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Accounting 4570/5570
Chapter 14 - International Budgeting and Performance Evaluation
Overview
• Strategic Control Process– Strategy - decisions about which businesses to
be in, where to locate operations, and how to be competitive as well as the firm’s response to changes in the global business environment
– Setting Objectives • Choosing a suitable target varies among countries
• Best measures are those which focus on the purpose for which the business unit is intended
Common Performance Measures
• Return on investment (ROI)
• Sales
• Cost reduction
• Quality targets
• Market share
• Profitability
• Budget to actual
Research on Performance Evaluation
• Most foreign subsidiaries evaluated on the same basis as domestic subsidiaries
• U.S. firms - ROI most used
• U. K. firms - Comparison to budget and ROI
• Japanese firms - other measures than ROI; particularly sales, sales volume, and long-term measures. ROI generally not important.
Research on Performance Evaluation
• ROI - highly criticized due to potential suboptimization
• Nearly all MNEs used some supplementary device to gauge foreign subsidiaries’ performance
• Most widely used supplementary measure - comparison to budget
Practical Suggestions on Performance Evaluation
• Evaluate foreign subsidiaries on how well they are meeting their intended purpose
• Separate the evaluation of the manager and the overall subsidiary performance
• Include translation adjustments only if manager has authority to hedge
• Compare performance with plan
• Method of evaluation should be understood by the foreign managers
Budget Process
• Formal or informal process?
• Who participates?
• Style of communication? (formal vs. informal)
• How are objectives set?
• Should budgeting process differ for foreign subsidiaries?
• Time period covered? (Short versus long-term?)
• Financial or nonfinancial objectives? Or both?
• How does volatility in the industry/country affect the budget?
Studies on Budgeting
• Top-level Mexican managers generally liked to participate in budget process
• However, lower-level Mexican managers did not like to participate
• Mexican managers of entirely foreign-owned subsidiaries did not like to participate due to feeling powerless.
• Australian and Singaporean managers preferred to participate in budget process
Studies on Budgeting
• Japanese used budgets to plan increased sales volume
• Japanese budgets prepared and used in a more timely manner
• American managers more likely to participate and be evaluated and compensated by budgets
Interaction of Culture and Geographic Distance
• Hassel and Cunningham (2004) studied how the combination of culture and geographic distance (psychic distance) influence the budgeting process.– Subsidiaries that are culturally similar and geographical
close (low psychic distance) tend to show greater financial performance than budget
– Subsidiaries that are culturally distinctive and located far away (high psychic distance) will show weaker financial performance than budget
Problems Related to International Business in Budgeting
• Enhanced coordination and communication• Foreign currency reporting
– Which currency to use• Difficult for top management to interpret statements
outside their domestic currency
– Responsibility for forex translation gains/losses
– Authority for hedging?• Do we want the subsidiary to think in terms of the parent
company profitability?
Problems Related to International Business in Budgeting
• Degree of Autonomy• Purpose of subsidiary• Should externalities in the foreign country (wars,
disasters, government intervention) be included?• Exchange Rates to use
– Actual rate at time budget is prepared
– Projected rate at time budget is prepared
– Actual exchange rate at end of period
Exchange Rates
• Exhibit 14.4, page 392– A1, P2, E3 only combination that eliminates all
exchange rate variances
• Exhibit 14.5, page 393 survey shows how many companies use the different exchange rate combinations.– P2 (same rate used = projected exchange rate at
time of budget) most common– P3 second most common
Other Issues
• Capital Budgeting - consider the risk factor of foreign currency exchange in discount rates and cash flows
Intracorporate Transfer Pricing
• Definition
• Theoretical price: Costs incurred + lost contribution margin
• Perfect market conditions– Market price charged if producing at full capacity– Variable costs charged if producing at less than
full capacity– Real world: Price somewhere between the two
Intracorporate Transfer Pricing
• International Complications– Taxes– Competition– Import duties– National controls (currency rationing, limits on
amount of cash taken out of country)– Profitability of subsidiary– Local partners– Exhibit 14.8, page 401
Overhead Allocation
• Cross-national allocation of overhead and expenses– Behavioral issues
– Foreign issues• Foreign currency translation
• Taxation
• Lessons from the Japanese– Cost drivers
– Motivation to reduce costs
Costing Issues
• Role of management accounting in corporate strategy
• Standard Costing - should same standards or procedures be used throughout the world or should they be tailored to individual locations?
Emerging Trends in Performance Evaluation
• Focus of evaluation shifted to strategic business units (SBUs)
• More use of ratios
• More use of cash flows
• More use of non-financial criteria
• Economic Value Added (EVA)
• Balanced Scorecard
Economic Value Added (EVA)
• EVA = [ROIC – WACC] x AIC– ROIC = Return on invested capital (operating
profit minus cash taxes paid)– WACC = after-tax weighted average cost of
capital– AIC = average invested capital = average
stockholders’ equity + average debt
EVA
• Positive EVA requires that a company earn a return on its assets that exceeds the cost of debt and equity.
• It is an actual monetary amount of value added.
• It measures changes in value for a period.
Balanced Scorecard
• Approach to performance measurement that links the strategic and financial perspectives of a business
• Four perspectives:– Financial measures– Customer measures– Internal business processes– Learning and growth
Cases
• Korean Subsidiary (Exercises 1-2)
• Lucas Inc. (Exercises 3-5)
• Uplift International Ltd. (Exercise 10)
• Niessen Apparel (website)
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