Capital Planning 2
Capital Planning 2
Capital Planning 2
STUDY UNITS
1
Be able to:
• Prepare documentation for the approval of projects of a capital nature in a municipality.
• Use this documentation to raise finance from financial institutions in South Africa for
municipal capital projects.
• Determine capital investment appraisal and project financing options as they relate to
capital budgeting decisions and techniques in South Africa’s local government sphere.
ASSESSMENTS
Prepare a Report
Collect and compile
SUMMATIVE. providing informed
this, based on the 6
Work based Rating of selected
stages of the given
Assessment (POE) capital projects for a
learning units
municipal
ASSESSMENT STEPS
1 2 3 4 5 6
MEMORANDUM OF BUSINESS PLANS- INTEGRATED MULTI YEAR CAPITAL BUDGETS OPERATING BUDGET
UNDERSTANDING THE FORMAL DEVELOPMENT BUDGET (AS PER (CAPEX)– ONCE OFF (OPEX) – DAY TO DAY
(MOU) (APPROVALS, STATEMENT OF A SET PLANNING (IDP) – 5- MFMA, 3 -YEAR PAYMENTS FOR INCOME & COSTS TO
DISBURSEMENTS, OF BUSINESS GOALS, YEAR STRATEGIC BUDGETS IN DEVELOPMENT DELIVER MUNICIPAL
CASHFLOWS, ATTAINMENT PLANS PLANS, INFORMS ALL UNIFORM FORMATS) PROJECTS (FOR SERVICES
PROJECT OUTCOMES PLANNING, OVER A YEAR)
AND LINES OF BUDGETING,
AUTHORITY) MANAGEMENT AND
DECISION MAKING
WHAT IS CAPITAL
PLANNING
• Process of budgeting resources for the future of
an organisation’s long-term plans
• Includes budgeting for replacement machinery,
R&D, new plants, new machinery etc
KEY STEPS IN CAPITAL PLANNING
• These are comprehensive, multiyear capital plans that provide a link between the
municipality’s strategic vision, its urban land use plan, and its annual budget
PREPARATION OF CAPEX PROGRAMMES
• Multi year CAPITAL plans need to fall within the overall strategic plans of the
municipalities. E.g provision of clean water
• The CAPITAL plans should be covered by the Integrated Development Planning (IDP)
• All Capital acquisitions should therefore support the municipality’s long -term goals
• To develop an effective CAPEX programme, information is derived from a number of
sources/stakeholders (communities need to be involved)
KEY STAKEHOLDERS
Media, organised
business (e.g chamber
Community
Municipal officials Ward committees of commerce),
development workers
provincial and
National departments
KEY STAKEHOLDERS
• The ACT (MFMA) requires extensive consultation of municipalities with stakeholders for
correct planning, transparency, accountability and prioritization.
CAPEX VS OPEX
• MTREF requires a 3- year rolling expenditure and revenue budget for municipalities.
• Capital budgeting is fundamental for planning , control and resource allocation.
CAPITAL EXPENDITURE PROGRAMME (CEP)
• CEPs reflect short to long term budgetary plans for additions, replacements and changes
and replacements of infrastructure.
• CEP is a component of the Financial Plan and affects the cash flow of the municipality.
• Before approval, the Municipal must consider all costs incurred and revenues before the
project is operational.
• They are derived from the CAPEX budget.
• Future OPEX and revenues for specific projects need to be identified.
CAPITAL EXPENDITURE
PROGRAMME (CEP)
COMPONENTS
c. Funders will include government grants, surplus revenue, leases, loans, municipal bonds,
developer contributions and other grants.
(to be discussed later)
6. Capital Budget – After the above steps have been accomplished, the capital budget will
be put together. The information from the CEP is transferred to the annual budget doc.
PRELIMINARY CAP PROJECTS EXAMPLE
BUSINESS PLANS
• This is a formal statement of a set of business goals, their motivation (of bein attainable)
and plan to reach them
• The goal in a municipal is to enhance service delivery
• Serves to formulate a capital project in a clear manner for decision makers
BUSINESS PLANS (TEMPLATE IN ANNEX 1.1)
• Business plan (intention of capital project, outcomes, timelines & mechanics, funding mechanism and other
resources)
• CAPEX programme, multi year capital plan, part of bigger strategy of municipality
• Opex vs capex
• Steps on capex programme (determination of capital needs, id of projects, costing, prioritization, development of
cap programme, cap budget)
• Contribution from own income: Cash-backed current year surplus in the Financial
performance budget (MFMA 18(1)(a). In cases where external loans and financing is not
possible. Surplus cash financing occurs when fully depreciated assets are disposed.
• Cash-backed accumulated funds from previous years not committed for other purposes
[MFMA 18(1)(b)] (committed to other purposes meaning council resolved to allocate the
funds for a specific purpose).
• Public Contributions, Grants and Subsidies from other Organs of State. There are 3 sources
of capital grants: National gvt, provincial gvt grants and other municipalities grants.
SOURCES OF CAPITAL FUNDING
There are 3 categories of Municipalities 1. they don’t need assistance to borrow from CM 2. not
credit viable but not incapable of being credit worthy i.e. sufficient tax base
3. Poor candidates due to fundamental structural weaknesses
• Long term external loans – Extending over 15, 20 or more years. Mostly annuity kind
• Municipality Service partnerships (MSPs) – Access to cap markets through revenue streams
• Concessional Loan Finance – More lenient , easy terms (DBSA, Infrastructure Finance Corp
(IFCA) )
SOURCES OF CAPITAL FUNDING
• Sale and Lease back – involves selling assets to a lessor who in turn leases it back.
Money raised can fund other capex purchases
• Equity deals: Municipal Bonds – Citizens invest directly in the municipal for better
services
KEY FACTORS IN BORROWING ( MFMA)
Borrow at
Borrow within
Borrow at lowest minimum
authorized
interest rate risk(manage
parameters
exposure)
FUNDING PROS AND CONS
FUNDING PROS AND CONS
Long term Loans Revenue/cash backed acc Public contributions, Grants etc
Advantages
Cost is spread longer No principal or interest payments Not repayable
Disadvantages
A bit difficult to access funds Current rate payers fund future tax payers Costs of maint and upgrades from municipal
Maybe more expensive Relies on fully cash backed Cap Replacement reserve May need to borrow in future for upgrades
Security maybe needed
For better informed decisions, the best possible information
must be presented for capital projects and should cover:
DISCUSSION:
Key terms:
• Capital rationing
• Optimal CAPEX
• Asset capitalization
• Medium Term Revenue and Expenditure Framework (MTREF)
• IDP, MBPS
CAPEX CONTROL MECHANISM
1. Objectives: Ensuring best CAPEX options are selected and evaluated in terms of financial viability and ability
to meet service delivery needs
2. Risk management: value of money not being achieved, service delivery not met
3. Key controls: appraisal and evaluation of capex options prior and post implementation
4. Capital rationing: Arises due to scarcity of funds. The following steps apply;
Step 1. Identify potential Cap projects that fit with the IDP Step 2. Establish minimum quantitative criteria
Step 3. Evaluate remaining projects using NPV, IRR etc Step 4.Consider the qualitative benefits
Step 5. Rank the projects based on quantitative and qualitative factors Step 6. Allocate available funds top to bottom
CAPEX 1. Objectives: Ensuring best CAPEX options are
selected and evaluated in terms of financial viability
CONTROL and ability to meet service delivery needs
MECHANISM 2. Risk management: value of money not being
achieved, service delivery not met
3. Key controls: appraisal and evaluation of capex
options prior and post implementation
4. Capital rationing: arises due to scarcity of funds.
The following steps apply;
5. Qualitative factors: may show impact of project
on service delivery e.g safety and welfare, pollution
CAPEX control mechanism is a budgetory control tool
• Expenditures that enhance objectives of IDP and MBPS for basic services
• A good mix of equity and liabilities to fund assets
• Established as per IDP (Capital budget, capex programme)
• Optimal capex structures to be agreed annually after consultations
• Informed by the powers, functions and delegation of municipality
STEP 4: SCREENING AND SELECTING CAPITAL
PROJECTS
• KEY TERMS: NPV, IRR, PAYBACK PERIOD, DISCOUNT RATE (I), BUDGET
• CRITERIA, CASHFLOWS, FINANCIAL ANALYSIS, APPRAISAL METHOD
THE SCREENING PROCESS
ACCOUNTING RATE
PAYBACK PERIOD
OF RETURN (ARR)
NET PRESENT VALUE
PVs are found by discounting CFs using the discount rate ( required
return, WACC)
NPV EXAMPLE determined discount rate the municipality requires is 18%. Should
the machine be purchased?
IRR FORMULAR
IRR CALCULATION EXAMPLE AND TIP
Tip: Use the NPV Table to find the factor under the number of years required. That will
give the IRR %. The IRR must be above the required rate of return to approve project.
IRR NOTES
• Simply to calculate
• Ignores CFs and TVM
• Can be useful in evaluating manager performance
QUESTIONS
STEP 5: PROJECT APPRAISAL
Objectives –
SMART (specific, Costs and Benefits
Options – Identify
measurable, – Identify and Financial appraisal Uncertainties and
available project
achievable,
options quantify for each – NPV, IRR etc Sensitivities – risk
relevant, time- project
bound)
Identify suitable
Non- Financial Comparison with Identify best Recommend
sources of
factors – evaluate alternatives option – TVM course of action
Funding
• Investors (municipality) prefer to receive money today
rather than in the future
TIME VALUE OF
• Inflation erodes the value of money
MONEY (TMV)
• R20,000 today is of less value in 5 years time ceteris
AND PRICE
paribus
INCREASES
• Price increase are beyond the control of municipalities.
Higher prices and increased Interest rates affect cash
FACTORS INFLUENCING CAPEX PROGRAMME BENEFITS
VALUE FOR
MONEY RATING
QUESTIONS
KEY TERMS and Acronyms
• For individual projects : if BCR (Benefit Cost Ratio) is > 1= ACCEPT Project
• For mutually exclusive projects: (Accept after ranking) = combine with NPV, NPV first
• Should it be used in municipal capital budgeting process????
NB:
Most public CAPEX projects produce qualitative benefits, (improved water quality, less
time on roads)
Costs are indicated in raised tariffs/taxes
CBA EXAMPLE