Characteristics of Managerial Accounting
1.1 Characteristics of Managerial Accounting
🧭 Overview
🧠 One-sentence thesis
Managerial accounting provides detailed, forward-looking, and segment-specific information to help managers plan and control operations, unlike financial accounting which focuses on historical, GAAP-compliant reports for external users.
📌 Key points (3–5)
- Managerial vs financial accounting: managerial accounting serves internal managers with future projections and detailed segments; financial accounting serves external users with historical, GAAP-compliant statements.
- Planning function: managers establish goals and communicate them through budgets (profit plans, capital budgets, cash flow budgets).
- Control function: managers evaluate whether plans were implemented effectively by comparing actual results to budgets.
- Common confusion: not all accounting reports are the same—quarterly projections by division and defect percentages are managerial; income statements and balance sheets prepared under GAAP are financial.
- Why it matters: effective planning and control using managerial accounting can be critical to organizational survival in today's business environment.
🔍 Distinguishing managerial from financial accounting
📊 Core differences
| Characteristic | Managerial Accounting | Financial Accounting |
|---|---|---|
| Audience | Internal managers | External owners/stakeholders |
| Time focus | Future projections | Historical information |
| Detail level | Segments, divisions, departments | Whole organization |
| Rules | No required format | Must follow U.S. GAAP |
| Frequency | As needed (e.g., monthly, quarterly) | Annual/quarterly standard reports |
🧩 Examples from the excerpt
Managerial accounting reports include:
- Projected net income for next quarter by division (future + segment-specific)
- Defective goods as percentage of all goods produced (nonfinancial detailed measure)
- Monthly sales broken down by geographic region (detailed + frequent)
- Production department budget for next quarter (future projection + segment)
Financial accounting reports include:
- Income statement for current year prepared in accordance with U.S. GAAP (historical + compliant)
- Balance sheet at end of current year prepared in accordance with U.S. GAAP (historical + compliant)
⚠️ Don't confuse
The same organization uses both types of accounting, but for different purposes. A balance sheet goes to owners; a departmental budget goes to managers planning operations.
📋 Planning function
🎯 What planning means
Planning is the process of establishing goals and communicating these goals to employees of the organization.
- Organizations formalize plans by creating budgets.
- A budget is a series of reports used to quantify an organization's plans for the future.
- Planning is not just "hoping it works out"—it involves projecting needs and scheduling resources.
📑 Types of budgets
The excerpt identifies several budget forms:
- Budgeted income statement: indicates a profit plan for the future
- Capital budget: shows long-term investments planned for the future
- Cash flow budget: outlines cash inflows and outflows for the future
💼 Real-world planning example
The excerpt describes Ernst & Young (an international accounting firm):
- Creates a budget indicating labor hours required to perform specific services for each client
- Projects future staffing needs based on these budgets
- Hires accounting staff based on projections
- Schedules staff required for each client
Example: An organization might budget that a project will require 100 labor hours next quarter, then hire and schedule staff accordingly rather than reacting after the fact.
🎛️ Control function
🔎 What control means
The control function is the process of evaluating whether the organization's plans were implemented effectively.
- Control happens after plans are implemented.
- It often leads to recommendations for the future.
- Many organizations compare actual results with the initial plan (budget) to evaluate performance.
🔄 How control works in practice
The excerpt illustrates the control process using Ernst & Young:
- Planning phase: Create a budget indicating labor hours needed to perform tax services for a client
- Implementation: Perform the work
- Control phase: Compare actual labor hours used to budgeted labor hours
- Evaluation: Assess whether employees completed work within budgeted time
- Recommendations: Might include adding more labor hours to future budgets or obtaining better support documents from the client
🔗 Planning and control together
- The two functions work as a continuous cycle.
- Control evaluates the plan's implementation and generates insights for future planning.
- The excerpt emphasizes that in today's business environment, effective planning and control can be "the key to survival."
Example: If a personal budget (planning) allocates a certain amount for food expenses, the control function at month-end compares actual food spending to the budget, identifies deviations, and helps adjust future budgets or spending behavior.