Financial Management for NGOs
All organizations need money.
Alongside staff, money is the one thing that takes up most management time.
Good financial management involves the following four building blocks:
1. KEEPING
RECORDS
The foundations of all accounting
are basic records that describe your earnings and spending.
This means the contracts and
letters for money you receive and the receipts and the invoices for things that
you buy.
These basic records prove that
each and every transaction has taken place. They are the cornerstones of being
accountable. You must make sure that all these records are carefully filed and
kept safe.
You must also make sure that you
write down the details of each transaction. Write them down in a 'cashbook' -
which is a list of how much you spent, on what and when. If you are keeping
your basic records in good order and writing down the details of each transaction
in a cashbook then you cannot go far wrong.
2. INTERNAL
CONTROL
Make sure that your organization
has proper controls in place so that money cannot be misused. Controls always
have to be adapted to different organizations. However, some controls that are often
used include:
·
Keeping
cash in a safe place (ideally in a bank account).
·
Making
sure that all expenditure is properly authorized.
·
Following
the budget.
·
Monitoring
how much money has been spent on what every month.
·
Employing
qualified finance staff.
·
Having
an audit every year.
·
Carrying
out a 'bank reconciliation' every month - which means checking that the amount of
cash you have in the bank is the same as the amount that your cashbook tells
you that you ought to have.
This last control is particularly
important. It proves that the amounts recorded in the cashbook and the reports
based on it are accurate.
3. BUDGETING
For good financial management,
you need to prepare accurate budgets, in order to know how much money you will
need to carry out your work. A budget is only useful if it is worked out by
carefully forecasting how much you expect to spend on your activities.
The first step in preparing a
good budget is to identify exactly what you hope to do and how you will do it.
List your activities, then plan how much they will cost and how much income
they will generate.
4. FINANCIAL
REPORTING
The fourth building block is
writing and reviewing financial reports. A financial report summarizes your income
and expenditure over a certain period of time. Financial reports are created by
adding together similar transactions. Financial reports summarize the
information held in the cashbook. This is normally done using a system of codes,
to allocate transactions to different categories.
VARE NICE
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