Accounting & Bookkeeping

What is Management Accounting?

The process of preparing financial and non-financial reports for internal managers to aid in decision-making, planning, and performance control.

How It Works

Management Accounting (also called Managerial Accounting) provides information specifically for internal decision-makers — unlike financial accounting which serves external stakeholders. It includes budgeting, cost analysis, variance analysis, break-even analysis, capital budgeting, and performance measurement. Management accounts are not governed by accounting standards (no Ind AS/IFRS rules), can be prepared at any frequency, include forward-looking estimates, and can use non-financial metrics (customer satisfaction, employee turnover, production efficiency).

Real-World Example

Monthly Management Report for CEO includes: Revenue vs Budget (₹45L actual vs ₹50L budget = 10% shortfall), Gross margin by product line (Product A: 65%, Product B: 35% — consider discontinuing B), Cash runway (4.5 months at current burn rate), Customer acquisition cost trend (₹2,500 → ₹3,100 over 3 months — investigate), and Headcount vs plan (85 actual vs 90 budgeted — 5 open positions).

Why It Matters

1

Ensures accurate financial reporting and record-keeping

2

Helps maintain regulatory and tax compliance

3

Enables better-informed business decisions

4

Improves operational efficiency and cash flow management

Frequently Asked Questions

How is management accounting different from financial accounting?

Financial accounting: mandatory, follows standards (Ind AS), annual/quarterly, historical, for external stakeholders (investors, banks, tax). Management accounting: optional, no standards, any frequency, includes forecasts, for internal managers. Financial tells 'what happened'; Management tells 'why it happened and what to do next'.

What are the most important management accounting reports?

Top 5: 1) Monthly P&L with budget variance, 2) Cash flow forecast (13-week rolling), 3) Product/service profitability analysis, 4) Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) dashboard, 5) Working capital report (DSO, DPO, inventory days). Frequency depends on business stage — startups need weekly; mature businesses monthly.

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