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07-10-07 FPAC Agenda
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07-10-07 FPAC Agenda
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07-10-07 Agenda
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7/10/2007
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• Appropriate Level of Unreserved Fund Balance in the General Fund (2002) <br /> Background. Accountants employ the term fund balance to describe the net assets of <br /> governmental funds calculated in accordance with generally accepted accounting <br /> principles (GAAP).Budget professionals commonly use this same term to describe the <br /> net assets of governmental funds calculated on a government's budgetary basis.' In both <br /> cases, fund balance is intended to serve as a measure of the financial resources available <br /> in a governmental fund. <br /> Accountants distinguish reserved fund balance from unreserved fund balance.Typically, <br /> only the latter is available for spending. Accountants also sometimes report a designated <br /> portion of unreserved fund balance to indicate that the governing body or management <br /> have tentative plans concerning the use of all or a portion of unreserved fund balance. <br /> It is essential that governments maintain adequate levels of fund balance to mitigate <br /> current and future risks (e.g.,revenue shortfalls and unanticipated expenditures) and to <br /> ensure stable tax rates. Fund balance levels are a crucial consideration,too, in long-term <br /> financial planning. <br /> In most cases, discussions of fund balance will properly focus on a government's general <br /> fund.Nonetheless, financial resources available in other funds should also be considered <br /> in assessing the adequacy of unreserved fund balance in the general fund. <br /> Credit rating agencies carefully monitor levels of fund balance and unreserved fund <br /> balance in a government's general fund to evaluate a government's continued <br /> creditworthiness. Likewise, laws and regulations often govern appropriate levels of fund <br /> balance and unreserved fund balance for state and local governments. <br /> Those interested primarily in a government's creditworthiness or economic condition <br /> (e.g.,rating agencies) are likely to favor increased levels of fund balance. Opposing <br /> pressures often come from unions,taxpayers and citizens' groups,which may view high <br /> levels of fund balance as "excessive." <br /> Recommendation. GFOA recommends that governments establish a formal policy on <br /> the level of unreserved fund balance that should be maintained in the general fund.2 <br /> GFOA also encourages the adoption of similar policies for other types of governmental <br /> funds. Such a guideline should be set by the appropriate policy body and should provide <br /> both a temporal framework and specific plans for increasing or decreasing the level of <br /> unreserved fund balance, if it is inconsistent with that policy.3 <br /> The adequacy of unreserved fund balance in the general fund should be assessed based <br /> upon a government's own specific circumstances.Nevertheless, GFOA recommends, at a <br /> minimum,that general-purpose governments, regardless of size, maintain unreserved <br /> fund balance in their general fund of no less than five to 15 percent of regular general <br /> fund operating revenues, or of no less than one to two months of regular general fund <br /> operating expenditures.4 A government's particular situation may require levels of <br /> • <br />
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