THE
U.S. MARINE CORPS &
ACTIVITY
BASED COSTING
"Incorporate Activities
Based Costing (ABC) into the state's accounting system with expenditures tied
not only to costs but to measurable performance outputs. Adopt
performance-based budgeting throughout state government. Appoint
a "performance management" director who works for the Governor
through DFA, and provide for a small volunteer
performance accountability "advisory group" to be put in place for
oversight purposes. Murphy
Commission, Policy Foundation project, September 1998
(August
2014) The U.S. Marine Corps (USMC), for 15 years has effectively used a fiscal
reform that could save Arkansas taxpayers millions of dollars in scarce
economic resources. The reform is activities based costing (ABC), defined by
the Murphy Commission1 as an accounting system
that "allocates dollars as they're
spent in agencies--in a consistent
and uniform manner--to defined service activities and administrative and
support functions."
USMC: "We Can Learn A Lot ... From Others"
"ABC,"
a 1999 USMC document2 explains, "is a
methodology focused on measuring cost and performance of processes in order to
produce relevant and explicit information for
decision-makers." A can-do spirit
infuses the USMC document, which states:
"We
can learn a lot about successful ABC implementation from others. Local teams should begin to study immediately
the lessons recorded in books such as "Implementing Activity-Based
Management In Daily Operations" by John A. Miller; "Cornerstones Of Decision
Making, Profiles Of Enterprises ABM" by Steve Player and Carol Cobble; and
"Activity-Based Management, Lessons From The ABM Battlefield" by
Steve Player and David Keys."
The USMC document notes, "Unfaltering leadership has proven
to be the decisive factor for ABC/M successes in other organizations. The commitment to succeed must be strong,
persistent, and smart."3
Three Supporting Functions
A 2003
USMC document4
notes "three supporting functions," at "the tactical
level," that are required to support "critical enables" that
make ABC possible:
·
Standardization and Rationalization of
Data Elements. The decision elements used to build programs
must "undergo a deliberate review" prior to each fiscal cycle
"to ensure that the most relevant elements are available for decision
makers."
·
ABC Model Standardization.
"The ABC models provide a means to view execution of funding across
appropriation and resource stovepipes. A
configuration control board will be established to continually define and
refine the requirement for consistent and standard high-level model standards
across the installations."
·
Program Budget Documentation Database.
The database, "a web-based system accessible to all Marine Corps users, is the Corps' primary means of gathering data for
program development. It facilitates
controlled, orderly, timely staffing and editing of initiatives by program
sponsors, advocates and HQMC departments."
The database "will facilitate the collection and display of the
standardized performance measures and cost data."
Conclusion
The
Foundation recommended ABC in 1998. The USMC has used ABC since 1999. Arkansas will elect a new governor this
year. The new administration should
enact ABC in 2015 to save Arkansas taxpayers scarce resources.
1 Policy Foundation report, "Making
Arkansas State Government Performance Driven And
Accountable" (September 1998). "When tied to outputs under a system
of performance budgeting," the report notes, "ABC becomes a vital
tool of managerial information and needed public reports to citizens."
2 "Marine Corps Activity Based Costing
(ABC)" (July 28, 1999)
http://www.marines.mil/News/Messages/MessagesDisplay/tabid/13286/Article/113269/marine-corps-activity-based-costing-abc.aspx
3 Other lessons include: "keep vision and objectives
clear, keep models simple and manageable (especially in the beginning),
emphasize the importance of an ABC/M communication/education plan, communicate
and share results (especially in the beginning), set expectations at a
reasonable level (expect some setbacks and plan to be persistent), train
managers to use ABC/M information, and make sure all the right people are
involved (in training and model development)."
4
Marine Corps, "Activity Based Resource Management (ABRM
Implementation" (July 7, 2003)
http://www.marines.mil/News/Messages/MessagesDisplay/tabid/13286/Article/117059/activity-based-resource-management-abrm-implementation.aspx. The document explains,
"The Marine Corps, in executing its "responsibilities to "man,
train, equip, and sustain forces to provide war fighting capabilities to the
combatant commanders requires that resources be optimally applied to functions
that support our strategic plans."
The document explains the USMC is "increasingly under
pressure" from groups including the Office of Management and Budget and
the U.S. Congress to "link performance with resources, also known as
performance based budgeting (PBB)."
PBB was also recommended by the Murphy Commission, and is discussed in
the 1998 Foundation report.