Buget Cost Analysis
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Transcript of Buget Cost Analysis
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Budget Cost Analysis
A budget cost analysis will give you clarity at the beginning and a firm foundation on
which to control the costs of your project.
Based on concept drawings the materials required, labour and other costs are calculated
to see what the concept will actually cost to make real.
You can then adjust the concept to fit your budget. Or use this information to make better
decisions on builders quotes and tenders.
A budget cost analysis will look at a building or renovation project and determine the
costs involved.
This would be done early on when concept drawings are being done.
The amount of the materials that will be required and associated costs are calculated.
Different design features and building approaches can also have quite a big impact on the cost.
For an outlay of less than 5% of the likely completion cost, you get piece of mind that you know
exactly what that project will cost.
A budget cost analysis will tell you:
1. How much of a specific material will be used
2. How much the materials will cost
3. How much the labour costs will be
Knowing this means:
You won't be charged for materials not needed or used You won't get caught out by exclusions and 'tags'
You can better negotiate cost savings
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Budget helps to aid the planning of actual operations by forcing managers to consider
how the conditions might change and what steps should be taken now and by encouraging
managers to consider problems before they arise. It also helps co-ordinate the activities of the
organization by compelling managers to examine relationships between their own operation and
those of other departments. Other essentials of budget include:
To control resources
To communicate plans to various responsibility center managers.
To motivate managers to strive to achieve budget goals.
To evaluate the performance of managers
To provide visibility into the company's performance
Buget types:
Sales budgetan estimate of future sales, often broken down into both units and currency.
It is used to create company sales goals.
Production budgetan estimate of the number of units that must be manufactured to meet
the sales goals. The production budget also estimates the various costs involved with
manufacturing those units, including labor and material. Created by product oriented
companies.
Capital budget- used to determine whether an organization's long term investments such as
new machinery, replacement machinery, new plants, new products, and research
development projects are worth pursuing.
Cash flow/cash budgeta prediction of future cash receipts and expenditures for a
particular time period. It usually covers a period in the short term future. The cash flow
budget helps the business determine when income will be sufficient to cover expenses andwhen the company will need to seek outside financing.
Marketing budgetan estimate of the funds needed for promotion, advertising, and public
relations in order to market the product or service.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Production_budgethttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Production_budgethttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capital_budgethttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capital_budgethttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capital_budgethttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Production_budget -
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Project budgeta prediction of the costs associated with a particular company project.
These costs include labour, materials, and other related expenses. The project budget is often
broken down into specific tasks, with task budgets assigned to each. A cost estimate is used
to establish a project budget.
Revenue budgetconsists of revenue receipts of government and the expenditure met from
these revenues. Tax revenues are made up of taxes and other duties that the government
levies.
Expenditure budgetincludes spending data items.
Cost analysis is currently a somewhat controversial set of methods in program evaluation.
One reason for the controversy is that these terms cover a wide range of methods, but are often
used interchangeably.
At the most basic level, cost allocation is simply part of good program budgeting and
accounting practices, which allow managers to determine the true cost of providing a given unit
of service.
TYPES OF COST ANALYSIS IN EVALUATION:
Cost al location, cost-ef fectiveness analysis, and cost-benefi t analysisrepresent a continuum of
types of cost analysis which can have a place in program evaluation.
COST ALLOCATION: Cost allocation is a simpler concept than either cost-benefit analysis or
cost-effectiveness analysis. At the program or agency level, it basically means setting up
budgeting and accounting systems in a way that allows program managers to determine a unit
cost orcost per unit of service.
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COST-EFFECTIVENESS ANALYSIS: Cost-effectiveness analysis assumes that a certain
benefit or outcome is desired, and that there are several alternative ways to achieve it. The basic
question asked is, "Which of these alternatives is the cheapest or most efficient way to get
this benefit?" By definition, cost-effectiveness analysis is comparative, while cost-benefit
analysis usually considers only one program at a time.
COST-BENEFIT ANALYSIS: The basic questions asked in a cost-benefit analysis are, "Do
the economic benefits of providing this service outweigh the economic costs" and "Is it
worth doing at all"? One important tool of cost-benefit analysis is the benefit-to-costs ratio,
which is the total monetary cost of the benefits or outcomes divided by the total monetary costs
of obtaining them.
WHAT COST ANALYSES CAN TELL YOU:
-Cost analyses can provide estimates of what a program's costs and benefits are likely to be,
before it is implemented
-Cost analyses may improve understanding of program operation, and tell whatlevelsof
intervention are most cost-effective
-Cost analyses may reveal unexpected costs
WHAT COST ANALYSES CANNOT TELL YOU:
-Whether or not the program is having a significant net effect on the desired outcomes
-Whether the least expensive alternative is always the best alternative
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Cost analyses can be used at several levels:
-Program Definition-uses cost studies based on other people's experience in similar
programs, since you are unlikely to have cost data of your own yet. This means that the estimates
you use will only be approximations, and may not accurately reflect what your program's
experience will be
-Accountability- Clearly, fiscal accountability is one of the primary reasons for using any
kind of cost analysis as part of your evaluation. Any responsible program should keep service
statistics and financial records that are accurate and up-to-date enough to be able to determine
some very basic information about unit costs, and funders usually require this.
-Understanding and Refining
-Progress Toward Objectives
-Program Impact-When it has been possible to conduct a full-scale cost-benefit analysis over
a long period of time, and it shows significant long-term gains and cost savings in a particular
population or problem area, the policy implications may be great.
ADVANTAGES OF USING COST ANALYSES:
-Promotes fiscal accountability in programs
-Helps set priorities when resources are limited
-Can be extremely powerful and persuasive to legislators, policy makers, and other funders
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DISADVANTAGES OF USING COST ANALYSES:
-Requires a great deal of technical skill and knowledge
-Market costs (what people actually pay for something) don't always reflect "real" social costs
-Sometimes costs and monetary values are considered less important than other, more intangible
values or program outcomes
The Functional Budget format starts with a line-item budget, and takes it a step further.
It focuses on process, or the cost of providing a service.
The Program Budget, which also starts with a line-item budget, looks at the same
information from the point of view of outcomes, or the cost of achieving a result.
COMMON STEPS IN DEVELOPING PROGRAM & FUNCTIONAL
BUDGETS:
1. Develop a line-item budget that shows all expenditures2. Determine the agency's program structure
3. Identify all direct costs and indirect costs
4. Assign direct costs to the appropriate program or project
5. Allocate indirect costs to programs
6. Determine total program costs
Once we have this information about total program costs, then we can calculate unit
costs. For a Functional Budget, this involves defining the units of service for each program, and
calculating the cost per unit of service.For a Program Budget, the final steps are determining
the total cost of achieving the outcome objectives for the year, and calculating the cost per
outcome.