joint product further processing decisions

    Joint products are products manufactured from a common process. In some instances, a company might have a choice between:

    • selling the joint product as soon as it is output from the common process, or
    • processing the joint product further before selling it (at a higher price).

    The financial assessment should compare:

    • the revenue that will be obtained (less any selling costs) from selling the joint product as soon as it is output from the common process, and
    • the revenue that will be obtained if the joint product is processed further, less the incremental costs of further processing and then selling the product.

    Applying relevant costing, the costs of the common process are irrelevant to the decision, because these costs will be incurred anyway, whatever the decision. The decision should be to further process the joint product if the extra revenue from further processing exceeds the extra (relevant) costs of the further processing.

     

    Minimum selling price decisions

    The minimum pricing approach is useful in the situation of intense competition, surplus production capacity, clearance of old stocks, getting special orders and/or improving market share of the product. In these situations, the selling price is the lowest price that a company may sell its product at – usually the price will be the Total Relevant Costs of Manufacturing.

  • Cost management Techniques

    Cost management Techniques

    Traditional vs modern manufacturing philosophy

    Traditional manufacturing philosophy

    Traditional manufacturing philosophy focuses on the need to continue to use valuable resources (such as manufacturing equipment) to their full capacity and to maximise the length of production runs.  The main features of the traditional approach to manufacturing are as follows:

    1. Labour and manufacturing equipment are so valuable they should not be left idle.
    2. Resulting inventory not needed should be stored (thus hiding inefficient and uneven production methods).
    3. To increase efficiency and reduce production cost per unit, batch sizes and production runs should be as large as possible.
    4. Concerned with balancing production run costs and inventory holding costs.

     

    Modern manufacturing philosophy

    The main features of the modern approach to manufacturing are as follows:

    1. Smooth, steady production flow (throughput)
    2. Flexibility, providing the customer with exactly what is wanted, exactly when it is wanted (making the organisation a more complex affair to manage), so as to achieve competitive advantage
    3. Volume versus variety – greater variety in volumes required by customers.
    4. Just-in-time – that is, little or no inventory.

     

    Total Quality Management (TQM)

    TQM is the general name given to programmes which seek to ensure that goods are produced and services supplied of the highest quality.

    Quality management becomes total (total quality management (TQM)) when it is applied to everything a business does.

    The management of quality is the process of:

    1. Establishing standards of quality for a product or service
    2. Establishing procedures or production methods that ought to ensure that these required standards of quality are met in a suitably high proportion of cases
    3. Monitoring actual quality
    4. Taking control action when actual quality falls below standard

    There are two basic principles of TQM:

    1. Get it right, first time: TQM considers that the costs of prevention are less than the costs of correction. One of the main aims of TQM is to achieve zero rejects and 100% quality.
    2. Continuous improvement: A second basic principle of TQM is dissatisfaction with the status quo: the belief that it is always possible to improve and so the aim should be to ‘get it more right next time’.

     

    Costs of quality

    Failing to satisfy customers’ needs and expectations, or failing to do so right first time, has a cost.

    Definition:

    The COST OF QUALITY is ‘the difference between the actual cost of producing, selling and supporting products or services and the equivalent costs if there were no failures during production or usage’.

    The cost of quality can be analysed into the following:

    1. COST OF PREVENTION – ‘the costs incurred prior to or during production in order to prevent substandard or defective products or services from being produced’ for example Quality engineering and Training in quality control.
    2. COST OF APPRAISAL – ‘costs incurred in order to ensure that outputs produced meet required quality standards’ for example Acceptance testing and Inspection of goods inwards.
    3. COST OF INTERNAL FAILURE – ‘the costs arising from inadequate quality which are identified before the transfer of ownership from supplier to purchaser’ for example Failure analysis and Losses from failure of purchased items
    4. COST OF EXTERNAL FAILURE – ‘the cost arising from inadequate quality discovered after the transfer of ownership from supplier to purchaser’ for example Administration of customer complaints section and Cost of repairing products returned from customers.

    External failure costs are the costs of failing to deliver a quality product externally. The sum of internal failure costs, prevention and appraisal costs is the cost of failing to deliver a quality product externally.

    Management accounting reports

    Management accounting systems can help organisations achieve their quality goals by providing a variety of reports and measures that motivate and evaluate managerial efforts to improve quality – including financial and non-financial measures.

    Traditionally, the management accounting systems focused on output, not quality.

     

    Kaizen Costing

    Kaizen costing aims to reduce current costs by using such tools as value analysis and functional analysis.

    KAIZEN COSTING focuses on obtaining small incremental cost reductions during the production stage of the product life cycle. It is based on the idea of an ongoing process of reviewing how the business operates in order to identify and implement cost savings. Each individual action may result in a small cost saving, but these are incremental and can add up to a material saving.

    The cultural requirements of Kaizen costing are that the whole workforce should be involved, as suggestions for improvements can come from anyone.

    The previous year’s actual production cost serves as the cost base for the current year’s production cost. A reduction rate and reduction amount are set (Kaizen cost goals). Actual performance is compared to the Kaizen goals throughout the year and variances are monitored. At the end of the current year, the current actual cost becomes the cost base for the next year. New (lower) Kaizen goals are set and the whole process starts again.

     

    How are Kaizen goals met?

    1. Reduction of non-value-added activities and costs
    2. Elimination of waste
    3. Improvements in production cycle time

     

    Just-in-time (JIT)

    JIT is a pull-based system of production, pulling work through the system in response to customer demand. This means that goods are only produced when they are needed, eliminating large stocks of materials and finished goods. In particular, JIT seeks to achieve the following goals:

    1. elimination of non­value added activities;
    2. zero inventory;
    3. zero defects;
    4. batch sizes of one;
    5. zero breakdowns;
    6. a 100% on-time delivery service.

    Key characteristics for successfully operating such a system are:

    1. High quality: possibly through deploying TQM systems.
    2. Speed: rapid throughput to meet customers’ needs.
    3. Reliability: computer-aided manufacturing technology will assist.
    4. Flexibility: small batch sizes and automated techniques are used.
    5. Low costs: through all of the above.

    Key features of companies operating in a JIT and TQM environment are:

    1. high level of automation
    2. high levels of overheads and low levels of direct labour costs
    3. customised products produced in small batches
    4. low stocks
    5. emphasis on high quality and continuous improvement.

     

    Business process re-engineering (BPR)

    BPR is all about major changes to how business processes operate.

    Business process re-engineering looks at how processes can be redesigned to improve efficiency.

    Business process re- engineering involves examining business processes and radically redesigning these processes to achieve cost reduction, improved quality and customer satisfaction.

    A re-engineered process has certain characteristics:

    1. Often several jobs are combined into one.
    2. Workers often make decisions.
    3. The steps in the process are performed in a logical order.
    4. Work is performed where it makes most sense.
    5. Checks and controls may be reduced, and quality ‘built-in’.
    6. One manager provides a single point of contact.
    7. The advantages of centralised and decentralised operations are combined.

    The main stages of BPR:

    1. Process identification: Each process is recorded and analysed to find out whether it is Necessary, Adding value, Supporting another value adding process.
    2. Process rationalization: Those processes which are not adding value, or which are not essential to supporting a value-adding process are discarded.
    3. Process redesign: The remaining processes are redesigned, so that they work in the most efficient way possible. At this stage detailed operating procedures need to be produced for all processes that are to be performed manually.
    4. Process reassembly: The re-engineered processes are implemented, resulting in tasks, department and an organisation that works in the most efficient manner.

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  • Ratios and Financial measures of performance – Ratio analysis

    Ratios and Financial measures of performance – Ratio analysis

    Overview

    Ratios are useful for assessing the performance of a company. When ratios are used to compare different companies, the comparability is affected if companies use different accounting policies to prepare their financial statements. These Ratios summary notes are prepared by mindmaplab team and covering, Ratios revised amendment, the key definitions, full standard with illustrative examples, the financial ratios analysis, accounting ratio, performance ratios, types of ratio analysis, the key and important financial ratios, ratio analysis in management accounting, the use of ratio analysis, including the most important financial ratios to analyze a company. This is actually a financial ratios cheat sheet. This is the Ratio and Trend analysis full text guide; we have also prepared Ratio and Trend analysis pdf version download.

    IAS Standards

    IAS 2 Inventories       

    IAS 7 Statements of cash flows

    IAS 7 Statement of cash flows  – Revisited

    IAS 8 Accounting policies, changes in accounting estimates, and errors

    IAS 10 Events after the reporting period       

    IAS 12 Income taxes 

    IAS 16 Property, plant and equipment          

    IAS 17 Leases

    IAS 19 Employee benefits     

    IAS 20 Accounting for government grants and disclosure of government assistance          

    IAS 21 The effects of changes in foreign exchange rates     

    IAS 23 Borrowing costs        

    IAS 24 Related party disclosures

    IAS 27 Consolidated and separate financial statements        

    IAS 28 Investments in associates and joint ventures 

    IAS 32 Financial instruments: presentation  

    IAS 33 Earnings per share

    IAS 33 Earnings per share – Revisited          

    IAS 36 Impairment of assets 

    IAS 37 Provisions, contingent liabilities and contingent assets        

    IAS 38 Intangible assets

    IAS 40 Investment property

    IFRS Standards

    IFRS 3 Business combinations    

    IFRS 5 Non-current assets held for sale and discontinued operations    

    IFRS 7 Financial instruments: disclosures          

    IFRS 8 Operating segments         

    IFRS 9 Financial instruments      

    IFRS 10 Consolidated financial statements        

    IFRS 11 Joint arrangements         

    IFRS 12 Disclosure of interests in other entities 

    IFRS 13 Fair value measurement 

    IFRS 15 Revenues from contracts with customers          

    IFRS 16 Leases

    IAS 17 VS IFRS 16 Lease – Differences

    Ratio Analysis

    Categories of financial ratios

    Ratios can be divided into five categories:

    Categories of financial ratios

    *Remember that when a ratio is calculated, it is important to compare ‘like with like’.

    Profitability ratios

    This category of ratios measures the performance of the company in terms of the return (profit) earned on the capital employed in the business. These ratios are relevant for measuring the success of management in using the resources and allow customers and suppliers to assess whether the company has the ability to continue operating successfully in the future.

    Return on (total) capital employed (ROCE)

    The return on capital employed ratio measures profit before interest and tax with the total capital employed in the business. It is therefore a measure of the success of the company in making use of its invested capital.

    Profit before interest and tax x 100

    Share capital + reserves + debt capital

    Return on shareholders’ funds (ROSF)

    The return on shareholders’ funds (ROSF) or return on shareholders’ capital (ROSC) measures the return on the capital invested by shareholders.

    In a company with no preference shares and no non-controlling interests, this ratio is calculated as follows:

    Profit before tax x 100

    Share capital + reserves

    When a company has non-controlling interests or preference shares, you need to decide on the most suitable method of calculating the ratio.

    Using ROCE or ROSF – It is not necessary to calculate both these ratios. The ratio that you calculate should be the ratio that is of the greatest interest to the particular user or user group.

    Gross profit percentage

    The gross profit margin is the ratio of gross profit to sales income.

    This ratio should normally remain fairly constant from one year to the next. Even a fairly small change in the ratio might indicate that something of significance has happened.

    Variations between years may be attributable to:

    • a change in sales prices
    • a change in sales mix
    • a change in purchase/production costs
    • an exceptional write-off of inventory

    Gross profit x 100

    Sales

    Overhead percentage

    Overhead percentage ratios measure the ratio of overhead costs to sales revenue. The main overhead costs are administrative expenses and sales and distribution costs.

    The ratio of variable overhead costs to sales revenue should remain constant from one year to the next, unless something of significance happens

    The ratio of fixed overhead costs to sales revenue should decrease as the company grows and increases its annual revenue.

    Overheads x 100

    Sales

    Efficiency ratios

    Cash flow is the lifeblood of an entity. Cash is needed to maintain operations by paying suppliers and employees, and to allow the company to grow.

    The operating cycle (also called the cash cycle) refers to the continuous cycle of business activities, whereby an entity spends cash to acquire materials, labour and other resources, and eventually recovers its cash (with a profit) by selling goods or services to customers and collecting payment.

    Poor working capital management and an inefficient cash cycle mean inadequate cash flows.

    When an entity ties up capital in excessive working capital (inventory and trade receivables) its ROCE will be lower than it should be, and it may need to borrow money to meet its obligations.

    Several working capital efficiency ratios are useful for assessing the efficiency of working capital management and management of the operating cycle/cash cycle.

    Inventory turnover

    Inventory turnover is a measure of how quickly an entity uses its inventory. It is also a measure of how slowly an entity uses its inventory, and how long items are held in inventory before they are eventually used or sold.

    Inventory turnover may be measured as ‘x times a year’.

    Cost of Sales

    Average Inventory

    A low turnover indicates inefficient use of resources. The slower inventory turnover, the greater the risk of obsolescence.

    Inventory turnover may also be measured as an average number of days, rather than as ‘x times a year’.

    Average Inventory x 365

    Cost of Sales

    This calculates the number of days a company takes to sell its average holding of inventory.

    Separate turnover ratios could be calculated for:

    • raw materials
    • work in progress (the production cycle), and
    • finished goods

    Receivables turnover

    It is sometimes called ‘debtor days’ or ‘days sales outstanding’. The receivables turnover ratio is usually measured in days. It is the average time that it takes an entity to collect amounts due from customers.

    Average Trade Receivables x 365

    Credit Sales

    The ratio should ideally use credit sales, but the financial statements do not provide an analysis of sales into cash sales and credit sales. Therefore, total sales must normally be used, and this may produce an unrealistic ratio.

    A change in the ratio from one year to the next may be due to:

    • A change in settlement terms for credit customers, to encourage new business
    • the introduction of debt factoring, which will reduce the average receivables collection period
    • exceptional factors, such as one large new customer being offered extended credit.

    Payables payment period

    It is the average payment period to suppliers. It is normally measured in days.

    Average Trade Payables x 365

    Credit Purchases

    The ratio should ideally use purchases on credit. However, this figure is not available from the financial statements, and the figure for the annual cost of sales should be used instead.

    Short-term liquidity ratios

    Short-term liquidity ratios are used to assess the ability of an entity to have sufficient cash, normally from its normal business cycle/cash cycle, to settle payments when they become due.

    The ratios can be used together with information in the statement of cash flows to analyse the liquidity (and cash flows) of the entity.

    Current ratio

    Liquidity comes from current assets, including cash. The need for liquidity comes from the need to settle current liabilities.

    The current ratio is simply a ratio that compares short-term sources of cash (current assets) with short-term needs for cash (current liabilities).

    Current assets

    Current liabilities

    As a very rough guide, an ‘ideal’ current ratio may be 1.5:1 or 2:1. A ratio of less than 1:1 could indicate liquidity problems, because the entity might be unable to obtain cash from normal business activities to settle its current liabilities.

    Quick ratio (acid test ratio)

    Inventory turnover could be very slow. In such cases, inventory is not a liquid asset and will not generate cash within a fairly short period of time in order to pay off the current obligations due in the next month or so.

    The quick ratio or acid test ratio is similar to the current ratio, but it excludes inventory from current assets.

    Current assets (less) Inventory

    Current liabilities

    By eliminating inventory, the quick ratio measures a worst-case-scenario. It can be used to ask the question: Does the entity appear to have sufficient cash and near cash assets (including receivables) to provide the money to settle all current liabilities on time?

    ‘Ideally’ the quick ratio should be about 0.8:1 to 1.0:1.

    Long-term solvency ratios

    A company finances its net assets with a combination of equity and reserves and long-term debt. An entity is ‘high geared’ when a large proportion of its long-term capital is in the form of debt. High financial gearing is seen as a high-risk strategy.

    Gearing’ examines the financing structure of a business and indicates to shareholders the level of financial risk to which the company is exposed because of its long-term capital structure.

    These ratios, and changes in the ratios over time, can help them to assess the credit risk in their investment.

    Gearing ratio

    The gearing ratio (or leverage ratio) is usually calculated as follows:

    Debt or    Debt x 100

    Equity    Equity + Debt

    Debt = Loans + Preference shares 

    Equity = Equity share capital + reserves + non-controlling interest

    Notes on financial gearing

    • A highly geared company, with a substantial proportion of its capital in the form of debt, is seen by investors as ‘more risky’.
    • High gearing is acceptable if it is accompanied by stable annual profits (PBIT) or increasing profits.
    • A highly-geared company may find it more difficult to raise additional debt capital.

    Interest cover

    The interest cover ratio measures the ability of a company to meet its obligations to pay interest on debt (out of its profits).

    The ratio therefore compares profit before interest and tax with the annual interest charges.

    Profit before interest

    Interest

    A high interest cover suggests a sensible financing structure.

    An interest cover of 2 times or less generally indicates that the company might have difficulty paying its interest if there is a fall in its profits.

    Investor ratios

    Four widely-used ratios are:

    1. earnings per share
    2. the P/E ratio
    3. dividend yield
    4. dividend cover

    Dividend yield

    The dividend yield measures the annual cash return (dividends) that equity shareholders are receiving on their investment.

    Net dividend per share + tax credit x 100

    Current market share price

    Where there is no system of tax credits on dividend payments, the figure for dividends is simply the annual cash dividends paid to shareholders.

    Dividend cover

    The dividend cover ratio measures the earnings of a company relative to the size of its dividend payments.

    EPS

    Net dividend per share

    Limitations of financial ratios

    Most of the data for calculating financial ratios comes from the financial statements.

    • The reliability of ratios is therefore affected by the reliability of the financial statements themselves.
    • When ratios are used to compare different companies, the comparability is affected if companies use different accounting policies to prepare their financial statements.
  • IFRS 13 Fair Value Measurement

    IFRS 13 Fair Value Measurement

    Overview

    IFRS 13 Fair Value Measurement – The purpose of IFRS 13 is to: define fair value, set out a single framework for measuring fair value, specify disclosures about fair value measurement. These IFRS 13 summary notes are prepared by mindmaplab team and covering, IFRS 13 revised amendment, the key definitions, full standard with illustrative examples, with IFRS 13 disclosure requirements, IFRS 13 fair value measurement, fair value hierarchy, valuation techniques, IFRS 13 highest and best use method. This is the IFRS 13 full text guide; we have also prepared IFRS 13 pdf version download.

    IAS Standards

    IAS 2 Inventories       

    IAS 7 Statements of cash flows

    IAS 7 Statement of cash flows  – Revisited

    IAS 8 Accounting policies, changes in accounting estimates, and errors

    IAS 10 Events after the reporting period       

    IAS 12 Income taxes 

    IAS 16 Property, plant and equipment          

    IAS 17 Leases

    IAS 19 Employee benefits     

    IAS 20 Accounting for government grants and disclosure of government assistance          

    IAS 21 The effects of changes in foreign exchange rates     

    IAS 23 Borrowing costs        

    IAS 24 Related party disclosures

    IAS 27 Consolidated and separate financial statements        

    IAS 28 Investments in associates and joint ventures 

    IAS 32 Financial instruments: presentation  

    IAS 33 Earnings per share

    IAS 33 Earnings per share – Revisited          

    IAS 36 Impairment of assets 

    IAS 37 Provisions, contingent liabilities and contingent assets        

    IAS 38 Intangible assets

    IAS 40 Investment property

    IFRS Standards

    IFRS 3 Business combinations    

    IFRS 5 Non-current assets held for sale and discontinued operations    

    IFRS 7 Financial instruments: disclosures          

    IFRS 8 Operating segments         

    IFRS 9 Financial instruments      

    IFRS 10 Consolidated financial statements        

    IFRS 11 Joint arrangements         

    IFRS 12 Disclosure of interests in other entities 

    IFRS 13 Fair value measurement 

    IFRS 15 Revenues from contracts with customers          

    IFRS 16 Leases

    IAS 17 VS IFRS 16 Lease – Differences

    Ratio Analysis

    There are many instances where particular IAS / IFRS requires or allows entities to measure or disclose the fair value of assets, liabilities or their own equity instruments.

    Purpose of IFRS 13

    The purpose of IFRS 13 is to:

    • define fair value
    • set out a single framework for measuring fair value
    • specify disclosures about fair value measurement.

    IFRS 13 does not change what should be fair valued nor when this should occur.

    IFRS 13 does not apply to:

    • share based payment transactions within the scope of IFRS 2
    • Leasing transactions accounted for in accordance with IFRS 16 Leases
    • measurements such as net realisable value (IAS 2 Inventories) or value in use (IAS 36 Impairment of Assets) which have some similarities to fair value but are not fair value.

    The IFRS 13 disclosure requirements do not apply to the following:

    • plan assets measured at fair value (IAS 19: Employee benefits)
    • retirement benefit plan investments measured at fair value (IAS 26: Accounting and reporting by retirement benefit plans); and
    • assets for which recoverable amount is fair value less costs of disposal in accordance with IAS 36.

    IFRS 13 Definition

    1. Fair value – Fair value is the price that would be received to sell an asset or paid to transfer a liability in an orderly transaction between market participants at the measurement date (i.e. it is an exit price).

    Note that the fair value is an exit price, i.e. the price at which an asset would be sold.

    1. Exit price – The price that would be received to sell an asset or paid to transfer a liability.
    2. Entry price – The price paid to acquire an asset or received to assume a liability in an exchange transaction.
    3. Unit of account – The level at which an asset or a liability is aggregated or disaggregated in an IFRS for recognition purposes.
    4. Most advantageous market – The market that maximises the amount that would be received to sell the asset or minimises the amount that would be paid to transfer the liability, after taking into account transaction costs and transport costs.
    5. Principal market – The market with the greatest (highest) volume and level of activity for the asset or liability.
    6. Highest and best use – The use of a non-financial asset by market participants that would maximise the value of the asset or the group of assets and liabilities (e.g. a business) within which the asset would be used.
    7. Inputs – The assumptions that market participants would use when pricing the asset or liability, including assumptions about risk, such as the following:
      • the risk inherent in a particular valuation technique used to measure fair value (such as a pricing model); and
      • the risk inherent in the inputs to the valuation technique.

    Measuring Fair value

    Fair value measurement assumes that the asset (liability) is exchanged in an orderly transaction between market participants to sell the asset (transfer the liability) at the measurement date under current market conditions.

    If an active market exists then it will provide information that can be used for fair value measurement.

    If there is no such active market (e.g. for the sale of an unquoted business or surplus machinery) then a valuation technique would be necessary.

    Principal or most advantageous market

    • Fair value measurement is based on a possible transaction to sell the asset or transfer the liability in the principal market for the asset or liability.
    • If there is no principal market fair vale measurement is based on the price available in the most advantageous market for the asset or liability.
    • Unless there is evidence to the contrary, principal market (or failing that, the most advantageous market) is the one in which an entity normally enters into transactions sell the asset or to transfer the liability being fair valued.
    • If there is a principal market for the asset or liability, the fair value measurement must use the price in that market even if a price in a different market is potentially more advantageous at the measurement date.
    • The price in a principle market might either be directly observable or estimated using a valuation technique.

    Transaction costs and Transport costs

    • The price in the principal (or most advantageous) market used to measure the fair value of the asset (liability) is not adjusted for transaction costs.
    • The price in the principal (or most advantageous) market is adjusted for the costs that would be incurred to transport the asset from its current location to that market.

    IFRS 13 Transaction costs and Transport costs EXAMPLE

    Fair value of non-financial assets – highest and best use

    Fair value measurement of a non-financial asset must value the asset at its highest and best use.

    *The current use of land is presumed to be its highest and best use unless market or other factors suggest a different use.

    Valuation Techniques

    An entity must use a valuation technique that is appropriate in the circumstances and for which sufficient data is available to measure fair value, maximising the use of relevant observable inputs and minimising the use of unobservable inputs.

    Quoted price in an active market provides the most reliable evidence of fair value and must be used to measure fair value whenever available.

    Fair value hierarchy

    IFRS 13 establishes a fair value hierarchy to categorise inputs to valuation techniques into three levels.

    Level 1 – Quoted prices in active markets for identical assets or liabilities that the entity can access at the measurement date (e.g. Share price quoted on the Stock Exchange).

    Level 2 – Inputs other than quoted prices included within Level 1 that are observable for the asset or liability, either directly or indirectly (e.g. Quoted price of a similar asset to the one being valued).

    Level 3 – Unobservable inputs for the asset or liability. (e.g. Cash flow projections).

    LIABILITIES AND AN ENTITY’S OWN EQUITY INSTRUMENTS

    General principles

    The fair valuation of an entity’s own equity instrument assumes that market participant to whom the instrument could be transferred would take on the rights and responsibilities associated with the instrument.

    The same guidance that applies to the fair value of assets also applies to the fair value of liabilities and an entity’s own equity instruments including that:

    • an entity must maximise the use of relevant observable inputs and minimise the use of unobservable inputs; and
    • quoted price in an active market must be used to measure fair value whenever available.

    In the absence of an active market there might be an observable market for items held by other parties as assets.

    IFRS 13 Disclosure

    The fair value measurement of assets and liabilities might be recurring or non-recurring.

    • Recurring fair value measurements are those that are required or permitted in the statement of financial position at the end of each reporting period (e.g. the fair value of investment property when the IAS 40 fair value model is used);
    • Non-recurring fair value measurements are those that are required or permitted in the statement of financial position in particular circumstances (e.g. when an entity measures an asset held for sale at fair value less costs to sell in accordance with IFRS 5).

    Disclosures are necessary in respect of each of the above.

    Information must be disclosed to help users assess both of the following:

    • the valuation techniques and inputs used to measure the fair value assets and liabilities on a recurring or non-recurring basis;
    • the effect on profit or loss or other comprehensive income for the period of recurring fair value measurements using significant unobservable inputs (Level 3).
  • IFRS 12 Disclosure of interests in other entities

    IFRS 12 Disclosure of interests in other entities

    Overview

    IFRS 12 Disclosure of interests in other entities – The objective of IFRS 12 is to require companies to disclose information that enables users of their financial statements to evaluate: the nature of, and risks associated with, its interests in other entities; and the effects of those interests on its financial position, financial performance and cash flows. These IFRS 12 summary notes are prepared by mindmaplab team and covering, IFRS 12 revised amendment, the key definitions, full standard with illustrative examples, with IFRS 12 disclosure requirements, IFRS 12 disclosure of interests in other entities, structured entity IFRS 12. This is the IFRS 12 full text guide; we have also prepared IFRS 12 pdf version download.

    IAS Standards

    IAS 2 Inventories       

    IAS 7 Statements of cash flows

    IAS 7 Statement of cash flows  – Revisited

    IAS 8 Accounting policies, changes in accounting estimates, and errors

    IAS 10 Events after the reporting period       

    IAS 12 Income taxes 

    IAS 16 Property, plant and equipment          

    IAS 17 Leases

    IAS 19 Employee benefits     

    IAS 20 Accounting for government grants and disclosure of government assistance          

    IAS 21 The effects of changes in foreign exchange rates     

    IAS 23 Borrowing costs        

    IAS 24 Related party disclosures

    IAS 27 Consolidated and separate financial statements        

    IAS 28 Investments in associates and joint ventures 

    IAS 32 Financial instruments: presentation  

    IAS 33 Earnings per share

    IAS 33 Earnings per share – Revisited          

    IAS 36 Impairment of assets 

    IAS 37 Provisions, contingent liabilities and contingent assets        

    IAS 38 Intangible assets

    IAS 40 Investment property

    IFRS Standards

    IFRS 3 Business combinations    

    IFRS 5 Non-current assets held for sale and discontinued operations    

    IFRS 7 Financial instruments: disclosures          

    IFRS 8 Operating segments         

    IFRS 9 Financial instruments      

    IFRS 10 Consolidated financial statements        

    IFRS 11 Joint arrangements         

    IFRS 12 Disclosure of interests in other entities 

    IFRS 13 Fair value measurement 

    IFRS 15 Revenues from contracts with customers          

    IFRS 16 Leases

    IAS 17 VS IFRS 16 Lease – Differences

    Ratio Analysis

    Introduction to IFRS 12

    IFRS 12 must be applied by a company that has an interest in any of the following:

    1. subsidiaries;
    2. joint arrangements (i.e. joint operations or joint ventures);
    3. associates;
    4. unconsolidated structured entities.

    The objective of IFRS 12 is to require companies to disclose information that enables users of their financial statements to evaluate:

    • the nature of, and risks associated with, its interests in other entities; and
    • the effects of those interests on its financial position, financial performance and cash flows.

    Significant judgements and assumptions

    A company must disclose information about significant judgements and assumptions it has made in determining:

    • that it has control of another entity;
    • that it has joint control of an arrangement or significant influence over another entity; and
    • the type of joint arrangement (i.e. joint operation or joint venture) when the arrangement has been structured through a separate vehicle.

    Interests in subsidiaries

    A company must disclose information that enables users of its consolidated financial statements:

    • to understand the composition of the group and the interest that non-controlling interests have in the group’s activities and cash flows; and
    • to evaluate the consequences of changes in its ownership interest in a subsidiary that do not result in a loss of control and of losing control of a subsidiary during the reporting period.

    When the financial statements of a subsidiary used in the preparation of consolidated financial statements are as of a date or for a period that is different from that of the consolidated financial statements, a company must disclose the date of the end of the reporting period of the financial statements of that subsidiary the reason for using a different date or period.

    Non-controlling interests

    A company must disclose for each of its subsidiaries that have non-controlling interests that are material to the reporting entity:

    • the name and the principal place of business of the subsidiary
    • the proportion of ownership interests held by non-controlling interests
    • the profit or loss allocated to non-controlling interests of the subsidiary during the reporting period

    Interests in joint arrangements and associates

    A company must disclose information that enables users of its financial statements to evaluate:

    • the nature, extent and financial effects of its interests in joint arrangements and associates,
    • the nature of, and changes in, the risks associated with its interests in joint ventures and associates.

    Nature, extent and financial effects of interests in joint arrangements and associates

    A company must disclose:

    • the name and the nature of the entity’s relationship with the joint arrangement or associate.
    • the principal place of business and the proportion of ownership interest or participating share held by the entity.
    • The method used for measurement (equity method or at fair value).

    Risks associated with an entity’s interests in joint ventures and associates

    A company must disclose:

    • commitments that it has relating to its joint ventures
    • contingent liabilities incurred relating to its interests in joint ventures or associates

    Structured entities

    Structured entity – An entity that has been designed so that voting or similar rights are not the dominant factor in deciding who controls the entity, such as when any voting rights relate to administrative tasks only and the relevant activities are directed by means of contractual arrangements.

    A structured entity might be consolidated or unconsolidated depending on the results of the analysis of whether control exists.

    Consolidated structured entities

    • A company must disclose the terms of any contractual arrangements that could require the parent or its subsidiaries to provide financial support to a consolidated structured entity.
    • A company must also disclose any support given where there is no contractual obligation and any intention to provide financial or other support to a consolidated structured entity.

    Unconsolidated structured entities

    A company must disclose information that enables users of its financial statements:

    • to understand the nature and extent of its interests in unconsolidated structured entities; and
    • to evaluate the nature of, and changes in, the risks associated with its interests in unconsolidated structured entities.
  • IFRS 11 Joint arrangements

    IFRS 11 Joint arrangements

    Overview

    IFRS 11 Joint arrangements – A joint arrangement has the following characteristics: The parties are bound by a contractual arrangement; and the contractual arrangement gives two or more of those parties joint control of the arrangement. These IFRS 11 summary notes are prepared by mindmaplab team and covering, IFRS 11 revised amendment, the key definitions, full standard with illustrative examples, with IFRS 11 disclosure requirements. This IFRS 11 is a guide for dummies as well as for professionals. This is the IFRS 11 full text guide; we have also prepared IFRS 11 pdf version download.

    IAS Standards

    IAS 2 Inventories       

    IAS 7 Statements of cash flows

    IAS 7 Statement of cash flows  – Revisited

    IAS 8 Accounting policies, changes in accounting estimates, and errors

    IAS 10 Events after the reporting period       

    IAS 12 Income taxes 

    IAS 16 Property, plant and equipment          

    IAS 17 Leases

    IAS 19 Employee benefits     

    IAS 20 Accounting for government grants and disclosure of government assistance          

    IAS 21 The effects of changes in foreign exchange rates     

    IAS 23 Borrowing costs        

    IAS 24 Related party disclosures

    IAS 27 Consolidated and separate financial statements        

    IAS 28 Investments in associates and joint ventures 

    IAS 32 Financial instruments: presentation  

    IAS 33 Earnings per share

    IAS 33 Earnings per share – Revisited          

    IAS 36 Impairment of assets 

    IAS 37 Provisions, contingent liabilities and contingent assets        

    IAS 38 Intangible assets

    IAS 40 Investment property

    IFRS Standards

    IFRS 3 Business combinations    

    IFRS 5 Non-current assets held for sale and discontinued operations    

    IFRS 7 Financial instruments: disclosures          

    IFRS 8 Operating segments         

    IFRS 9 Financial instruments      

    IFRS 10 Consolidated financial statements        

    IFRS 11 Joint arrangements         

    IFRS 12 Disclosure of interests in other entities 

    IFRS 13 Fair value measurement 

    IFRS 15 Revenues from contracts with customers          

    IFRS 16 Leases

    IAS 17 VS IFRS 16 Lease – Differences

    Ratio Analysis

    Introduction

    • A controlling interest in an investee results in an investment (a subsidiary) which is consolidated.
    • A fairly small interest in the equity shares of another company would give no influence of any kind and such investments are treated as follows:
    • The shares are shown in the statement of financial position as long-term assets (an investment) and valued in accordance with IFRS 9; and
    • Any dividends received for the shares are included in profit or loss for the year as other income.
    • Still other investments might result in joint control or significant influence. The rules for accounting for these are given in:
    • IFRS 11 Joint Arrangements: and
    • IAS 28 Investments in Associates and Joint ventures.

    IFRS 11 Definitions

    Joint arrangement – A joint arrangement is an arrangement of which two or more parties have joint control.

    Joint control – is the contractually agreed sharing of control of an arrangement, which exists only when decisions about the relevant activities require the unanimous consent of the parties sharing control.

    Separate vehicle – A separate vehicle is a separately identifiable financial structure, including separate legal entities or entities recognised by statute, regardless of whether those entities have a legal personality.

    Joint arrangements

    A joint arrangement has the following characteristics:

    1. The parties are bound by a contractual arrangement; and
    2. The contractual arrangement gives two or more of those parties joint control of the arrangement.

    A party to a joint arrangement is an entity that participates in a joint arrangement, regardless of whether that entity has joint control of the arrangement.

    Contractual arrangement

    • Any contractual arrangement will usually be evidenced in writing, between the parties.
    • A joint arrangement might be structured through a separate vehicle.
    • Any contractual arrangement sets out the terms upon which the parties participate in the activity that is the subject of the arrangement and would generally deal with such matters as:
    1. the purpose, activity and duration of the joint arrangement.
    2. how the members of the board of directors, of the joint arrangement, are appointed.
    1. the decision-making process (the matters requiring decisions from the parties, the voting rights of the parties and the required level of support for those matters).
    1. the capital or other contributions required of the parties.
    2. how the parties share assets, liabilities, revenues, expenses or profit or loss relating to the joint arrangement.

    Joint control

    IFRS 11 states that decisions about the relevant activities require unanimous consent of all parties that collectively control the arrangement.

    It is not necessary for every party to the arrangement to agree in order for unanimous consent to exist.

    IFRS 11 Types of joint arrangements

    There are two types of joint arrangement. A joint arrangement is either a joint operation or a joint venture.

    1. Joint operation – A joint operation is a joint arrangement whereby the parties that have joint control of the arrangement have rights to the assets, and obligations for the liabilities, relating to the arrangement. Those parties are called joint operators.
    2. Joint venture – A joint venture is a joint arrangement where the parties that have joint control of the arrangement have rights to the net assets of the arrangement. Those parties are called joint venturers.

    *Investors may or may not establish a joint arrangement as a separate vehicle.

    • IFRS 11 says that if a joint arrangement is not structured through a separate vehicle it MUST be a joint operation.
    • If a joint arrangement is structured through a separate vehicle it could be a joint operation or a joint venture.

    *For a joint arrangement to be a joint venture, it is the separate vehicle that must have the rights to the assets and the obligations to the liabilities with the investor only having an interest in the net assets of the entity. If an investor has a direct interest in specific assets and direct obligation for specific liabilities of the separate vehicle then the joint arrangement is a joint operation.

    Accounting for joint operations and joint ventures

    Joint operations

    A joint operator must recognise the following in its own financial statements:

    1. its assets, including its share of any assets held jointly;
    2. its liabilities, including its share of any liabilities incurred jointly;
    3. its revenue from the sale of its share of the output arising from the joint operation;
    4. its share of the revenue from the sale of the output by the joint operation; and
    5. its expenses, including its share of any expenses incurred jointly.

    Joint ventures

    A joint venturer must recognise its interest in a joint venture as an investment and account for it using the equity method in accordance with IAS 28 Investments in Associates and Joint Ventures.

  • IFRS 10 Consolidated Financial Statements

    IFRS 10 Consolidated Financial Statements

    Overview

    IFRS 10 Consolidated Financial Statements – Guidance on the process of consolidation is set out in two standards, IFRS 3 Business Combinations and IFRS 10 Consolidated Financial Statements. IFRS 10 explains that a business under the control of another is a subsidiary and the controlling entity is the parent. These IFRS 10 summary notes are prepared by mindmaplab team and covering, IFRS 10 revised amendment, the key definitions, full standard with illustrative examples, IFRS 10 investment entity, IFRS 10 control, IFRS 10 exemption from consolidation, objective of IFRS 10, IFRS 10 special purpose entities, with IFRS 10 disclosure requirements. This IFRS 10 is a guide for dummies as well as for professionals. This is the IFRS 10 full text guide; we have also prepared IFRS 10 pdf version download.

    IAS Standards

    IAS 2 Inventories       

    IAS 7 Statements of cash flows

    IAS 7 Statement of cash flows  – Revisited

    IAS 8 Accounting policies, changes in accounting estimates, and errors

    IAS 10 Events after the reporting period       

    IAS 12 Income taxes 

    IAS 16 Property, plant and equipment          

    IAS 17 Leases

    IAS 19 Employee benefits     

    IAS 20 Accounting for government grants and disclosure of government assistance          

    IAS 21 The effects of changes in foreign exchange rates     

    IAS 23 Borrowing costs        

    IAS 24 Related party disclosures

    IAS 27 Consolidated and separate financial statements        

    IAS 28 Investments in associates and joint ventures 

    IAS 32 Financial instruments: presentation  

    IAS 33 Earnings per share

    IAS 33 Earnings per share – Revisited          

    IAS 36 Impairment of assets 

    IAS 37 Provisions, contingent liabilities and contingent assets        

    IAS 38 Intangible assets

    IAS 40 Investment property

    IFRS Standards

    IFRS 3 Business combinations    

    IFRS 5 Non-current assets held for sale and discontinued operations    

    IFRS 7 Financial instruments: disclosures          

    IFRS 8 Operating segments         

    IFRS 9 Financial instruments      

    IFRS 10 Consolidated financial statements        

    IFRS 11 Joint arrangements         

    IFRS 12 Disclosure of interests in other entities 

    IFRS 13 Fair value measurement 

    IFRS 15 Revenues from contracts with customers          

    IFRS 16 Leases

    IAS 17 VS IFRS 16 Lease – Differences

    Ratio Analysis

    International accounting standards and group accounts

    The following standards relate to accounting for investments:

    • IFRS 3 Business combinations
    • IFRS 10 Consolidated financial statements
    • IFRS 11 Joint Arrangements
    • IAS 27 Separate financial statements
    • IAS 28 Investments in associates and joint ventures

    Guidance on the process of consolidation is set out in two standards, IFRS 3 Business Combinations and IFRS 10 Consolidated Financial Statements.

    Introduction to IFRS 10

    IFRS 10 explains that a business under the control of another is a subsidiary and the controlling entity is the parent.

    IFRS 10 covers the on-going rules related to consolidation. It is IFRS 10 that requires:

    1. that the financial statements of Parent and Subsidiary be prepared using uniform accounting policies;
    2. the consolidated assets, liabilities, income and expenses are those of the parent and its subsidiaries added on a line by line basis;
    3. the elimination of unrealised profit on intra group transactions; and
    4. the cancellation of intra group balances.
    5. IFRS 10 explains how to account for disposals.

    IFRS 10 Definitions

    Control – An investor controls an investee when:

    1. it is exposed, or has rights, to variable returns from its involvement with the investee; and
    2. it has the ability to affect those returns through its power over the investee.

    Non-controlling interest (NCI) – the equity in a subsidiary not attributable to a parent.

    The non-controlling interest may be stated as either:

    • a proportionate share of the identifiable assets acquired and liabilities assumed; or
    • at fair value as at the date of acquisition

    Consolidated financial statements – The financial statements of a group in which the assets, liabilities, equity, income, expenses and cash flows of the parent and its subsidiaries are presented as those of a single economic entity.

    The requirement to prepare consolidated accounts

    An entity that is a parent must present consolidated financial statements. There is an exception to this rule.

    A parent need not present consolidated financial statements if (and only if) it meets all of the following conditions:

    1. The parent itself (X) is a wholly-owned subsidiary, with its own parent (Y).
    2. Alternatively, the parent (X) is a partially-owned subsidiary, with its own parent (Y), and the other owners of X are prepared to allow it to avoid preparing consolidated financial statements.
    3. The parent’s debt or equity instruments are not traded in a public market.
    4. The parent does not file its financial statements with a securities commission for the purpose of issuing financial instruments in a public market.
    5. The parent’s own parent, or the ultimate parent company (for example, the parent of the parent’s parent), does produce consolidated financial statements for public use that comply with International Financial Reporting Standards.

    The following might be given as spurious justification for failing to consolidate a particular subsidiary:

    1. The subsidiary’s activities are dissimilar from those of the parent, so that the consolidated financial statements might not present the group’s financial performance and position fairly.
    2. Obtaining the information needed would be expensive and time-consuming and might delay the preparation of the consolidated financial statements.
    3. The subsidiary operates under severe long-term restrictions, so that the parent is unable to manage it properly.

    Investment entities exemption

    An investment entity might take shares in another entity in order to make gains through dividends or capital appreciation, not to become involved in business of that entity.

    An investment entity must not consolidate the entities that it controls but it must measure them at fair value through profit or loss in accordance with IFRS 9 Financial Instruments.

    An entity is an investment entity only if it meets all of the following criteria:

    1. Its only substantive activities are investing in multiple investments for capital appreciation, investment income (dividends or interest), or both.
    2. It has made an explicit commitment to its investors that its purpose of investment is to earn capital appreciation, investment income (dividends or interest), or both.
    3. Ownership in the entity is represented by units of investments, such as shares or partnership interests, to which proportionate shares of net assets are attributed.
    4. The funds of its investors are pooled so that they can benefit from professional investment management.
    5. It has investors that are unrelated to the parent (if any), and in aggregate hold a significant ownership interest in the entity.
    6. Substantially all of the investments of the entity are managed, and their performance is evaluated, on a fair value basis.
    7. It provides financial information about its investment activities to its investors.

    Group financial statements – Disposals

    IFRS 10 Consolidated Financial Statements contains rules on accounting for disposals of a subsidiary.

    Accounting for a disposal is an issue that impacts the statement of profit or loss.

    There are two major tasks in constructing a statement of profit or loss for a period during which there has been a disposal of a subsidiary:

    1. The statement of profit or loss must reflect the pattern of ownership of subsidiaries in the period.
    2. When control is lost, the statement of profit or loss must show the profit or loss on disposal of the subsidiary.

    The rules in IFRS 10 cover full disposals and part disposals.

    Full disposals

    Profit or loss on disposal

    IFRS 10 specifies an approach to calculating the profit or loss on disposal.

    This approach involves comparing the asset that is recognised as a result of the disposal (i.e. the proceeds of the sale) to the amounts that are derecognised as a result of the disposal.

    IFRS 10 Profit or loss on disposal

    The calculation of profit or loss on disposal must be supported by several other calculations. These are:

    • the goodwill arising on acquisition, which in turn needs the net assets of the subsidiary at the date of acquisition; and
    • the net assets of the subsidiary at the date of disposal, which in turn needs a calculation of the equity reserves at the date of disposal.

    Part disposals

    When a parent makes a part disposal of an interest in a subsidiary it will be left with a residual investment. The accounting treatment for a part disposal depends on the nature of the residual investment. Whether part disposal:

    • results in loss of control
    • does not results in loss

    Part disposal with loss of control

    If a part disposal results in loss of control the parent must recognise a profit or loss on disposal in the consolidated statement of profit or loss.

    IFRS 10 Part disposal with loss of control

    Part disposal with no loss of control

    A part disposal which does not result in loss of control is a transaction between the owners of the subsidiary. In this case the parent does not recognise a profit or loss on disposal in the consolidated statement of profit or loss. Instead the parent recognises an equity adjustment.

    The double entry to record the equity adjustment is:

    Cash                                                                      Dr.

    Non-controlling interest (new)                                 Cr.

    Retained earnings                                                           Cr.