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Presupuesto

Un presupuesto es un plan de cálculo , generalmente pero no siempre financiero , para un período definido , a menudo un año o un mes. Un presupuesto puede incluir volúmenes de ventas e ingresos previstos , cantidades de recursos, incluidos tiempo, costos y gastos , impactos ambientales como emisiones de gases de efecto invernadero, otros impactos, activos , pasivos y flujos de efectivo . Empresas, gobiernos, familias y otras organizaciones utilizan los presupuestos para expresar planes estratégicos de actividades en términos mensurables. [1]

Elaborar un presupuesto permite a empresas , autoridades , entidades privadas o familias establecer prioridades y evaluar la consecución de sus objetivos. Para lograr estos objetivos puede ser necesario incurrir en déficit (los gastos superan a los ingresos) o, por el contrario, puede ser posible ahorrar, en cuyo caso el presupuesto presentará un superávit (los ingresos superan a los gastos).

En el ámbito del comercio, un presupuesto también es un documento o informe que detalla el costo que tendrá un servicio en caso de realizarse. Quien realiza el presupuesto debe ceñirse al mismo y no puede modificarlo si el cliente acepta el servicio.

Un presupuesto expresa los gastos previstos junto con propuestas sobre cómo cubrirlos con recursos. Un presupuesto puede expresar un superávit , que proporciona recursos para su uso en el futuro , o un déficit en el que los gastos superan los ingresos u otros recursos.

Como Sísifo – Honoré Daumier (Museo de Brooklyn)

Gobierno

El presupuesto de un gobierno es un resumen o plan de los recursos previstos (a menudo, pero no siempre, de impuestos) y gastos de ese gobierno. Hay tres tipos de presupuestos gubernamentales: el presupuesto operativo o corriente, el presupuesto de capital o inversión y el presupuesto de efectivo o flujo de efectivo. [2]

Por país

Estados Unidos

El presupuesto federal es preparado por la Oficina de Gestión y Presupuesto y presentado al Congreso para su consideración. Invariablemente, el Congreso realiza muchos y sustanciales cambios. A casi todos los estados americanos se les exige tener presupuestos equilibrados , pero al gobierno federal se le permite tener déficits. [3]

India

The budget is prepared by the Budget Division Department of Economic Affairs of the Ministry of Finance annually. The Finance Minister is the head of the budget making committee. The present Indian Finance minister is Nirmala Sitharaman. The Budget includes supplementary excess grants and when a proclamation by the President as to failure of Constitutional machinery is in operation in relation to a State or a Union Territory, preparation of the Budget of such State.[citation needed]The first budget of India was submitted on 18 February 1860 by James Wilson. P C Mahalanobis is known as the father of Indian budget.

Philippines

The Philippine budget is considered the most complicated in the world, incorporating multiple approaches in one single budget system: line-item (budget execution), performance (budget accountability), and zero-based budgeting. The Department of Budget and Management (DBM) prepares the National Expenditure Program and forwards it to the Committee on Appropriations of the House of Representatives to come up with a General Appropriations Bill (GAB). The GAB will go through budget deliberations and voting; the same process occurs when the GAB is transmitted to the Philippine Senate.

After both houses of Congress approves the GAB, the President signs the bill into a General Appropriations Act (GAA); also, the President may opt to veto the GAB and have it returned to the legislative branch or leave the bill unsigned for 30 days and lapse into law. There are two types of budget bill veto: the line-item veto and the veto of the whole budget.[4]

Personal

A personal budget or home budget is a finance plan that allocates future personal income towards expenses, savings and debt repayment. Past spending and personal debt are considered when creating a personal budget. There are several methods and tools available for creating, using, and adjusting a personal budget. For example, jobs are an income source, while bills and rent payments are expenses. A third category (other than income and expenses) may be assets (such as property, investments, or other savings or value) representing a potential reserve for funds in case of budget shortfalls.

Corporate budget

The budget of a business, division, or corporation[5][6][1][7]is a financial forecast for the near-term future, usually the next accounting period, aggregating the expected revenues and expenses of the various departments – operations, human resources, IT, etc. It is thus a key element in integrated business planning, with measurable targets correspondingly devolved to departmental managers (and becoming KPIs[1]); budgets may then also specify non-cash resources, such as staff or time.[1]

The budgeting process requires considerable effort,[5] often involving dozens of staff; final sign-off resides with both the financial director and operations director. The responsibility usually sits within the company's financial management area in general, sometimes, specifically in "FP&A". Professionals employed in this role are often designated "Budget Analyst",[8] a specialized financial analyst function.

Organisations may produce [7] functional budgets, relating to activities, and / or cash budgets, focused on receipts and payments. Incremental budgeting starts with the budget from the previous period, while under zero-based budgeting activities/costs are included only if justified. Under all approaches expected sales or revenue, is typically the starting point; [7] this will be based on the business' planning for the period in question. Directly related elements and costs are typically linked to these (activity based costing may be employed).Support and management functions may be revisited, and the resultant "fixed" costs, such as rent and payroll, will be adjusted, at a minimum, for inflation. Capital expenditure, both new investments and maintenance, may be budgeted separately; debt servicing and repayments likewise. The master budget [7] aggregates these all. See Financial forecast, Cash flow forecast, Financial modeling § Accounting.

Whereas the budget is typically compiled on an annual basis - although, e.g. in mining,[9] this may be quarterly - the monitoring is ongoing, with financial and operational adjustments (or interventions) made as warranted; see Financial risk management § Corporate finance for further discussion. Here, [7] if the actual figures delivered come close to those budgeted, this suggests that managers understand their business and have been successful in delivering. On the other hand, if the figures diverge this sends an "out of control" signal; additionally, the share price could suffer where these figures have been communicated to analysts.

Criticism is sometimes directed at the nature of budgeting, and its impact on the organization.[10][11]Additional to the cost in time and resources, two phenomena are identified as problematic: First, it is suggested that managers will often "game the system" in specifying targets that are easily attainable, and / or in asking for more resources than required, [7] such that the required resources will be budgeted as a compromise. A second observation is that managers' thinking may emphasize short term, operational thinking at the expense of a long term and strategic perspective, particularly when [12] bonus payments are linked to budget. See Strategic planning § Strategic planning vs. financial planning.

Types of budgets

References

  1. ^ a b c d "CIMA Official Terminology" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-08-10.
  2. ^ Cliche, P. (2012). "Budget", in L. Côté and J.-F. Savard (eds.), Encyclopedic Dictionary of Public Administration, [online], http://www.dictionnaire.enap.ca/Dictionnaire/en/home.aspx Archived 2012-11-05 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ "Constitutional Balanced Budget Amendment Poses Serious Risks". Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. Retrieved 2022-07-13.
  4. ^ "§015l. (CB) Line Item Veto". Budget Counsel. 2016-11-15. Retrieved 2022-07-13.
  5. ^ a b Jonas Elmerraji (2021). How Budgeting Works for Companies, investopedia.com
  6. ^ Edriaan Koening (N.D.) What is Corporate Budgeting?, chron.com
  7. ^ a b c d e f Rosemarie Kelly (2019). "Budgeting" Institute of Certified Public Accountants in Ireland
  8. ^ Budget Analysts Archived 2020-11-09 at the Wayback Machine, Bureau of Labor Statistics
  9. ^ Mining Financial Basics
  10. ^ Loren Gary (2003). Why Budgeting Kills Your Company, Harvard Management Update, May 2003.
  11. ^ Michael Jensen (2001). Corporate Budgeting Is Broken, Let's Fix It, Harvard Business Review, pp. 94-101, November 2001.
  12. ^ "Bonuses: Short-Term Incentives". Retrieved from www.businessballs.com
  13. ^ Мarynchak, Yevhеn (2019). THE FINANCIAL NEXUS BETWEEN AN INDIVIDUAL AND A STATE. PUBLIC FINANCE: LEGAL ASPECTS: Collective monograph. Riga: Baltija Publishing. p. 130. ISBN 9789934571824. Archived from the original on 2022-01-03. Retrieved 2022-01-09.

External links