2 resultados para MATRIX SUPPORT
em Portal do Conhecimento - Ministerio do Ensino Superior Ciencia e Inovacao, Cape Verde
Resumo:
O presente trabalho cujo título é Implementação do ABC numa empresa prestadora de serviços de Saúde, tem como finalidade a obtenção do grau de licenciatura em Contabilidade e Administração e tem como principal objectivo a implementação do método ABC numa pequena e média empresa de prestação de serviços de saúde, como um instrumento de apoio á gestão. Para a introdução da Contabilidade de Gestão na empresa, há que se escolher um método/sistema de apuramento de gastos que espelha a realidade da empresa, e de uma certa forma o ABC é o método ideal para apuramento de resultados sem distorções. O ABC (Activity-Based Cost) apura os resultados através da relação de causa-efeito, considerando que as actividades é que geram gastos e os objectos de custeio é que consomem as actividades. É aplicável tanto nas empresas industriais como nas empresas prestadoras de serviços, apesar de inicialmente ter sido concebido para as empresas industrias, isto é, para as grandes empresas devido aos avultados recursos financeiros e humanos como também pelo tempo necessário para a sua implementação. Mas o modelo matricial apresentado por Roztcki et al (1999) permite a aplicação deste método nas PME com poucos recursos financeiros e de tempo, utilizando uma folha de cálculo no Excel. Será este modelo a ser proposto e poderá ser implementado na clínica. O modelo apresentado foi testado num estudo de caso realizado numa clínica. Com a realização dos testes foi detectado algumas dificuldades e limitações, as maiores dificuldades encontradas foram a identificação das actividades e dos cost drivers, devido à complexidade do sector. A implementação foi concluída com sucesso, proporcionando informações detalhadas dos gastos dos produtos/serviços prestados em toda a clínica. This work was done as a requisite for obtaining a degree in Accounting and Administration, and is titled “The Implementation of ABC – Activity Based Cost in a company that provides health services”. Its main purpose is to analyze the implementation of ABC method in a small and medium-sized enterprise which provides health services to support decision making by the Managers. To adopt management accounting in a company, it’s necessary to choose a cost qualifying system that reflects the reality of the company and in a certain way ABC is the method which can determine the results without any distortion. ABC (Activity-Based Cost) determines the results through cause-and-effect relationship, whereas the activities generate spending while costing objects consume the activities. It’s applicable both in industrial companies as in services providers, although it was initially designed for industrial companies, that is, to large companies, due to the huge financial and human resources existent as well as by the time required for its implementation. But the matrix model presented by Roztckiet al (1999) allows application of this method in small and medium-sized enterprises with limited financial resources and time, using a spreadsheet in Excel. This model will be proposed and could be implemented in any clinic. The model was tested in a case study, undertaken in a private clinic. With the realization of the tests, some problems and limitations were detected, and the major difficulties encountered were the identification of activities and cost drivers, due to the complexity of the sector. The implementation was completed successfully, providing detailed information of the products services spending throughout the clinic.
Resumo:
This Report is an update of the Cape Verde Diagnostic Trade Integration Study, titled Cape Verde’s Insertion into the Global Economy, produced and validated by the Government of Cape Verde in December 2008. Like the previous 2008 study, this Cape Verde Diagnostic Trade Integration Study Update provides a critical examination of the major institutional and production constraints that hinder Cape Verde’s ability to capitalize fully on the growth and welfare gains from its integration into the world economy. As a policy report, this study offers a set of priority policies and measures that can be implemented by both the public and private sectors to mitigate and surmount these supply side and institutional constraints. These recommendations are summarized in an Action Matrix. The Report is fruit of the generous support of the multi-donor program the Enhanced Integrated Framework (EIF). In every crisis there is an opportunity. Four years after the validation of the country’s first Diagnostic Trade Integration Study in 2008, Cape Verde finds itself in a drastically altered external environment. Cape Verde faces a worsened external environment than four years ago, when it was also traversing years of crisis as global food and energy prices escalated. Just as the country was validating its first trade study in late 2008, and celebrating its graduation from the list of Least Developed Countries, the onset of the deepest global recession in recent memory triggered an even worse external situation as the country’s principal source of markets, investments, remittances and aid, the Eurozone, unraveled economically and politically. As the Eurozone crisis spread, it was Cape Verde’s misfortune that the crisis contaminated precisely its biggest Eurozone partners and donors, such as Portugal, Spain and Italy. For such a highly dependent and exposed economy like that of Cape Verde, the deteriorating external sector has had a substantial negative impact on its macroeconomic performance. At the time of the validation workshop and graduation in 2008, no one could have foreseen or predicted the severity of the global crisis that followed. Despite traversing these years of adversity and external shocks, and suffering palpable setbacks, Cape Verde’s economy had proven surprisingly resilient, especially its principal sector, tourism. To its great credit, the country’s economic fundamentals are solid, and have been carefully and prudently managed over the years. For this reason alone, the country has thus far weathered the global and Eurozone crisis. Yet the near and medium term future remains uncertain. The country’s margin for maneuver has narrowed, its options far more limited, and hard choices lie ahead. Thus, there is no better time than now to analyze Cape Verde’s position in the global economy, and to examine the many challenges and opportunities it faces. The first diagnostic trade study outlined an ambitious agenda and set of policy strategies to enhance Cape Verde’s participation in the global economy. Written prior to the global crisis, the study did not, and could not, anticipate the scope and depth of the subsequent global and Eurozone crises. A few short months before the validation of the first DTIS Cape Verde joined the World Trade Organization (WTO). It has spent these four years adjusting to this status and implementing its commitments. At the same time, the country seeks greater economic integration with the European Union. Since 2008 the government has been investing heavily in the country’s economic infrastructure, focusing especially on fostering transformation in key sectors like agriculture, fisheries, tourism and creative industries. For these and many other reasons, it is both timely and urgent to review the road traveled since 2008. It is an opportune moment to reassess the country’s options, to rethink strategies, and to chart a new way forward that it is practical, implementable, and that builds on the country’s competitive advantages and current successes.