Home » OIS’s solutions to budget’s current problems

OIS’s solutions to budget’s current problems

Per AccountingTools, it:

  • is always wrong
    • when budget is created YE, it’s based on pretty good predictions
    • inevitably, predictions get increasingly “dicey”
    • and budget become increasingly irrelevant, up or down
    • as described on previous PP, OIS is as current as possible
  • imposes rigid decision-making
    • with no mechanism for revisions to budget, decision making becomes increasingly rigid
    • also, managers still think they can spend the budget, rupturing profit budgeted
    • OIS is constantly being revised to keep it current. See previous PP
  • can be very time/cost consuming to complete
    • depends on size of company; 2-3 months for larger companies for which OIS is the most appealing
    • longer if the budget is tied to performance metrics, approval processes, and extensive forecasting,
    • even longer if budget is aligned with fixed, annual plans rather than rolling forecasts
    • There is no annual budgeting process with OIS.
  • allows for gaming the system
    • manager can deliberately increase expense estimates to make budget to achieve bonuses
    • which is unethical behavior
    • managers have no control over their budgets; OIS sets them and updates as necessary
  • encourages use it or lose it behavior
    • If a department’s expenditures are headed to being under its budget, what are the manager’s options?
    • come in under budget and risk a cut next year = best for company
    • spend to be sure you don’t get a cut next year = best for manager
    • Next year’s budget is developed by OIS with no reference to this year’s budget which eliminates the risk described
  • allows blame for outcomes
    • If a department didn’t make its budget, blame the departments upon which the manager depends for goods and services to do his job
    • very unlikely to happen. All departments have the resources necessary to support the forecasted volumes. So, not making a budget could compromise attaining those volumes and associated profit. Something a manager is very unlikely likely to allow to happen…

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