Accrual accounting
System of accounting where items are brought to account and included in the financial statements as they are earned or incurred, rather than as they are received or paid.
Administered items
Expenses, revenues, assets or liabilities managed by agencies on behalf of the Commonwealth. Agencies do not control administered items. Administered expenses include grants, subsidies and benefits. In many cases, administered expenses fund the delivery of third party outputs.
Additional Estimates
Where amounts appropriated at Budget time are insufficient, Parliament may appropriate more funds to portfolios through the Additional Estimates Acts.
AEIFRS
Australian Equivalents to International Financial Reporting Standards issued by the Australian Accounting Standards Board.
Appropriation
An authorisation by Parliament to spend moneys from the Consolidated Revenue Fund for a particular purpose.
Annual appropriation
Acts of Parliament, which provide appropriation for the Government's activities during a specific financial year. Three Appropriation Bills are introduced into Parliament in May and comprise the Budget. Further supplementary Bills are introduced later in the financial year as part of the Additional Estimates process. The Parliamentary Departments have their own Appropriation Bills.
Appropriation Bills (No. 3) and (No. 4)
If an amount provided in Appropriation Acts (No. 1) or (No. 2) is not enough to meet approved expenditure to be paid in a financial year, supplementary appropriation may be sought in Appropriation Bills (No. 3) or (No. 4). Once these Bills are passed by Parliament and given royal assent, they become the Appropriation Acts (No. 3) and (No. 4). However, they are also commonly referred to as the Additional Estimates Bills.
Assets
Future economic benefits controlled by an entity as a result of past transactions or other past events.
Average Staffing Level (ASL)
ASL is the average number of employees receiving salary/wages (or compensation in lieu of salary/wages) over a financial year, with adjustments for casual and part-time employees to show the full-time equivalent.
Consolidated Revenue Fund
Section 81 of the Constitution stipulates that all revenue raised or money received by the Commonwealth forms the one consolidated revenue fund (CRF). The CRF is not a bank account. The Official Public Account reflects most of the operations of the CRF.
Depreciation
Apportionment of an asset's capital value as an expense over its estimated useful life to take account of normal usage, obsolescence, or the passage of time.
Effectiveness indicators
Indicators to assess the degree of success in achieving outcomes. As outcomes are generally long-term in nature, effectiveness indicators often relate to intermediate outcomes (shorter-term impacts) below the planned outcomes specified.
Efficiency indicators
Measures the adequacy of an agency's management of its outputs (and where applicable, administered items). Includes Price, Quality and Quantity indicators. The interrelationship between the three efficiency indicators of any one output should be considered when judging efficiency.
Equity
Residual interest in the assets of an entity after deduction of its liabilities.
Estimates
Estimates are an agency's expected revenues, expenses, assets, liabilities and cash flows. They are prepared for each output in the Budget, in consultation with the Department of Finance and Administration. (See also Forward Estimates and Additional Estimates).
Expenses
Expenses represent the full costs of an activity, that is, the total value of all the resources consumed in producing goods and services or the loss of future economic benefits in the form of reductions in assets or increases in liabilities of the entity. Expenses include cash items such as salary payments as well as expenses that have been incurred, such as accruing employee entitlements that will be paid in the future.
Fair Value
Valuation methodology: the amount for which an asset could be exchanged or a liability settled between knowledgeable, willing parties in an arm's length transaction.
Financial Management and Accountability Act 1997 (FMA ACT)
The principal legislation governing the proper use and management of public money and public property, and other Commonwealth resources. FMA Regulations and FMA Orders are made pursuant to the Act.
Forward Estimates
The financial statement estimate for the three outyears after the Budget year.
Grants
Non-reciprocal transfers of economic resources, where the payer agency does not receive approximately equal value in return.
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Groups
See Output Groups.
Intermediate outcomes
More specific medium-term impacts (for example, trend data, targets or milestones) below the level of the planned outcomes specified in the Budget. A combination of several intermediate outcomes can at times be considered as a proxy for determining the achievement of outcomes or progress towards outcomes. (See also Outcomes)
Measure
Decision by the Cabinet or Ministers that has been finalised since the 2008–09 Budget, which has a financial impact in the Budget or forward years.
Operating result
Equals revenue less expenses.
Outcomes
The Government's objectives in each portfolio area. Outcomes are desired results, impacts or consequences for the Australian community as influenced by the actions of the Australian Government. Actual outcomes are assessments of the end results or impacts actually achieved.
Output groups
A logical aggregation of agency outputs, where useful, and based either on homogeneity, type of product, business line or beneficiary target group. Aggregation of outputs may also be needed for the provision of adequate information for performance monitoring, or based on a materiality test.
Outputs
The goods and services produced by agencies on behalf of Government for external organisations or individuals. Outputs also include goods and services for other areas of government external to the agency.
Performance indicators
Qualitative and quantitative measures of an output which provide a guide on performance where direct causal links are not obvious and changes in performance are difficult to measure directly.
Performance Information
Evidence about performance that is collected and used systematically. Evidence may relate to appropriateness, effectiveness and efficiency. It may be about outcomes, factors that affect outcomes, and what can be done to improve them.
Price
One of the three key efficiency indicators. The amount the Government or the community pays for the delivery of agreed outputs.
Quality
One of the three key efficiency indicators. Relates to the characteristics by which customers or stakeholders judge an organisation, product or service. Assessment of quality involves use of information gathered from interested parties to identify differences between users' expectations and experiences.
Quantity
One of the three key efficiency indicators. Examples include: the size of an output; count or volume measures; how many or how much.
Receipts
The total or gross amount received by the Commonwealth. Each receipt item is either revenue, an offset within outlays, or financing transactions. Receipts include taxes, interest, charges for goods and services, borrowings and Government Business Enterprise dividends received.
Revenue
Total value of resources earned or received to cover the production of goods and services.
Special Account
Balances existing within the Consolidated Revenue Fund (CRF) that are supported by standing appropriations (Financial Management and Accountability Act 1997 (FMA Act), ss.20 and 21). Special Accounts allow money in the CRF to be acknowledged as set aside (hypothecated) for a particular purpose. Amounts credited to a Special Account may only be spent for the purposes of the Special Account. Special Accounts can only be established by a written determination of the Finance Minister (s.20 FMA Act) or through an Act of Parliament (referred to in s.21 of the FMA Act).
Special Appropriations (including Standing Appropriations)
An amount of money appropriated by a particular Act of Parliament for a specific purpose and number of years. For Special Appropriations, the authority to withdraw funds from the Consolidated Revenue Fund does not generally cease at the end of the financial year.
Standing Appropriations are a sub-category consisting of ongoing Special Appropriations. The amount appropriated will depend on circumstances specified in the legislation.