Traditionally, the study of financial decision making in law enforcement and criminal justice entities has been approached from the perspective of tax revenues and budgeting that focus only on the past and present. Capital investments of cash flow provide future benefits to all organizations, and among courses in business administration, these notions of long-term financial management are critical to a sound understanding of organizational finance. Strategic Finance for Criminal Justice Organizations examines capital budgeting techniques from a quantitative perspective that targets the strategic future of revenues within the criminal justice and law enforcement sectors.Explaining capital budgeting concepts through the use of practical examples, this volume discusses: Economics and the use of money as a tool to facilitate the exchange of goods and servicesHuman decision making, impediments to rendering objective decisions, and methods for improving decision objectivityThe consequences of making capital budgeting decisions, the concept of risk, and the time value of moneyThe rendering of decisions using the payback time method and the mathematical formula necessary to use itThe concept of discounting and decision rules for net present valueHow to make an internal rate of return financial decisionThe mathematical formula for the profitability ratio/index method and using it to make financial decisionsIn all organizations, it is essential that financial decisions are made through informed insight considering all relevant factors. This volume contributes to improvements of the skills that are required to robustly render beneficial, long-term strategic decisions within the law enforcement and criminal justice environment.
Introductory Concepts. Concepts of Decisions. Financial Management Decisions.Tools of the Trade: Making a Decision. It Is Time for Payback: The Payback Time Method. A Present for the Present: The Net Present Value Method. How Do We Rate? With the Internal Rate of Return. Red or Black? The Profitability Index Method. Putting It All Together! Let’s Make a Decision. Day and Night Shifts: Integrating the Concepts. The Slammer: Concluding Remarks. Afterword. Appendices. Index.
"The book satisfies the academic need to introduce theory while providing relevant real-world application. It provides a logical progression through the world of organizational financial decision-making, and is geared to the non-finance major. It also provides insight into strategic best practices and is adaptable to audiences at the local, regional, and international levels."—Ernest C. Fields, Ph.D., in Journal of International Students
David H. McElreath, Daniel Adrian Doss, Barbara Russo, Greg Etter, Jeffrey Van Slyke, Joseph Skinner, Michael Corey, Carl J. Jensen, Michael Wigginton, Robert Nations
David H. McElreath, Daniel Adrian Doss, Barbara Russo, Greg Etter, Jeffrey Van Slyke, Joseph Skinner, Michael Corey, Carl J. Jensen, Michael Wigginton, Robert Nations
David H. McElreath, Daniel Adrian Doss, Carl J. Jensen III, Michael Wigginton Jr., Ralph Kennedy, Kenneth R. Winter, Robert E. Mongue, Janice Bounds, J. Michelle Estis-Sumerel
David H. McElreath, Daniel Adrian Doss, Carl J. Jensen III, Michael Wigginton Jr., Ralph Kennedy, Kenneth R. Winter, Robert E. Mongue, Janice Bounds, J. Michelle Estis-Sumerel
David H. McElreath, Daniel Adrian Doss, Barbara Russo, Greg Etter, Jeffrey Van Slyke, Joseph Skinner, Michael Corey, Carl J. Jensen, Michael Wigginton, Robert Nations
David H. McElreath, Daniel Adrian Doss, Barbara Russo, Greg Etter, Jeffrey Van Slyke, Joseph Skinner, Michael Corey, Carl J. Jensen, Michael Wigginton, Robert Nations