Grant Management You can read the information below in over 15 languages! Simply use the translation tool in the top-left corner of the screen to select your preferred language, including অসমীয়া, বাংলা, ગુજરાતી, हिन्दी, ಕನ್ನಡ, മലയാളം, मराठी, মৈতৈলোন্, नेपाली, ଓଡ଼ିଆ, ਪੰਜਾਬੀ, संस्कृतम्, தமிழ், తెలుగు, and اُردُو. What is a Grant? Funds given from one entity to another for a public benefit/charitable purpose Usually given to a charitable entity or NPO Is not an automatic entitlement, it is for an obligation to be discharged Grant is trust money with 3 actors-grantor, grantee (trustee with fiduciary responsibility to grantor and beneficiary) and beneficiary Grantor does not get direct benefit and grantee is not expected to payback if utilised for the intended purpose Grant comes in different forms from different sources-govt (grant-in-aid), retail, corporate, foundation Are awarded directly or through a competitive process Exchange Transaction vs Grant Exchange transaction (as per GST Act) involves: Supply of goods and services Consideration In course of furtherance of business Grant is not exchange transaction since there are No specific beneficiaries Nothing in return from beneficiaries or benefit derived by grantee Not for furtherance of business Understanding above for grant contract is crucial otherwise contributions maybe considered as exchange transactions inviting GST and TDS implications and also charitable status maybe jeopardised. Grant Management Involves two key players: Grantmakers-grantor/donor Grantseekers-grantee/donee Grant management is a system that includes identifying, applying for and securing grants, adhering to grant conditions, evaluating outcomes. Grant management process in grant management system (GMS) is the grant management lifecycle. The Grand Management Process Planning Opportunity Application Award Execution Closeout Grant Management Life Cycle Pre award Planning-need identification, SWOT, due diligence preparatory etc Scout Funding opportunity Grant application & review-eligibility and Qualification Award Award Negotiation Award Decision Award Notification/Contract Post Award fund request-advance, reimbursement etc, Implementation Reporting-program and finance Post award amendment-key changes and approval, budget realignment, NCE Performance/impact Closeout Reapplication Principles of grant management Accountability, Transparency & Trust for grant funds Efficiency & Effectiveness with grant funds Compliance with laws of the land Adherence to terms and conditions of Grant Agreement Internal controls in place Communication & Timely Reporting - narrative and financial as per grant contract Fund Accounting NGOs follow Fund Accounting for managing grants: Fund accounting is an accounting system for recording and tracking project resources (fund) whose use is limited/restricted by specific conditions by donor through a grant contract This accounting system emphasizes  accountability/productively over profitability which is the accounting basis for for-profits Features: Separate funds (buckets/compartments) Restriction on use Separate budget established for each fund/project and income credited and expenses debited from the fund Transparency Software for recording Good internal controls Monitoring and Reporting  mechanisms ensures fund accounting Type of funds for NPOs Grant word is not comprehensively defined in Indian laws, referred to as Voluntary contribution/donation (VC) in Income Tax law. FC under FCRA and CSR fund under CSR law. ICAI has classified funds for NPOs in its Technical Guide on Accounting for NPOs: Unrestricted funds: Funds with no specific  restrictions on use (purpose)/time Corpus (acknowledged in IT law)-non-refundable, non reducible, reinvestment obligation. Corpus only when specific donor direction that it be treated as corpus by donor not income but capital per IT Act to be invested in section 11(5) modes of investment considered application when  replenished not application if given to another charity. Corpus income shown in I&E. Donations i.e. no obligations attached, a gift Designated/earmarked funds-appropriated and set aside for specific purpose/future, self imposed by management and not binding in law for NPOs General funds-surplus/deficit transferred from I&E which are  not designated. Free reserves Restricted funds: funds with conditions/restrictions Project/program grants-to be utilized as per terms and  conditions of award, Restriction-by purpose and by time. There could be other conditions/restrictions. Principle of fund based accounting Endowment: fund amount cannot be utilized, only income utilized for general/specific purpose as per donor stipulation.  The recipient owns it but does not control it. Restricted funds maybe Permanent restriction Temporary restriction: restricts use for a certain period or  meeting objectives after which it becomes unrestricted. Format of financial statements as per ICAI BALANCE SHEET AS AT _________________________________________ SOURCES OF FUNDS (LIABILITIES) Schedule Current Year Previous Year UNRESTRICTED FUNDS Corpus Fund/General Fund/Designated Funds RESTRICTED FUNDS-Unutilised Grants (Deferred Revenue), Endowment LOANS/BORROWINGS-Secured/Unsecured CURRENT LIABILITIES & PROVISIONS TOTAL APPLICATION OF FUNDS (ASSETS) FIXED ASSETS-Tangible Assets/Intangible Assets/Capital Work-In-Progress INVESTMENTS-Long Term/Short term CURRENT ASSETS-LOANS, ADVANCES & DEPOSITS-Grant Receivable TOTAL Significant Accounting Policies and Notes on Accounts Net Assets In NPOs, net assets is like net worth (share capital+reserves & surplus) in case of for profit entities Net assets=Total Assets-Total Liabilities Net assets means owner funds (capital) although there are no owners in charitable institutions generally In an NPO, net assets mainly include corpus and general funds Format of financial statements as per ICAI Name of Entity ______________________________________ INCOME AND EXPENDITURE ACCOUNT FOR THE PERIOD/YEAR ENDED __________ INCOME Schedule Schedule Current Year Previous Year Grants & Donations Other Income-rent, interest, incidental business Income, Fee & Subscription, TOTAL (A) EXPENDITURE Program Exp Administrative and General Expenses, Finance costs Depreciation & Amortisation Expenses TOTAL (B) Excess of Income over Expenditure (Surplus) or excess of Exp over Income (Deficit)(A-B) (Net Income in for profit entity) Balance Being Surplus (Deficit) Carried to Balance Sheet-General Fund, Transfer to Designated fund, Building fund/ Others (specify) Significant Accounting Policies and Notes on Accounts Accounting for grant recognition by NGOs in India Practise followed as per convention-no legal directive: Option 1: Gross grant treated as income Option 2: Gross grant routed through Balance Sheet only-asset and liability side settled Option 3: Grant treated as income to the extent of expenditurewhile unutilised grant is a liability--hybrid method AS 9 mentions income recognition to the extent of expenditure for grants applicable if there is business/commerce etc Follow the principle of prudence in selecting the option for recognition. Recipient, Sub- recipient and Vendor Recipient is the organization receiving the grant, sometimes called the Prime recipient because it has full responsibility for grant funds. The document evidencing this arrangement is grant contract Sub-recipient is involved in substantive activities of the award project. The recipient passes on some or all of its duties to the sub-recipient called sub award. All the terms and conditions from the grant award flow down to sub- recipients through a document evidencing it called sub grant contract Vendor/service provider provides goods/services to the recipient to accomplish project’s purposes. Selected terms and conditions might be passed through to the vendor. The document evidencing is a goods/service contract Cost-Key concepts Cost-amount spent to acquire an asset Expense-amount spent on regular operations Classification of expense for NPOs Natural expense head-WHAT (type of expense) the funds are being spent on-salary, rent, hotel accommodation etc The natural expenses are grouped into group heads like HR cost, Travel, capital cost, office exp, legal & professional etc Group head-Travel-natural expense-conveyance, airfare, meals, accommodation etc Group head-HR-natural expenses-salary, HRA, PF, Gratuity Furcation expense head- WHY (purpose of expense) the funds are being spent Program cost (program implementation, MEL) Support cost (Accounting, Admin, Fund raising) Cost - Key concepts NPOs should follow functional expense head for presenting reports, that is what is the basis for their constitution and work. Broadly the functional heads are two-Program/service delivery and Support/Admin & General Costs for a project for NGO Direct costs (100% direct traceability to a program/support function) to benefit the beneficiary as per project design. No cost if no project. Common/Shared costs-benefit multiple projects-shared cost apportionment based on time, space, no of employees/beneficiaries/ no of project locations Understanding and computing direct and shared cost crucial for correct and realistic budget formulation Apportionment method and share of common cost included in common cost policy Common cost be reviewed every year within the purview of common cost policy Total cost for a project: Direct cost+ Common Direct cost Shared cost apportioned to the project Institutional/Management cost/indirect cost if permitted basis donor grant management policy to address contingency/create a reserve Other types of cost Capital & Revenue cost: Capital Costs: Capital costs are one-time fixed assets purchases that will be used for revenue generation over a longer period- more than one year. Revenue Costs: are referred to as operating expenses are short-term expenses that are used in running the daily business operations. Fixed and Variable Costs: Fixed cost is one that does not change in total within a reasonable range of activity.Since the fixed cost remains constant in total, the fixed cost per unit of activity decreases when the volume increases and vice versa Variable cost or expense is where the total cost changes in proportion to changes in volume or activity. Historical cost: original cost of asset when it was purchased. Sunk cost: money spent that cannot be recovered. Marginal cost: change usually decrease in the cost of producing one more unit or serving one more customer. Opportunity cost: value of next best alternatives when taking a decision given the resource constraint. Cost Principles in grant budgeting for NPOs Costs budgeted for a project grant should be Allowable cost-costs which are not subject to any restrictions/limitations in the grant award. Allocable cost-costs which are incurred specifically for the attainment of the objective of the grant. Reasonable cost-cost which is generally recognized as necessary to be incurred by a prudent person in the conduct of normal business Consistent: cost applied in same fashion throughout the grant Unallowable cost-those costs that cannot be incurred and paid under the grant. Budget basics A budget is estimation of revenue and expenses over a specified future period, usually the project period for a grant. It is financial plan (blueprint) of the project plan. One need to budget the plan and not vice versa Budget is a Planning (align with objectives)Tool, Control (within policy framework) Tool, Compliance (ceiling) Tool and Mirrors the Financial Report A budget covers quantitative, qualitative and cost aspects. The purpose of budget is to: Ascertain reasonable estimation of costs for interventions/activities in a grant proposal/award. Segregates costs-direct/common/indirect or OH costs Cost matching/sharing (co-financing) for multi donor grant, in kind match. Is a framework for donor-donee in a grant award Enables course correction based on measurement of actual achievements versus estimates  Statement of SOF and Estimated Costs Enables Recognition-activity, group, period, income, expenditure, deficit, surplus Pre requisites Organisation structure. Data. Chart of accounts. Managerial support. Formal process for formulation. Types of Budgets: Activity budget Activity based budget as the name suggests, covers the costs required for implementing a project activity. In ABB, one looks at resources required for completing an activity and the resources cost For example , if project strategy is to build capacity of civil society leaders, workshops is an activity. Workshops costs would be towards hiring resource persons, booking a venue, transportation cost, food, lodging and materials and handouts. Illustration: Activity Budget for Conducting a Workshop Particular of  Expense Rate per unit No of Units Total in Rs Trainer Fees @ Rs 1000 per day 3 days 3,000 Venue @ Rs 500 per day 3 days 1,500 Rental for Furniture @ Rs 500 per day 3 days 1,500 Rental for Equipment @ Rs 100 per day 3 days 300 Catering Exp for Lunch and tea two times @ 100 per person 55 persons X 3 days = 165 16,500 Conveyance paid to attendees @Rs 50 per person per day 50 attendees x 3 days = 150 7,500 Printing of handouts @ Re 1 per page 50pages x 50 copies = 2500 pages 2,500 Grand Total 32,800 Line Item Budget A Line-item budget presents the budget under broad heads It lists income and expenses by category Major donors like USAID, European Commission prefer to have their budget templates by line items. It helps better tracking for trends in major cost categories Illustration: Line Item Budget Expenses Unit # of Units Unit Rate ($) Costs ($) Human Resources  CEO Per day 3 350 1050 Trainer Fees Per day 2 200 400 Subtotal Human Resources 1450 Travel Trainer Airfare Per Person 1 300 300 Participant Transportation Per Person 30 10 300 Subtotal Travel 600 Equipment and Supplies Materials and hand-outs  Per Person 30 15 450 Subtotal Equipment and Supplies 450 Other costs, Services Venue Per day 2 300 600 Catering Per Person 30 15 450 Subtotal Other costs, Services Subtotal 3550 Overhead (10%) 355 TOTAL 3905 Other Types of Budget Incremental budget: Next year’s budget prepared by making marginal changes to the current year’s budget. The current budget is used as a base to which incremental assumptions are added or subtracted from the base amounts to determine new budget amounts. Value Proposition Budgeting focuses on allocating the ideal amount of financial resources that provides the highest value to the customer. Another name for Value Proposition Budgeting is Priority Based Budgeting or value based budgeting. Zero-based budgeting (ZBB) based on efficiency and need at that point rather than budget history. Formulation starts from scratch that only includes operations and expenses essential, no expenses are automatically added to the budget. Performance based budget (PBB) considers input of resources and the output of services. The goal is to link funding to results delivered, thus called Outcome based budgeting Fixed Budget : not modified for variation in actual activity and costs. Flexible budget : budget changes in response to activity level and costs Budget Justification Note Separate word document to explain the budget nos. For each line item and activity, provide complete details so that it can be referred for direction and validation during implementation. Provides narrative clarification of each budget item demonstrating the necessity of the costs and how they relate to the program activity Provide justification of the calculation of the estimated costs. Note that the estimation should be based on real costs Balanced, Surplus and Deficit budgets A balanced budget is a e budgeting process where total expected revenues are equal to total planned spending. A budget deficit occurs when expenditures surpass revenue. A budget surplus means there is additional money to spend at the end of the accounting period Budget Monitoring & Budgetary Control Budget Monitoring is the process: Record actual expenditure versus budget estimates at the line/activity level in books Measure variance using a budget variance report to ascertain positive/negative devotions The workplan delivered helps budget monitoring at a  particular point of time Tally software can setup budget and record expenditure. So, the Variance report is real time. Budgetary Control is the process to: Evaluate results of budget monitoring i.e. actual income and expenditure versus original/revised (realigned) budget through variance report Deviation/tolerance triggers action Budgetary control ensures timely action/approvals i.e.  budget realignment, reallocation, NCE Interest apportionment With a single bank account for multiple projects, interest apportionment for reporting to donor has to be made as per well defined method Interest apportionment not applicable for dedicated bank  account Interest can be additive or deductive from grant as specified in grant agreement. HR cost allocation Staff cost for shared HR in a grant should be allocated and charged to donor grants as per project grant in line with common cost allocation policy Monthly salary register/sheet with salary allocation of staff to donor projects, deductions/adjustments, variance versus previous month with reasons and banking streams for payout. This is required for donor verification and audit Payment of salary out of FC and local funds Applicability of time sheets in donor contracts Robust Grant Monitoring System Grant monitoring is a process to measure/review performance during grant period. It assesses physical & financial progress, identify risks and corresponding mitigation measures, ensure that funds are used as intended and programs achieve desired outcomes and impact. Important Tools and Process: Complete understanding of terms and conditions  of Grant contract Budget and LFA clearly known to both finance and programme teams Periodic Budget Variance/Deviation Analysis by  finance, program team and management review Timely course correction through realignment etc through addendum in grant contract. Timely reporting-narrative and financial reports as  stipulated in grant contract Grant Contract - General Conditions MOU versus grant contract/agreement distinction Recitals/Preamble Definitions Grant amount and purpose (including prohibited/disallowed use) No Pledge Complementary funding Designated contacts-for various aspects of  the grant Conflict of interest and ethical conduct Confidentiality Term and termination Grant Contract - General Conditions Notice of Changes Compliance with laws   Indemnity Publications and Licenses Visibility, Publicity Force Majeure Relationship of parties Governing Laws Notice  Waiver Grant Contract - General Conditions Severability-any clause not enforceable does not make other clauses non enforceable Assignment/Delegation Acknowledgement-understand and consent Counterparts Entire agreement Arbitration Jurisdiction Remedies-injunctive relief from court Grant Contract - Operational Conditions Scope of Work Deliverables Budget Eligible Costs Grant Disbursement/Reimbursement Log Frame and Work Plan Basis of accounting Separate Books of Account for the project Separate Bank Account for Grant Funds Bills and Voucher separately and defaced with mention of project Limit on Cash Expenditure. Treatment of interest Procurement rules Program/Financial reporting-Often there are templates for interim and final reports Input Tax credit Monitoring/Evaluation Audit Recovery Treatment of Fixed Assets-templates in case FA are not allowed to be retained automatically Income generated from project activity Sustainability Closure of grant Record and retention Please note: Information is for reference only. Read our disclaimer  here .