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Management accounting is
concerned with the
provisions and use of
accounting information to
managers within
organizations, to provide
them with the basis to make
informed business decisions
that will allow them to be
better equipped in their
management and control
functions.
In
contrast to financial
accountancy information,
management accounting
information is:
*
Usually confidential and
used by management, instead
of publicly reported;
*
Forward-looking, instead of
historical;
*
Pragmatically computed using
extensive management
information systems and
internal controls, instead
of complying with accounting
standards.
This is
because of the different
emphasis: management
accounting information is
used within an organization,
typically for
decision-making.
Definition
Management Accounting is
"the process of
identification, measurement,
accumulation, analysis,
preparation, interpretation
and communication of
information used by
management to plan, evaluate
and control within an entity
and to assure appropriate
use of and accountability
for its Resource (economics)
resources. Management
accounting also comprises
the preparation of financial
reports for non management
groups such as
shareholder's, creditors,
regulatory agencies and tax
authorities" P2M Infotech
states that management
accounting as practice
extends to the following
three areas:
*
Strategic
Management—advancing the
role of the management
accountant as a strategic
partner in the organization.
*
Performance
Management—developing the
practice of business
decision-making and managing
the performance of the
organization.
*
Risk Management—contributing
to frameworks and practices
for identifying, measuring,
managing and reporting risks
to the achievement of the
objectives of the
organization.
P2M
Infotech states "A
management accountant
applies his or her
professional knowledge and
skill in the preparation and
presentation of financial
and other decision oriented
information in such a way as
to assist management in the
formulation of policies and
in the planning and control
of the operation of the
undertaking. Management
Accountants therefore are
seen as the "value-creators"
amongst the accountants.
They are much more
interested in forward
looking and taking decisions
that will affect the future
of the organization, than in
the historical recording and
compliance (scorekeeping)
aspects of the profession.
Management accounting
knowledge and experience can
therefore be obtained from
varied fields and functions
within an organization, such
as information management,
treasury, efficiency
auditing, marketing,
valuation, pricing,
logistics, etc.
Aims
1.
Formulating strategy /
strategies
2.
Planning and constructing
business activities
3.
Helps in making decision
4.
Optimal use of Resource
(economics)
5.
Supporting financial reports
preparation
6.
Safeguarding asset
Traditional vs. innovative
management accounting
practices
Professional accounting
institutes, perhaps fearing
that management accountants
would increasingly be seen
as superfluous in business
organizations, subsequently
devoted considerable
resources to the development
of a more innovative skills
set for management
accountants.
The
distinction between
‘traditional’ and
‘innovative’ management
accounting practices can be
illustrated by reference to
cost control techniques.
Cost accounting is a central
method in management
accounting, and
traditionally, management
accountants’ principal
technique was variance
analysis, which is a
systematic approach to the
comparison of the actual and
budgeted costs of the raw
materials and labor used
during a production period.
While
some form of variance
analysis is still used by
most manufacturing firms, it
nowadays tends to be used in
conjunction with innovative
techniques such as life
cycle cost analysis and
activity-based costing,
which are designed with
specific aspects of the
modern business environment
in mind. Lifecycle costing
recognizes that managers’
ability to influence the
cost of manufacturing a
product is at its greatest
when the product is still at
the design stage of its
product lifecycle (i.e.,
before the design has been
finalised and production
commenced), since small
changes to the product
design may lead to
significant savings in the
cost of manufacturing the
product. Activity-based
costing (ABC) recognizes
that, in modern factories,
most manufacturing costs are
determined by the amount of
‘activities’ (e.g., the
number of production runs
per month, and the amount of
production equipment idle
time) and that the key to
effective cost control is
therefore optimizing the
efficiency of these
activities. Activity-based
accounting is also known as
Cause and Effect accounting.
Both
lifecycle costing and
activity-based costing
recognize that, in the
typical modern factory, the
avoidance of disruptive
events (such as machine
breakdowns and quality
control failures) is of far
greater importance than (for
example) reducing the costs
of raw materials.
Activity-based costing also
deemphasizes direct labor as
a cost driver and
concentrates instead on
activities that drive costs,
such as the provision of a
service or the production of
a product component.
Role of
Management Accountants
within the Corporation
Consistent with other roles
in today's corporation,
management accountants have
a dual reporting
relationship. As a strategic
partner and provider of
decision based financial and
operational information,
management accountants are
responsible for managing the
business team and at the
same time having to report
relationships and
responsibilities to the
corporation's finance
organization.
The
activities management
accountants provide
inclusive of forecasting and
planning, performing
variance analysis, reviewing
and monitoring costs
inherent in the business are
ones that have dual
accountability to both
finance and the business
team. Examples of tasks
where accountability may be
more meaningful to the
business management team vs.
the corporate finance
department are the
development of new product
costing, operations
research, business driver
metrics, sales management
score carding, and client
profitability analysis.
Conversely, the preparation
of certain financial
reports, reconciliations of
the financial data to source
systems, risk and regulatory
reporting will be more
useful to the corporate
finance team as they are
charged with aggregating
certain financial
information from all
segments of the corporation.
One widely held view of the
progression of the
accounting and finance
career path is that
financial accounting is a
stepping stone to management
accounting. Consistent with
the notion of value
creation, management
accountants help drive the
success of the business
while strict financial
accounting is more of a
compliance and historical
endeavor.
An
alternative view of
management accounting
A very
rarely expressed alternative
view of management
accounting is that it is
neither a neutral or benign
influence in organizations,
rather a mechanism for
management control through
surveillance. This view
locates management
accounting specifically in
the context of management
control theory.
Resource Consumption
Accounting (RCA)
Resource Consumption
Accounting is formally
defined as a dynamic, fully
integrated, principle-based,
and comprehensive management
accounting approach that
provides managers with
decision support information
for enterprise optimization.
Throughput Accounting
The
most significant, recent
direction in managerial
accounting is throughput
accounting; which recognizes
the interdependencies of
modern production processes.
For any given product,
customer or supplier, it is
a tool to measure the
contribution per unit of
constrained resource. (For a
detailed description of
Throughput Accounting, see
cost accounting).
Transfer Pricing
Management accounting is an
applied discipline used in
various industries. The
specific functions and
principles followed can vary
based on the industry.
Management accounting
principles in banking are
specialized but do have some
common fundamental concepts
used whether the industry is
manufacturing based or
service oriented. For
example, transfer pricing is
a concept used in
manufacturing but is also
applied in banking. It is a
fundamental principle used
in assigning value and
revenue attribution to the
various business units.
Essentially, transfer
pricing in banking is the
method of assigning the
interest rate risk of the
bank to the various funding
sources and uses of the
enterprise. Thus, the bank's
corporate treasury
department will assign
funding charges to the
business units for their use
of the bank's resources when
they make loans to clients.
The treasury department will
also assign funding credit
to business units who bring
in deposits (resources) to
the bank. Although the funds
transfer pricing process is
primarily applicable to the
loans and deposits of the
various banking units, this
proactive is applied to all
assets and liabilities of
the business segment. Once
transfer pricing is applied
and any other management
accounting entries or
adjustments are posted to
the ledger (which are
usually memo accounts and
are not included in the
legal entity results), the
business units are able to
produce segment financial
results which are used by
both internal and external
users to evaluate
performance.
Resources and Continuous
Learning
There
are a variety of ways to
keep current and continue to
build one's knowledge base
in the field of management
accounting. Certified
Management Accountants
(CMA's) are required to
achieve continuing education
hours every year, similar to
a Certified Public
Accountant. A company may
also have research and
training materials available
for use in a corporate owned
library. This is more common
in "Fortune 500" companies
who have the resources to
fund this type of training
medium.
There
are also numerous journals,
on-line articles and blogs
available. Cost Management
and the Institute of
Management Accounting (IMA)
site are sources which
include Management
Accounting Quarterly and
Strategic Finance
publications. Indeed,
management accounting is
needed in an organization.
Management Accounting Tasks/
Services Provided
Listed
below are the primary tasks/
services performed by
management accountants. The
degree of complexity
relative to these activities
is dependent on the
experience level and
abilities of any one
individual.
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Variance Analysis
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Rate & Volume Analysis
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Business Metrics Development
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Price Modeling
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Product Profitability
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Geographic vs. Industry or
Client Segment Reporting
*
Sales Management Scorecards
*
Cost Analysis
*
Cost Benefit Analysis
*
Cost-Volume-Profit Analysis
*
Life cycle cost analysis
*
Client Profitability
Analysis
*
Capital Budgeting
*
Buy vs. Lease Analysis
*
Strategic Planning
*
Strategic Management Advice
*
Internal Financial
Presentation and
Communication
*
Sales and Financial
Forecasting
*
Annual Budgeting
*
Cost Allocation
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Resource Allocation and
Utilization
Related
Qualifications
There
are several related
professional qualifications
and certifications in the
field of accountancy
Other
Professional Accountancy
Qualifications
Chartered Certified
Accountant, (ACCA)
Chartered Accountant, (CA)
Certified Public Accountant,
(CPA)
American Institute of
Certified Public Accountants
Certified Practicing
Accountant (CPA Australia)
Methods
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Activity-based costing
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Lean accounting
*
Resource Consumption
Accounting
*
Standard costing
*
Throughput accounting
*
Transfer pricing
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