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The principal goal of this paper is to review recent studies on small and medium sized companies in order to concentrate on the main critical issues of SMEs financial management. There are three core elements of financial management: (1) the question of liquidity management and cash flow management. Cash is company's most precious nonhuman asset. (2) The question of long term asset acquisition-which directs the long term course of business. (3) Questions of funding, capital structure and cost of funding. The most imminent question is the liquidity management. A business will never see the long term if it cannot plan an appropriate policy to effectively manage its working capital. Generally, the poor financial management of owner-managers is the main cause underlying the problems of SMEs.
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European Research Studies,
Volume XVI, Special Issue on SMEs, 2013
Financial Management in SMEs
Irena Jindrichovska1
Abstract:
The principal goal of this paper is to review recent studies on small and medium
sized companies in order to concentrate on the main critical issues of SMEs financial
management. There are three core elements of financial management: (1) the question of
liquidity management and cash flow management. Cash is company’s most precious
nonhuman asset. (2) The question of long term asset acquisition which directs the long
term course of business. (3) Questions of funding, capital structure and cost of funding. The
most imminent question is the liquidity management. A business will never see the long term
if it cannot plan an appropriate policy to effectively manage its working capital. Generally,
the poor financial management of owner-managers is the main cause underlying the
problems of SMEs.
Key Words: SMEs, Financial Management, Liquidity Management, Capital Structure,
Financial Failure
JEL Classification: O16, M14, G31, P34
1 Senior Lecturer in Finance and Accounting, Department of Business Economics, Faculty of Economic
Studies, University of Finance and Administration, Estonská 500, Prague, Czech Republic, tel. 777 818
660, e-mail irena.jindrichovska@mail.vsem.cz.
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1. Introduction
Many people who start to run a business do not engage themselves in
financial matters. The reason may be because they do not have enough knowledge or
interest in recording transactions, preparation and analysis of financial statements
and secondary they are extremely involved in other aspects of business like
managing people, sales purchasing and production. These entrepreneurs rely on their
accountants to run the financial side of their business.
While financial management is a critical element of the management of a
business as a whole, within this function the management of its assets is perhaps the
most important. In the long term, the purchase of assets directs the course that the
business will take during the life of these assets, but the business will never see the
long term if it cannot plan an appropriate policy to effectively manage its working
capital. In effect the poor financial management of owner-managers or lack of
financial management altogether is the main cause underlying the problems in SME
financial management.
A great many small businesses fail not because the owner does a poor job or
provides an inferior service, but because their firm is not run like a business. Most
small business people only know one-half of what it takes to succeed. The part they
are missing is how to manage and grow their business. Small business owners that
succeed in this part learn these issues while working or they already have the
knowledge.
2. Previous literature on finance in small business
Literature on small firms’ financial management is quite voluminous and it
concentrates on different aspects of firm’s management. For this research paper we
have selected just a few studies from the recent period concentrating predominantly
on various issues of financial management and small firms’ strategy. The following
table summarizes studies across the globe and points out the main point of interest.
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Table 1. Literature on small firms’ financial management
Author(s) (year) Country Research question
McNamara (1988) Australia Small enterprise failure
Hall and Young (1991) UK Voluntary liquidation
Peel and Wilson (1996) UK Capital budgeting
McMahon (1998, 2000
and 2001)
Australia Determining characteristics of
enterprise growth. Stage model
Michaelas and
Chittenden, (1999)
UK Financial structure
Robson and Bennett
(2000)
UK Influence of external advice and
business collaborations
Klapper, Sarria-Allende
and Sulla (2002)
Eastern Europe Financing patterns of SMEs in
Eastern Europe
More innovative firms, small SME
sector in every country
Rutherford, Muse and
Oswald (2006)
US Development model of family
business
García-Teruel and
Martínez-Solano (2007).
Spain Working capital and profitability
Escribá-Esteve, Sánchez-
Peinado, L. and Sánchez-
Peinado, E. (2008)
Spain Strategic orientation and
performance
Juan García-Teruel and
Martínez-Solano (2010)
Europe Trade credit granted and received,
alternative sources of financing
Struhařová (2010) Czech Republic Effect of the shift from Financial
Reporting under the CZ GAAP to
the IFRS and impact on
management practices
Czarnitzki and
Hottenrott (2011)
Germany Working capital management R&D
funding
Newman, Gunessee and
Hilton (2012)
China Theories of capital structure and
cultural context in China
Bhunia (2012) Europe Relationship between default
behaviours of SMEs and the credit
facets of their owners
2.1. Studies on causes of financial failure
Prediction of Financial Failure
Some researchers tried to predict small enterprise failure to mitigate the
collapse of small businesses. McNamara et al. (1988) developed a model to predict
small enterprise failures giving the following four reasons: a) to enable management
to respond quickly to changing conditions, b) to train lenders in recognising the
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important factors involved in determining an enterprise’s likelihood of failing, c) to
assist lending organisations in their marketing by identifying their customer’s
financial needs more effectively, d) to act as a filter in the credit evaluation process.
The authors argued that small enterprises are very different from large ones in the
area of borrowing by small enterprises, lack of long-term debt finance and different
taxation provisions.
Involuntary liquidation
Hall and Young (1991) performed UK a study of 3 samples of 100 small
enterprises that were subject to involuntary liquidation in 1973, 1978 and 1983. The
authors have found that the reasons given for failure were of financial nature in
49.8%. In the study of perceptions of official receivers interviewed for the same
small enterprises, 86.6% of the 247 reasons given were of a financial nature. The
positive correlation between poor or non-existent financial management (including
basic accounting) and business failure has well been documented in western
countries according to Peacock (1985, 2004).
Default behaviours of SMEs and the credit characteristics of their owners
Bhunia (2012) examined relationship between default behaviours of SMEs
and the credit facets of their owners. Identifying and measuring credit risk of SMEs
should be different from that of large firms, for SMEs appear to be influenced by
their owners more directly and significantly, so that a more appropriate and effective
way of credit management of SMEs could be applied in practice. This study
implement an empirical study of logistic regression analysis with repeat sampling
data after segregating the owners’ characteristics data into variables of basic aspects,
credit capacity aspects and credit will aspects. The results reveal that variables
reflected credit capacity aspects share more significant relationship with the SMEs’
credit default behaviour. This indicates that “credit will” variables and “personal
credit” history have the closest relationship with enterprises’ default probability and
the proportion of overdue loans. These are the extreme significant variables which
are valuable indicators in default risk estimate model.
2.2 Growth and development of SMEs
Studies of small enterprise growth and development
McMahon (1998, 2000 and 2001) worked for establishment of a
theoretically sound and empirically validated explanation of small and medium-
sized enterprise growth to serve as broad conceptual framework for research and
policy-making regarding the business growth phenomenon. After a critical appraisal
of recent research in the field, the paper argues that reconsideration should be given
to a conceptual framework that represents SME growth as a series of stages of
development through which the business may pass in an enterprise life-cycle.
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In the follow up study from 2000 the author substantially extended his
previously undertaken pilot study as part of an on-going research effort to derive,
characterise and employ empirically based development taxonomy for SMEs in the
manufacturing sector using panel data recently made available from Australia’s
Business Longitudinal Survey. Cluster analysis was used with key variables:
enterprise age, size and growth variables to discover whether there appear to be any
stable development pathways evident in the data. Each of four annual data
collections was examined separately, and then comparisons were made of the
resulting cluster analysis outcomes over time. Descriptive statistics for various
enterprise characteristics facilitate interpretation of the cluster analysis solutions.
Using the clusters as markers or signposts, three relatively stable SME development
pathways are discernible in the longitudinal panel results. The first is a low growth
pathway apparently leading to the traditional or life-style SME configuration
(around 70 per cent of the panel). The second is a moderate growth pathway
possibly leading to the capped growth SME configuration (around 25 per cent of the
panel). And the third is a high growth pathway seemingly leading to the
entrepreneurial SME configuration (around 5 per cent of the panel).
Statistical analysis revealed that differences between the identified SME
development pathways in terms of enterprise age, size and growth variables were
highly significant. This author has returned to the topic again in 2001 in his working
paper entitled “Stage Models of SME Growth Reconsidered”.
In the paper from 2001 McMahon presents a study of financial management
characteristics on business growth and performance among small and medium-sized
enterprises (SMEs) engaged in manufacturing. The author finds that enterprise
characteristics seem to dominate in their impact upon SME achievement, with
financial management characteristics, other than use of external financing being
relatively unimportant. Development orientation and the existence of internal and
external constraints appear to be the most influential enterprise characteristics.
Development model of family business
Rutherford et al. (2006) concentrated on the family business and contributes
to the literature stream by providing the first empirical test of the developmental
model for family business (DMFB) first developed by Gersick, Davis, Hampton, and
Lansberg (1997). The tests of the DMFB model allowed the authors to identify key
groups of variables that can help explain family business development. Specifically,
they identify owner, firm, and family characteristics to augment the DMFB, and
used hierarchical regression analysis of 934 firms. The authors suggest that the
original model provides a solid foundation for classifying family firms, but the
augmented model explained significantly more variance in family firm development.
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2.3 Studies on Capital Structure
Studies of level of debt in SMEs
Michaelas and Chittenden (1999) researched the financial structure of SMEs
using quantitative methods on panel data of UK SMEs. The article utilised financial
panel data, and investigated the capital structure of small and medium sized
enterprises (SMEs) in the U.K. Different capital structure theories were reviewed in
order to formulate testable propositions concerning the levels of debt in small
businesses, and a number of regression models were developed to test the
hypotheses.
The results suggested that most of the determinants of capital structure
presented by the theory of finance appeared to be relevant for the UK small business
sector. Size, age, profitability, growth and future growth opportunities, operating
risk, asset structure, stock turnover and net debtors all seem to have an effect on the
level of both the short and long term debt in small firms. Furthermore, the paper
provides evidence which suggested that the capital structure of small firms is time
and industry dependent. The results indicated that time and industry specific effects
influenced the maturity structure of debt raised by SMEs.
Important finding was that in general terms, average short term debt ratios in
SMEs appear to be increasing during periods of economic recession and decrease as
the economic conditions in the marketplace improve. On the other hand, average
long term debt ratios exhibit a positive relationship with changes in economic
growth (Michaelas and Chittenden, 1999, 114).
Capital structure in Chinese SMEs
Newman et al. (2012) studied applicability of financial theories of capital
structure to the Chinese cultural context using a new dataset of 1,539 Chinese small
and medium-sized enterprises. The article investigated the firm-level determinants
of capital structure and tested them against the predictions of financial theory. Firm
size and profitability were both found to be related to leverage as proposed by
pecking-order theory. In contrast a little support was found for the predicted
relationship between asset structure and leverage. These findings were discussed in
relationship to their Chinese cultural context.
2.4 Studies on working capital management
Studies of investment appraisal and working capital practices
Peel and Wilson (1996) researched the capital budgeting and working
capital practices of small firms. Their paper presented the results of a preliminary
study on the working capital and financial management practices of a sample of
small firms located in the north of England. In general, the results of the survey
indicated that a relatively high proportion of small firms in the sample claimed to
use quantitative capital budgeting and working capital techniques and to review
various aspects of their companies’ working capital. In addition, the firms which
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claimed to use the more sophisticated discounted cash flow capital budgeting
techniques, or which had been active in terms of reducing stock levels or the
debtors’ credit period, on average tended to be more active in respect of working
capital management practices.
Effects of working capital management on SME profitability
The importance of working capital management has been discussed by
García-Teruel and Martínez-Solano (2007), and Thalassinos and Curtis (2005). The
object of the research presented was to provide empirical evidence on the effects of
working capital management on the profitability of a sample of small and medium-
sized Spanish firms. The authors have collected a panel of 8,872 small to medium-
sized enterprises covering the period 1996–2002 to test the effects of working
capital management on SME profitability. Their findings demonstrate that managers
can create value by reducing their inventories and the number of days for which
their accounts are outstanding. Moreover, shortening the cash conversion cycle also
improves the firm’s profitability.
Their work contributes to the literature with usage of robust test that have
been conducted for the possible presence of endogeneity problems. The aim was to
ensure that the relationships found in the analysis wee due to the effects of the cash
conversion cycle on corporate profitability and not vice versa.
Issues of working capital management on trade credit
García-Teruel and Martínez-Solano (2010) analysed the determinants of the
trade credit granted and received on a panel of 47,197 SMEs in Europe over the
period 1996–2002. Their results show a strong homogeneity in the factors
determining trade credit in European countries. On the one hand, firms with greater
capacity to obtain resources from the capital markets, and more cheaply, grant more
trade credit to their customers. Moreover, the results appear to support the price
discrimination theory. They also found that firms react by increasing the credit they
grant in an attempt to stem falling sales. On the other hand, larger firms, with greater
growth opportunities and greater investment in current assets, receive more finance
from their suppliers. Where firms have alternative sources of finance they are less
likely to resort to vendor financing (substitution effect).
Working capital management and profitability
Czarnitzki and Hottenrott (2011) analyzed the relation between working
capital management and profitability of small and medium-sized enterprises in
Germany by controlling for unobservable heterogeneity and possible endogeneity.
The authors examined a non-linear relation between these two variables and have
shown that there is a non-monotonic (concave) relationship between working capital
level and firm profitability, which indicates that SMEs have an optimal working
capital level that maximizes their profitability. In addition, a robustness check of our
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results confirmed that firms’ profitability decreases as they move away from their
optimal level.
2.5 Studies on Eastern Europe
Financial Management of SMEs in Eastern Europe
A specific paper was written on Europe by Klapper et al. (2002) is devoted
to understanding firms’ access to finance, particularly in the financing of small- and
medium-size enterprises. The financing patterns of SMEs across countries are not
well understood. For example, little is known about the relative importance of
equity, debt, and inter-firm financing for SMEs across countries.
The authors used the Amadeus database, which includes financial
information on over 97,000 private and publicly traded firms in 15 Eastern and
Central European countries. The Amadeus database allows the authors the
opportunity to provide a new analysis of the general financing patterns of private
firms across a large sample of Eastern European countries. The summary statistics
show that the size of the SME sector (as measured by the percentage of total
employment) in Eastern European countries is smaller than in most developed
economies. However, SMEs seem to constitute the most dynamic sector of the
Eastern European economies, relative to large firms. In general, the SME sector
comprises relatively younger, more highly leveraged, and more profitable and faster
growing firms. This suggests that a new type of firm is emerging in transitional
economies that is more market and profit-oriented. However, these firms appear to
have financial constraints that impede their access to long-term financing and ability
to grow at the same time. Although the authors find in almost every country in the
sample a large number of SMEs as a percentage of total firms, the SMEs in Eastern
Europe are generally small and hire few employees. This paper a product of
Finance, Development Research Group is part of a larger effort in the group to
better understand small- and medium-size enterprise financing.
Changes in accounting of SMEs
Struhařová (2010) evaluated the effect of the shift from Financial Reporting
under the Czech legislature (CZ GAAP) to the International Financial Reporting
Standard for financial management in Small and Medium-sized Enterprises (IFRS
for SMEs) and Its Effect on Financial Management. The paper analysed the changes
relevant to the shift. The author defined the changes in accounting department of
SMEs and also the changes that affect a company as a whole. Furthermore,
information from Financial Reporting used in Financial Management is described.
The paper also analysed the changes in Financial Reporting related to modifications
affecting Financial Management of SMEs. Fekete, et al., (2010) and Asuman Atik,
(2010) have evaluated similar effects for Romania and Turkey respectivelly.
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2.6 Influence on performance and profitability
Influence of external advice
Robson and Bennett (2000) presented the multivariate analysis of the
relationship of SME growth with the acquisition of external business advice, whilst
controlling for the influence of SME characteristics of age, manufacturing/services,
high technology and innovation, level of skill of the workforce, exporter and number
of competitors. The relationship of external business advice with SME performance
is statistically significant for only a small number of sources and fields. Obtaining
external advice in fields such as business strategy and staff recruitment is associated
with positive firm performance. The main positive relationships of advice and
performance are dominated by private sector sources such as lawyers, suppliers,
customers and business friends/relatives. Collaborative arrangements with suppliers
nationally/internationally have a strong positive relationship with employment and
turnover growth; collaboration with local suppliers has a strong positive relationship
with growth in profitability. There is little evidence of statistically significant
relationships between government-backed providers of business advice such as
Business Link and firm performance.
Strategic orientation and performance
Escribá-Esteve et al. (2008) focused on the factors that moderate the
relationship between firm’s strategic orientation and performance in small and
medium-sized firms. Most of the prior research has focused simply on identifying
environmental conditions conducive to the effectiveness of the strategic orientation
approach. However, recent research has called for studies focused on investigating
internal moderators of the strategic orientation-performance relationship. The
authors propose a contingency framework, considering how corporate and
competitive strategies, top management characteristics, and environmental
conditions may moderate this relationship. Based on a survey of 295 Spanish small
and medium-sized enterprises from seven manufacturing sectors, the study shows
that the positive influence of the firm's strategic orientation may be moderated by
the environment conditions, the previous experience of top management team, and
the corporate and competitive strategies developed by the firm.
2.7 Summary of literature review
The literature on small firms’ financial management is very broad and it
draws upon different aspects of firm’s life. The initial interest of research in SMEs
bankruptcies and default risk has widen to studies investigating capital budgeting,
development and growth models of small business and relationship between default
behaviours of SMEs and the credit facets of their owners. Another interesting point
of investigation were the financing patterns and capital structure and working capital
management
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In this paper we will concentrate on two major aspects working capital
management and issues of financing long term assets and risk the firms undergo in
fixing substantial portion of their funds in such assets.
3. Working Capital and Liquidity Management – Practical Approach
A successful business tries to have optimum working capital – not minimum
or maximum but optimum (Liapis, 2010). Working capital is the difference between
current assets and current liabilities. If a business has too much working capital, then
you incur costs of funding unemployed assets that resemble interest which can and
should be avoided. Very little working capital can also have a disastrous effect on
your business. For example very little or no stock of raw material could result in a
break in production, which in turn could result in huge losses.
The major components of working capital are:
Inventories (raw material, work – in – progress, finished goods)
Receivables
Cash
Each of these components needs to be looked into.
In practice, however, it is very common that the potentials associated with
an intelligent optimization of capital tie-up in inventories, in receivables, in
liabilities and in liquid assets are often neglected or are not addressed systematically.
If company holds too much inventories or has very high receivables the
WORKING CAPITAL WILL BE POSITIVE, BUT EXPENSIVE!!!!
In the company different people could be responsible for each component,
and the manager must give them separate attainable targets so that they work
towards an optimum holding of their component of working capital. We have
defined a firm’s net working capital as its current assets minus its current liabilities.
Net working capital is the capital required in the short term to run the business.
Thus, working capital management involves short-term asset accounts such as cash,
inventory, and accounts receivable, as well as short-term liability accounts such as
accounts payable. The level of investment in each of these accounts differs from
firm to firm and from industry to industry. It also depends on factors such as the
type of business and industry standards. Some firms, for example, require heavy
inventory investments because of the nature of their business.
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Operating Cycle and Cash Cycle
The level of working capital reflects the length of time between when cash
goes out of a firm at the beginning of the production process and when it comes
back in.
Take Intel, for example.
1. First, Intel buys $1000 of raw materials and inventory from its suppliers,
purchasing them on credit, which means that the firm does not have to pay
cash immediately at the time of purchase.
2. About 53 days later, Intel pays for the materials and inventory, so almost
two months have passed between when Intel purchased the materials and
when the cash outflow occurred.
3. After another 20 days, Intel sells the materials (now in the form of finished
microprocessors) to a computer manufacturer, but the sale is on credit,
meaning that the computer manufacturer does not pay cash immediately. A
total of 73 days have passed between when Intel purchased the materials and
when it sold them as part of the finished product.
4. About 37 days later, the computer manufacturer pays for the
microprocessors, producing a cash inflow for Intel.
5. A total of days have passed from when Intel originally bought the raw
materials until it received the cash from selling the finished product. Thus,
Intel’s operating cycle is 110 days: a firm’s operating cycle is the average
length of time between 53 + 20 + 37 = 110 days.
6. A firm’s cash cycle is the length of time between when the firm pays cash to
purchase its initial inventory and when it receives cash from the sale of the
output produced from that inventory. For Intel, the cash cycle is 57 days: the
20 days it holds the material after paying for it plus the 37 days it waits to
receive cash after selling the finished product.
Source: Berk et al. (2012, p. 566–567)
Company executives must understand the operating cycle and cash cycle of
the firm and appreciate why is of working capital management so critically
important. Management could use trade credit to the firm’s advantage and make
decisions on extending credit and adjusting credit terms. It could also manage
accounts payable and ascertain the costs and benefits of holding additional
inventory.
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Graph 1. Cash Conversion Cycle
Source: Brigham, Houston (2010, p. 496) with some adjustments.
The Cash and Operating Cycle for a Firm
The cash cycle is the average time between when a firm pays for its
inventory and when it receives cash from the sale of its product. If the firm pays
cash for its inventory, this period is identical to the firm’s operating cycle. However,
most firms buy their inventory on credit, which reduces the amount of time between
the cash investment and the receipt of cash from that investment.
4. Investments and investment decision-making
Many times decisions regarding investment into fixed assets, like Factory
Building, Plant and Machinery are taken without doing any scientific analysis.
These decisions have long term effects on the business and should be taken only
after a detailed analysis of the market scope, competition and by applying
discounted cash flow techniques like IRR.
Optimizing capital investments is one of the most important levers both for
improving value-based performance indicators and for securing the availability of
sufficient liquidity. In order to carry out measures to increase capital efficiency and
install a system whereby it is permanently monitored, you must first have a
comprehensive system for managing capital expenditure which also manages your
investments, your finance and your working capital.
Average
Collection
Period (37 Days)
Finish Goods
and Sell
Them
Payables
Deferral
Period (53 Days)
Cash
Conversion
Period (57 Days)
Receive
Materials
Pay Cash for
Purchased
Materials
Collect Cash
for Accounts
Receiveable
Days
Inventory
Conversion
Period (20 Days)
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Graph 2. How financial management decisions affect the company balance sheet
Balance Sheet
Assets Liabilities and Equity
Working capital management
decisions deal with day-to-
day financial matters and affect
current assets, current liabilities and
net working capital.
Current liabilities
(including short term debt
a
Current assets
(including cash, inventory,
and accounts receivable)
Net working capital - the difference
between current assets and current
liabilities
Capital budgeting decisions
determine what long-term
productive assets the firm will
purchase.
Long-term debt
(debt with a maturity of
over one year)
Long-term assets
(including productive
assets; may be tangible or
intangible)
Financing decisions determinate
the firm’s capital structure - the
combination of long-term debt and
equity that will be used to finance
the firm’s long-term productive
assets.
Stockholder’ equity
Source: Parrino, Kidwell (2010, 5).
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Alongside the primary target of raising capital efficiency, optimizing
working capital can also enable companies to increase their ability to reach strategic
targets. It is no coincidence that successful companies enjoy above average returns
on capital investments rather it is proof of the efficiency of systematic management
and control of the working capital cycle.
Financial managers are concerned with three fundamental types of
decisions: capital budgeting decisions, financial decisions and working capital
management decisions. Each type of decisions has a direct and important effect on
the firm’s balance sheet and on the firm’s profitability.
Issues of funding
Today, the entrepreneur has several options for financing his business. The
traditional routes of loans and own funds have now several variants. Certain
financial institutions are now offering Factoring services – they finance credit sales
– your sales force now needs to concentrate only on sales and not on collections.
One mistake that several entrepreneurs commit is that they use short term
loans (like cash credit, overdraft) for purchasing fixed assets. This leads to a severe
strain on the funds position.
5. Summary
From what we have learned in both theoretical and practical parts of this
study, the following recommendations should be applied to small enterprises.
Table 2. Recommended Principles for Healthy Financial Management of SMEs
Have a good in-house Accounts department who are well versed in
Accounting principles and are computer savvy.
Get basic working knowledge about the financial software that your business
is using.
Insist on a monthly reporting system – so that the Profitability Statements and
Balance Sheet are on your table by the 5th of every successive month.
Sit with your managers to prepare an Annual Budget which should be broken
down to monthly budgets. Do a monthly joint review of actual achievements
with the budgeted/target figures. Take corrective action immediately.
Keep a constant check on items which affect the liquidity of the business
level of debtors, stock of raw materials and finished goods.
Interact with your Banker or Financial Institution on a regular basis not just
when you require your cheque to be passed or when you want your credit limit
to be raised!! – check out their new financial products.
Ask your Accounts department to prepare a check list of the various statutory
payments and filings. Keep a close check on whether compliance takes place.
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Have an interim audit of your accounts done say for 9 months ended 31st
December. This will give you enough time to take corrective action, based on
the inputs of the auditors.
Never make hasty decisions about purchasing huge fixed assets or getting into
new ventures or diversification. Make a detailed study and apply evaluation
techniques like IRR.
Keep looking for ways to reduce cost – mere cost control procedures may not
be long lasting new innovative methods which will bring down the cost of
delivery of your product and services need to be constantly encouraged among
all employee of the organisation.
Adopted from: Korah Good Financial Management for SMEs available at
http://www.korahandkorah.com/downloads/FM%20for%20SMEs5March.pdf
There is a need for more knowledge about basic financial concepts – either
through books/ magazines or by attending a workshop on finance. It is to highlight
the fact that despite the need to manage every aspect of their small enterprises with
very little internal and external support, it is often the case that owner-managers only
have experience or training in some functional areas. This is also not always or
usually applied because they might be doing everything from telephone calls to
ordering products.
There is a school of thought that believes that “a well-run business
enterprise should be as conscious of its finances as healthy a fit person is of his or
her breathing”. It must be possible to undertake production, marketing, distribution
and the like, without repeatedly causing financial pressures and strains. It does not
mean, however, that financial management can be ignored by a small enterprise
owner-manager; or as is often done, given to an accountant to take care of. Whether
it is obvious or not to the casual observer, in prosperous small enterprises the owner-
managers themselves have a firm grasp of the principles of financial management
and are actively involved in applying them to their own situation.
It is hoped that the issues raised in this research paper will stimulate further
theoretical and empirical contributions on this seemingly neglected but important
area of small business research.
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European Research Studies, Volume XVI, Special Issue on SMEs, 2013
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... The common financial management practices in available literature include budgeting and financial planning, financial accounting, financial reporting, cash flow planning, working capital management, fixed assets management and the use of accounting information systems, (Butt, Hunjra & Rehman, 2010;Jindrichovska, I. 2013;Karadag, H., 2015;Nguyen, 2001;Peel and Wilson,1996). The commonly cited factor why financial management is a challenge is that of lack of necessary skills (Jindrichovska, 2013). SMEs are normally managed by owners who rarely have any financial management expertise. ...
... These issues can erode investor confidence, limit access to financing, and hinder the ability of SMEs to capitalize on growth opportunities, thereby stifling their competitiveness and growth potential. Jindrichovska (2013), in his study on financial management in SMEs urged that poor financial management is main cause of underlying problems in SMEs. ...
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