Victoria University Professional and Executive Development
Rutherford House, 23 Lambton Quay, Wellington City
Full Day 9:00am - 4:30pm
$675.00 Early Bird Discount available until 28 days prior to the course start date $607.50 excl GST
Overview: The art of finance can be daunting to the uninitiated manager. This practical one-day course provides you with a sound grounding in the fundamentals of finance in the public sector.
Who Should Attend: Public sector managers who work in government departments; crown entities or non-governmental organisations that interact with the Government and require an understanding of government information and processes.
Learning Objectives: * Learn key concepts underpinning the financial management system and how these provide the framework for financial recommendations in policy initiatives. Understand the accountability framework. * Understand the roles of the Treasury, Ministers, auditors, Select Committees in the accountability cycle. * Learn about the context within which staff are empowered to expend resources. * Examine art of accounting - the terminology, and how the numbers are built on assumptions, estimates and biases and the difference between accrual and cash reporting. * Learn the difference between operating and capital expenditure and the importance of depreciation and the cost of capital. * Gain familiarity with accrual information and how to use it to understand the performance of your public sector organisation.
Course Outline: * Understanding the concepts * The Government - what types of entities? * Concepts underlying the Government's financial system: o Purchase/ownership o Inputs, outputs, outcomes o Departmental/non-departmental o Capital/expense. * The accountability framework * Understanding financial information: o Accounting reports and how they can help you manage your resources. * Using accounting concepts to help you manage: what needs to be included in the costing for policy proposals and/or how to manage a budget o What are accruals? o Concepts - revenue and expenses, assets, liabilities o Importance of accounting policies o Depreciation, provisions and capital charge o Cost allocation o Reporting standards * Incentive effects in reporting o How does accounting information affect behaviour?
Course Format: This course emphasises the practical application of the financial concepts covered. Real-world examples will be used.