One of the few books that addresses financial and managerial accounting within the three major areas of the public sector—government, health, and not-for-profit—the Second Edition provides the fundamentals of financial management for those pursuing careers within these fields. KEY TOPICS: With a unique presentation that explains the rules specific to the public sector, this book outlines the framework for readers to access and apply financial information more effectively. Employing an engaging and user-friendly approach, this book clearly defines essential vocabulary, concepts, methods, and basic tools of financial management and financial analysis that are imperative to achieving success in the field. This book is intended for financial managers and general managers who are required to obtain, understand, and use accounting information to improve the financial results of their organizations, specifically within the areas of government or public policy and management, not-for-profit management, and health policy and management.
There’s way too many typos and mis-references. I get that this is a dry as bones topic, but make sure your examples and tables say what your text says they’re about. 8th edition!
Finkler et al: Financial Management for Public, Health, and Not-for-Profit Organizations
4th Edition
This was the book assigned to me for my class specifically for Nonprofit Financial Management as I pursue my MBA specifically for Nonprofit management.
As textbooks go, it is serviceable. The writing is clean and clear, and is easily understandable for someone that has some background in accounting. I am the Director of Finance at a nonprofit, and I was able to pick up a number of useful things from this, though a lot of it was review.
A couple of things bothered me a bit. There is a chapter about the time value of money (here it is chapter five). The book teaches the student how to approach the problems from a point where the unknowns are plugged into excel. This may just be me being old fashioned, but to me it skipped a step in being overly reliant on technology instead of going back one step and showing the derivation and making the student go through the motions to get an understanding of where excel is coming from. It’s not that it isn’t there - for example the derivation of finding the value of the annuity is footnoted, in small print. Again, a small concern, but one nevertheless.
A second thing is to look at the cost. Due to a mix up with the professor’s syllabus, I had first bought the third edition of this book, before being told that the fourth edition was the only acceptable one. The problem is that at the time, the third edition was less than half the price of the fourth edition. The kicker was I ended up with both of the editions side by side, and looking at the first three chapters I noticed no discernible difference. This may not be true in later chapters as I didn’t make the comparison. If you are assigning the text, have a look at the third edition for the student’s sake.
Very good text book that makes nonprofit financial management understandable to people who will never be accountants but will need to hire them and be able to knowledgeably know what they are talking about.
I'm not sure I'd say I "liked" it, but it was very helpful. I personally learn best by reading so most people would not find my reviews of textbooks helpful, but this one was decent. I feel like I have a pretty good grasp of the concepts and was able to complete the exercises at the back of the book fairly easily. It hasn't exactly turned me into an accountant, but I feel much more competent looking at financial statements than I was before.