Understanding school finances

You will find information about resourcing and school finances in these areas of the Ministry of Education website:

School funding sources

Schools receive three types of funding through the Ministry of Education.

The Resourcing division administers operational funding and staffing entitlements; the Infrastructure division administers property funding.

Schools can also generate income from activities such as fundraising, donations, trusts or fee-paying students.

Operational funding

Operational funding covers a school’s running costs, including the wages of all non-teaching staff, property maintenance, classroom materials, purchase and depreciation of capital items, leases and rentals and staff professional development.

Operational funding is calculated using school rolls and other factors such as decile. It is responsive to roll fluctuations.

The ministry pays it directly into your school’s bank account every three months. The amount of the quarterly payments varies across the year.

Read the operational funding information on the Ministry of Education website for a full explanation of the processes around this.

Staffing entitlements

Staffing entitlements are also calculated on a formula.

The ministry pays the salaries of the teachers a school employs through the school’s staffing entitlement. The ministry pays these salaries directly to teaching staff through an agency.

As principal you are responsible for making sure:

Read the school staffing information on the Ministry of Education website for a clear explanation of regulations and processes for staffing and salaries.

Banking staffing

Banking staffing monitors the teachers’ pay. It is important all principals fully understand how this works.

Banking staffing gives boards some flexibility in timing the use of staffing entitlement.

In one year, schools can choose to:

Starting carefully with banking staffing is probably a sound idea, as banked staffing debts can be costly for schools in ensuing years. Any debt will be repaid at rates set each year by the ministry.

Banking staffing – Ministry of Education

Keeping the accounts

As principal, you and your board of trustees need to feel sure you can account for all the money coming into the school and how it is spent.

As a significant community business, it is very important that your school pays all money due on time and in full to maintain healthy community relationships.

Schools usually make GST returns on a two-monthly basis. Make sure staff know that GST invoices or receipts are essential records of expenditure. Invoices and receipts should be given promptly to the person responsible for GST accounting records in the school.

Attendance dues accounts

State-integrated schools must provide audited annual attendance dues accounts to the Ministry of Education.

Read the financial management chapter in the Financial Information for Schools Handbook to get a broad picture of what needs to be done in this area. You can download the Financial Information for Schools Handbook from the Ministry of Education website:

Preparing the budget

Good financial practice means managing money and money processes so the budget is aligned with the school’s strategic plan. Budgeting is an important process that allows for some delegation of financial tasks and responsibility in larger schools.

The Ministry of Education has regional financial advisers who are available to provide advice on budgeting in schools. See Managing school finances for contact details.

Reporting on and reviewing school finances

Monthly and annual reporting is a key part of keeping your financial systems secure and successful.

Before each board meeting your financial service provider or executive officer should prepare a management report. This should include:

Remember, as principal, you and the board chairperson sign off the annual report. You need to know how the finances work in a school to be able to do this.

Before attending board meetings you should be comfortable answering all of the following questions:

Useful financial terms

Equity – Debits – Credits – Balance sheet – Bottom line – Operating statement – Percentages - Cyclical maintenance – Operating loss/surplus – Viable/not viable – Working capital- Solvent/ not solvent – Depreciation – Fixed assets – Working capital – Banking staffing – Bank reconciliation

Financial self-checklists

PLANNING AND BUDGETING

Further information