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Chapter 1 Michael H. Granof Saleha B. Khumawala Granof & Khumawala -6e Government and Not-for-Profit Accounting: Concepts and Practices, 6e 1 Granof & Khumawala -6e The Government and Not-for-Profit Environment Chapter 1 CHAPTER 1 2 “Service to others is the rent you pay for your room here on earth.” Mohammed Ali Granof & Khumawala -6e “We make a living by what we get. We make a life by what we give.” Winston Churchill Chapter 1 Thoughts to Ponder: Chapter 1 3 Learning Objectives • Identify the features that distinguish governments from notfor-profits. Granof & Khumawala -6e • Understand the characteristics that distinguish governments and not-for-profit organizations from businesses (for-profit entities). Chapter 1 After studying Chapter 1, you should be able to: • Identify authoritative bodies responsible for setting GAAP and financial reporting standards for different governmental and not-for-profit entities. 4 (1) State and local governments (2) Not-for-profit organizations (3) The federal government • Distinguish Management Discussion & Analysis (MD&A), basic financial statements, and Required Supplementary Information (RSI) of state and local governments in their comprehensive annual financial reports (CAFR). Granof & Khumawala -6e • Compare and contrast the objectives of financial reporting for: Chapter 1 Learning Objectives, continued 5 Granof & Khumawala -6e • No direct and proportional relationship between resources provided and the benefits received. • Absence of a profit motive. • Absence of transferable ownership rights. • Collective ownership by constituents. • Policy-setting process. Chapter 1 How Do Governmental and Not-For-Profit Organizations differ from Business Organizations? 6 How Do Governmental and Not-For-Profit Organizations differ from Business Organizations? – Cont’d • Ensure inter-period equity for most GNPs. • Revenues may not be linked to constituent demand or satisfaction. • No direct link between revenues and expenses. • The matching concept has different meaning for governments and not-for-profits. Granof & Khumawala -6e o Budget is the culmination of the political process. o The budget is the key fiscal document. Chapter 1 • For GNP entities, budget is very important. 7 How Do Governmental and Not-For-Profit Organizations differ from Business Organizations? –Cont’d • No distinguished ownership interests. • Less distinction between internal and external accounting and reporting. Granof & Khumawala -6e o Example: Federal government grants for low-income housing; a state’s gasoline tax may be targeted by law at highway construction and maintenance. Chapter 1 • Restriction on assets for particular activities and purposes. 8 Power ultimately rests in the hands of the people. Citizens vote and delegate that power to elected officials. Different mission. Exercise their sovereign power to collect taxes. Created by and accountable to a higher level government. • Different reporting objectives. Granof & Khumawala -6e • • • • • Chapter 1 How Do Governmental and Not-For-Profit Organizations differ from Business Organizations? –Cont’d 9 Objectives of Financial Reporting State and Local Governments (SLGs) • Remember: o Financial statements are a report of the past; your focus must be on the future. o One main objective of financial analysis is to derive the economic substance of a transaction from the data provided in the financial statements. Then, it is up to you to recast the data in a form that best facilitates the decisions that you must make. Granof & Khumawala -6e o Compare actual results with the budget. o Assist in determining compliance. o Assist in evaluating efficiency & effectiveness. o Assess financial condition and results of operations . Chapter 1 • Financial reports are used primarily to: 10 o What do we mean by accountability? o How does “interperiod equity” relate to accountability? These questions are very important! Granof & Khumawala -6e • “ACCOUNTABILITY is the cornerstone of all financial reporting in government,” (GASB Concepts Statement No. 1, par. 56). • Please see the summary of Concepts Statement 1. Chapter 1 Objectives of Financial Reporting State and Local Governments (SLGs) 11 Objectives of Financial Reporting State and Local Governments (SLGs) Granof & Khumawala -6e • Accountability arises from the citizens’ “right to know.” • It imposes a duty on public officials to be accountable to citizens for raising public monies and how they are spent. Chapter 1 What is accountability? 12 Objectives of Financial Reporting State and Local Governments (SLGs) • It is important to understand this concept of “interperiod equity”! Granof & Khumawala -6e o Interperiod equity is a government’s obligation to disclose whether current-year revenues were sufficient to pay for current-year benefits—or did current citizens defer payments to future taxpayers? Chapter 1 • How does “interperiod equity” relate to accountability? 13 Objectives of Financial Reporting State and Local Governments (SLGs) o Internal users (management), and o External users Granof & Khumawala -6e • Federal Accounting Standards Advisory Board (FASAB)’s standards are targeted at both: Chapter 1 • Accountability is also the foundation of Federal government financial reporting 14 Composition of the Local U.S. Government Entities Based on 2012 Census Special districts, 37,203 Municipalities, 19,522 Towns/ townships, 16,364 Granof & Khumawala -6e Chapter 1 Counties, 3,031 School districts, 12,884 15 Importance of the NFP Sector Giving 2011: Individuals contribution (73%) Charitable bequests (8%) Foundations (14%) Corporate (5%) 211.77 billion 22.83 billion 41 billion 15.29 billion Granof & Khumawala -6e Number of not-for-profit organizations 2.2 million Total nonprofit sector revenues (2009) $1.87 trillion Annual contributions from private sources (2011) $347 billion Percentage of wages and salaries paid in the US(2010) 9% Chapter 1 Size and Scope 2009-2011: 16 Sources of GAAP and Authoritative Bodies Authoritative Bodies: • GASB – Governmental Accounting Standards Board o Governmental entities: ex. New York City, Atlanta, Harris County o Governmental not-for-profits: ex. University of Houston • FASAB – Federal Accounting Standards Advisory Board o Federal Government and its agencies: o Ex. Department of Defense, Department of Transportation, Department of Energy, Department of Education, Department of Agriculture, HUD, HHS and others. Granof & Khumawala -6e o Business organizations: ex. Wal-Mart, Exxon o Nongovernmental not-for-profits: ex. Rice University, o American Cancer Society Chapter 1 • FASB – Financial Accounting Standards Board 17 Who are the users of financial reports? • • • • • Investors and creditors Citizens and organizational members Donors and Grantors Regulatory Agencies Employees and other constituents Granof & Khumawala -6e o The prime recipients of the report, because they approve budgets, major purchases, contracts and significant operating policies. Chapter 1 • Governing Boards 18 Paper generated text financial statements PDF Internet- HTML or PDF XBRL (eXtensible Business Reporting Language) Granof & Khumawala -6e • • • • Chapter 1 Several forms of Financial Reporting 19 General Purpose External Financial Reports (SLGs) Fund financial statements Required supplementary information (other than MD&A) Granof & Khumawala -6e Government-wide financial statements Chapter 1 Management's discussion and analysis Notes to the financial statements 20 Source: GASB Statement 34 Basic Financial Statements Governmentwide Financial Statements Fund Financial Statements Notes to the Financial Statements Summary <------------------------------> Detail Granof & Khumawala -6e Management’s Discussion and Analysis Chapter 1 Components of the Annual Financial Report 21 Comprehensive Annual Financial Report (CAFR) • Recommended, but not mandatory Granof & Khumawala -6e • Introductory section • Financial section • Statistical section Chapter 1 • Three Sections: 22 Title page Contents page Letter of transmittal Other (as desired by management) • You can view online the City of Houston’s Annual Reports for the years 2012, 2011, and other years at the following link: http://www.houstontx.gov/controller/cafr.html Granof & Khumawala -6e • • • • Chapter 1 CAFR - Introductory Section 23 Granof & Khumawala -6e • The Government Finance Officers Association (GFOA) of the United States and Canada awarded a Certificate of Achievement for Excellence in Financial Reporting Program (CAFR Program) to the City of Houston for its CAFR for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2011. • The Certificate of Achievement is a prestigious national award-recognizing conformance with the highest standards for preparation of state and local government financial reports. Chapter 1 Award from the GFOA 24 Auditor’s report MD&A Basic Financial Statements Required Supplementary Information RSI (Other than MD&A) • Combining the individual fund statements and schedules • Remember GASB Statement No. 34 is the Reporting Model that SLGs have to follow. Granof & Khumawala -6e • • • • Chapter 1 CAFR—Financial Section (GASB Statement No. 34) 25 Brief objective narrative providing management’s analysis of the government’s financial performance This is basically “Tell it like it is.” Granof & Khumawala -6e Chapter 1 Management’s Discussion and Analysis (MD&A) 26 Granof & Khumawala -6e • Government-wide Financial Statements o Statement of Net Position o Statement of Activities • Fund Financial Statements (see next slide) • Notes to the Financial Statements • The Government-wide Financial Statements are the TWO additional F/S required under GASB 34. Chapter 1 Basic Financial Statements 27 Fund Financial Statements • Proprietary-type Funds o Statement of Net Position o Statement of Revenues, Expenses, and Changes in Fund Net Position o Statement of Cash Flows • Fiduciary-type Funds Granof & Khumawala -6e o Balance Sheet o Statement of Revenues, Expenditures, and Changes in Fund Balances - Governmental Funds and a schedule of reconciliation Chapter 1 • Governmental-type Funds o Statement of Fiduciary Net Position o Statement of Changes in Fiduciary Net Position 28 CAFR – Statistical Section Granof & Khumawala -6e Chapter 1 Tables and charts showing multiple-year trends in financial and socioeconomic information 29 • Chapter 2 explains the concept of fund accounting. Granof & Khumawala -6e • Fund accounting reports financial information for separate self-balancing sets of accounts, segregated for separate purposes or to account for resources restricted as to use by donors or grantors • Funds are separate accounting and fiscal entities Chapter 1 Fund Accounting 30 In this course you will become familiar with current GASB, FASB, and FASAB standards related to governmental and not-for-profit organizations. • Accounting and reporting for governmental and notfor-profit entities differ from those of for-profit entities because each type of entity has a different mission and reporting objectives. Granof & Khumawala -6e • Chapter 1 Summary 31