Role and Effects of Budgeting in Managerial Practice
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- $25.99
Publisher Description
Budgeting is a major area of management accounting and receives a lot of interest from
researchers who mainly concentrate their studies on the design of budget schemes and the
process of setting budgets. Concerning the use in practice, a survey of senior managers in 219
publicly traded firms indicated that “75 percent thought of the budgetary process as a managerial
rather than an accounting function” (Zimmerman, 2009, p. 250). However, the effects of budgets
and budget processes on managerial performance and effort are still not clear.
This paper aims at providing an overview of a collection of recent research papers to investigate
how different types of budgets influence managerial behavior and performance and what
implications these findings have for managerial practice. Therefore, in the first section the general
role of budgeting in organizations will be described. Next, different types of budgets and budget
levels are introduced and their effects on managerial behavior and performance will be examined.
Finally, several implications of those effects for managerial practice will be given, before a
conclusion wraps up the main points of this report.