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Managerial Accounting:
Concepts and Principles
Outline
What is managerial accounting?
Comparison between managerial
 accounting and financial accounting
Cost classifications in different ways
Flow of manufacturing activities
Job order cost accounting systems and
 process cost accounting systems
Cost allocation

                                          2
Introduction
 The previous presentations focus on the financial
  accounting topics
   Please summarize the basic points of financial accounting
      →Users/ Time focus/ Emphasis/ Importance/ Subject focus/
       Requirements
   Thinking
      →Is the information provided by financial accounting enough for an
       enterprise to conduct its operation and management?
      →If not, how to satisfy this demand for the internal used information?
      →Have you ever heard ―managerial accounting‖?




                                                                           3
What is Managerial Accounting?

An activity that provides financial and
 nonfinancial information to managers and
 other internal decision makers
Is quite important to planning, control, and
 decision making activities




                                                4
The Environment of
      Managerial Accounting

                  Complexity and
               size of organizations
 Regulatory                             Emphasis
environment                             on quality

                Environment of
              Managerial Accounting



     Competition                 Development of
                                   technology
                                                     5
Managerial Accounting and
        Financial Accounting
                         Financial                   Managerial
                        Accounting                   Accounting
1. Users           Investors, creditors, and   Managers, employees, and
                     other external users         other internal users

2. Time focus       Historical perspective         Future emphasis

3. Emphasis            Objectivity and                 Relevance
                        Verifiability           for planning and control

4. Importance      Precision of information    Timeliness of information

5. Subject focus    Summarized data for        Detailed segment reports
                   the whole organization         of an organization

6. Requirements     Structured and often          Relatively flexible
                    controlled by GAAP                (no GAAP)


                                                                           6
Cost Classifications
Costs can be classified by:
    Relevance
    Behaviour
    Controllability
    Traceability
    Function



                               7
Costs Classification by
                       Relevance

   Relevant
     If   costs influence a decision
       →Costs that are applicable to a particular decision.
       →Costs that should have a bearing on which
        alternative a manager selects.
       →Costs that are avoidable.
       →Future costs that differ between alternatives.

   Irrelevant
     If   costs do not influence a decision

                                                              8
Costs Classification by
                     Relevance

 Sunk Costs
  All costs incurred in the past that cannot be changed by
   any decision made now or in the future.
  should not be considered in decisions.
  Irrelevant
  Example: You bought an automobile that cost $30,000
   two years ago. The $30,000 cost is sunk because whether
   you drive it, park it, trade it, or sell it, you cannot change
   the $30,000 cost.



                                                                    9
Costs Classification by
                    Relevance

   Out-of-pocket costs
     require future outlays of cash
     associated with a particular decision
     relevant for future decisions
     Example: Considering the decision to take a
      vacation or stay at home, if you choose a
      vacation, you will only have travel costs (out-of-
      pocket costs).


                                                           10
Costs Classification by
                  Relevance

Opportunity Costs
  The potential benefit that is given up when one
   alternative is selected over another.
  Example: If you were not attending college or
   university, you could be earning $25,000 per
   year. Your opportunity cost of attending college
   or university for one year is $25,000.




                                                      11
Costs Classification by Behavior

Cost behavior refers to
  how a cost will react to changes in the level of
   business activity.
Fixed costs
  do not change when activity changes.
Variable costs
  change in proportion to changes in the volume
   of activity


                                                      12
Costs Classification by
                               Behavior
 Total fixed costs remain unchanged
  when activity changes within a relevant range.
 Fixed costs per unit decline as activity increases.




                                             Fixed costs per unit
    Total fixed costs




                        Volume of Activity                          Volume of Activity
                                                                                         13
Costs Classification by
                                Behavior
Total variable costs change when activity changes.
Variable costs per unit do not change as activity
increases.




                                              Variable costs per unit
  Total variable costs




                         Volume of activity                             Volume of activity

                                                                                             14
Costs Classification by
                             Behavior
 Mixed costs
                 contain a combination of fixed and variable costs.
 Total Compensation




                                                         Variable
                                                   Sales Commissions

                                                              Fixed
                                                         Monthly salary
                              Sales
                                                                          15
Costs Classification by
              Behavior
 Step-Wise Costs
  remain fixed over limited ranges of volumes but increase
   by a lump sum when volume increases beyond maximum
   amounts.
  Example: additional production supervisors must be
   added when another shift is added.
              Supervisory Salaries




                                     Production Volume

                                                              16
Costs Classification by
            Controllability

Controllable vs. not controllable
  depends upon the employee’s responsibilities.
  Example: A lower level manager may have
   control over overtime costs but not over the
   purchase of high-cost machinery.




                                                   17
Costs Classification by
         Traceability
Management often traces costs to cost
 objects
  To obtain a better measure of their total cost
  Cost objects include
     →Products
     →Services
     →Departments
     →Divisions
     →Customer groups


                                                    18
Costs Classification by
           Traceability
Traceable costs are classified as
  Direct costs
     →can be conveniently traced to a unit of product or
      other cost objective.
     →Examples: salaries of production workers, salary of
      maintenance department employees.
  Indirect costs
     →must be allocated to a unit of product or other cost
      objective.
     →Examples: factory rent, factory light and heat,
      factory accounting costs.


                                                             19
Costs Classification by Function

Manufacturing Costs
  are necessary and integral to the production of
   finished goods.
  Examples: direct labour, direct materials, and
   manufacturing overhead.
Non-Manufacturing Costs
  are not integral to the manufacture of finished
   goods.
  Examples: selling and administrative expenses.


                                                     20
Costs Classification by Function


  Direct        Direct      Manufacturing
 Material       Labour        Overhead




            Manufacturing
               Costs

                                            21
Costs Classification by Function

 Direct materials
  Materials that are clearly and easily identified with a
   particular product.
  Example: Steel used to manufacture an automobile
 Direct labour
  Labour costs that are clearly traceable to, or readily
   identifiable with, the finished product.
  Example: Wages paid to an automobile assembly
   worker.



                                                             22
Costs Classification by Function

Manufacturing overhead
  All manufacturing costs except direct material
   and direct labour.
  Manufacturing costs that cannot be traced
   directly to specific units produced.
  Examples:
    →Indirect labour – maintenance
    →Indirect material – cleaning supplies
    →Factory utility costs
    →Supervisory costs


                                                    23
Costs Classification by
                   Function

           Manufacturing costs are often
               combined as follows:

 Direct             Direct          Manufacturing
Material            Labour            Overhead




           Prime             Conversion
           Cost                Cost

                                                    24
Costs Classification by
                   Function
Non-Manufacturing costs (period costs) are
 expenses not charged to the product.
  Selling Costs
    →Costs incurred to obtain customer orders and to
     deliver finished goods to customers —advertising
     and shipping.
  Administrative Costs
    →Non-manufacturing costs of staff support and
     administrative functions —accounting, data
     processing, personnel, research and development.

                                                        25
Discussions
 ABC company manufactures a portable radio
  designed for mounting on the wall of the
  bathroom. The following list represents some of
  the different types of costs incurred in the
  manufacture of these radios:
  1.   The plant manager's salary.
  2.   The cost of heating the plant.
  3.   The cost of heating executive offices.
  4.   The cost of printed circuit boards used in the radios.
  5.   Salaries and commissions of company salespersons.

                                                                26
Discussions
6. Depreciation on office equipment used in the executive
    offices.
7. Depreciation on production equipment used in plant.
8. Wages of janitorial personnel who clean the plant.
9. The cost of insurance on the plant building.
10. The cost of electricity to light the plant.
11. The cost of electricity to power plant equipment.
12. The cost of maintaining and repairing equipment in the
    plant.
13. The cost of printing promotional materials for trade
    shows.
14. The cost of solder used in assembling the radios.
15. The cost of telephone service for the executive offices.

                                                               27
Discussions
Required:
 Classify each of the items above as
  product cost or period costs.




                                        28
Discussions: the answer

1    Product   6    Period    11   Product

2    Product   7    Product   12   Product

3    Period    8    Product   13   Period

4    Product   9    Product   14   Product

5    Period    10   Product   15   Period


                                             29
Flow of Manufacturing
                    Activities
   Materials Activity              Production Activity                 Marketing Activity
   (raw materials)                 (goods in process)                  (finished goods)
                                    Goods in Process
    Raw Materials                                                       Finished Goods
                                   Beginning Inventory
  Beginning Inventory                                                 Beginning Inventory


                                       Raw Materials Used
     Raw Materials                                                          Goods
      Purchases                                                           Manufactured
                                       Direct Labour Used


                                       Factory Overhead
                                             Used
Financial Reports     Raw Materials               Goods in Process   Finished Goods    Cost of Goods
                       Ending Inv.                   Ending Inv.       Ending Inv.     Sold (income
                                                                                        statement)
                     (balance sheet)               (balance sheet)   (balance sheet)
                                                                                                 30
Job Order Cost
     Accounting Systems
Job Order Cost Accounting Systems
  The production of products in response to
   special orders.
  quite flexible in the number of products they
   can produce.
    →Jobs involving the production of more than one unit
     of product are called job lots.




                                                           31
Job Order Cost Accounting
         Systems
              Direct
Materials
  Indirect




 Factory Allocate      Goods in   Completed       Finished
Overhead               Process                     Goods
  Indirect




                                              Delivered

                                                   Cost of
              Direct
 Labour                                            Goods
                                                    Sold
                                                             32
Job Order Cost Accounting
         Systems
 Direct
Materials

                        Finished   Cost per unit
            Job No. 1              for Job No. 1
                         Goods
 Direct
 Labour
                        Finished   Cost per unit
            Job No. 2              for Job No. 2
                         Goods
 Factory
Overhead



                                                   33
Process Cost Accounting
          Systems
Process Cost Accounting Systems
  Used for production of small, identical, low-
   cost items.
  Mass produced in automated continuous
   production process.
  Costs cannot be directly traced to each unit of
   product.




                                                     34
Process Cost Accounting
          Systems
 Direct
Materials
                                      Finished
            Process 1    Process 2
                                       Goods
 Direct
 Labour

             Cost per     Cost per    Total cost
            equivalent   equivalent      per
 Factory     unit for     unit for    equivalent
Overhead    Process 1    Process 2       unit



                                                   35
Process Cost Accounting
            Systems
Unit cost
  To determine the cost of goods transferred from
   department to department and to finished
   goods, we need to calculate unit cost.
  Unit cost is computed by dividing the
   accumulated costs by the number of equivalent
   units produced in the period.
  Cost per         Product costs for the period
 equivalent
    unit
              =   Equivalent units for the period

                                                     36
Process Cost Accounting
            Systems
Costs are accumulated for a period of time
 by process or department.
Equivalent units is a concept expressing a
 number of partially completed units as a
 smaller number of fully completed units.
  Example: Three one-third full pitchers are
   equivalent to one full pitcher.
  Equivalent units may be different for material
   and labour and overhead at different stages of a
   process.

                                                      37
Comparing Job Order and
      Process Production
Similarities
  Same objective
     →to determine the cost of products
  Same inventory accounts
     →raw materials, goods in process, and finished goods
  Same overhead assignment method
     →predetermined rate times actual activity




                                                            38
Comparing Job Order and
      Process Production

                Differences
 Job Order Systems     Process Systems
  Custom orders         Repetitive production
  Heterogeneous         Homogeneous offerings
   products              High output volume
  Low output volume     Low product flexibility
  High flexibility      High standardization
  Low to medium
   standardization

                                                    39
Cost Allocation

 Methods of Overhead Cost Allocation

  Plant-wide Overhead Rate     Low




                                        Complexity
  Two-stage Cost Allocation

  Activity-based Costing
                                High


                                                     40
Cost Allocation
Plant-wide Overhead Rate
  A single plant-wide overhead rate is relatively
   easy to use
  but may result in inaccurate product costs




                                                     41
Cost Allocation
Two-stage Cost Allocation
  more accurate method than plant-wide
  Stage 1: Allocate service department costs to
   production departments. Service department
   costs are assigned to operating (or production)
   departments.
  Stage 2: Allocate production department costs to
   cost objects. Costs accumulated within operating
   (or production) departments are assigned to cost
   objects.
                                                      42
Cost Allocation
                   Service Departments

          Janitorial   Maintenance      Factory
                                       Accounting

Stage 1

             Machining              Assembly
             Department             Department

Stage 2


           Job 236        Job 237        Job 238
                                                    43
Cost Allocation
Activity-based Costing
  Attempts to better allocate costs to the desired
   cost objects by focusing on activities consumed
   by the cost objects.
  Many activities within a department drive
   overhead costs.
     →Products require activities.
     →Activities consume resources.




                                                      44
Cost Allocation
   Activity-based Costing: Procedures
       Identify activities that consume resources.
       Assign costs to a cost pool for each activity.
       Identify cost drivers associated with each activity.
       Compute overhead rate for each cost pool.

       Estimated overhead costs in activity cost pool
Rate =
            Estimated number of activity units
 Allocate overhead cost:           Overhead
                                                  × Actual
                                      Rate            Activity

                                                                 45
Cost Allocation
 Activity-based Costing: Identifying Cost
  Drivers
    Most cost drivers are related to either volume
     or complexity of production.
    Examples: purchasing, invoicing, quality
     inspection, product design.
    Three factors in choosing a cost driver:
        → Causal relationship
        → Benefits received
        → Reasonableness.
                                                      46
Cost Allocation
Activity-based Costing: Cost and Cost Driver
            Cost                          Cost Driver
Materials purchasing            Number of purchase orders
Materials handling              Number of materials
                                requisitions
Personnel                       Number of employees
Equipment amortization          Number of products
                                produced or hours of use
Quality inspection              Number of units inspected
Indirect labour in setting up   Number of setups required
equipment
                                                            47
Cost Allocation
Activity-based Costing: Benefits
  More detailed measures of costs
  Better understanding of activities
  More accurate product costs for . . .
     →Pricing decisions
     →Product elimination decisions
     →Managing activities that cause costs
  Benefits should always be compared with costs
   of implementation

                                                   48
Summary
 Managerial accounting is quite important to planning,
  control, and decision making activities.
 Managerial accounting and financial accounting are
  different in users, time focus, requirements, etc.
 Costs can be classified by relevance, behavior,
  controllability, traceability, and function.
 Flow of manufacturing activities.
 Similarities and differences between job order and
  process cost accounting systems
 The methods of cost allocation: plant-wide overhead
  rate, two stage cost allocation, activity-based costing


                                                            49
ATTENTION COMMERCE
      STUDENTS
    ACCOUNTING(FINANCIAL & COST) OF
  ICMAP STAGE 1,2,3,4 (CRASH CLASSES)
              CA..MODULE B,C,D
PIPFA (FOUNDATION,INTERMEDIATE,FINAL)
                ACCA-F1,F2,F3
                  BBA,MBA
            B.COM(FRESH),M.COM
         MA-ECONOMICS..O/A LEVELS
         KHALID AZIZ…..0322-3385752
http://finance.groups.yahoo.com/group/cost-
                 accountants

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Managerial accounting

  • 2. Outline What is managerial accounting? Comparison between managerial accounting and financial accounting Cost classifications in different ways Flow of manufacturing activities Job order cost accounting systems and process cost accounting systems Cost allocation 2
  • 3. Introduction  The previous presentations focus on the financial accounting topics Please summarize the basic points of financial accounting →Users/ Time focus/ Emphasis/ Importance/ Subject focus/ Requirements Thinking →Is the information provided by financial accounting enough for an enterprise to conduct its operation and management? →If not, how to satisfy this demand for the internal used information? →Have you ever heard ―managerial accounting‖? 3
  • 4. What is Managerial Accounting? An activity that provides financial and nonfinancial information to managers and other internal decision makers Is quite important to planning, control, and decision making activities 4
  • 5. The Environment of Managerial Accounting Complexity and size of organizations Regulatory Emphasis environment on quality Environment of Managerial Accounting Competition Development of technology 5
  • 6. Managerial Accounting and Financial Accounting Financial Managerial Accounting Accounting 1. Users Investors, creditors, and Managers, employees, and other external users other internal users 2. Time focus Historical perspective Future emphasis 3. Emphasis Objectivity and Relevance Verifiability for planning and control 4. Importance Precision of information Timeliness of information 5. Subject focus Summarized data for Detailed segment reports the whole organization of an organization 6. Requirements Structured and often Relatively flexible controlled by GAAP (no GAAP) 6
  • 7. Cost Classifications Costs can be classified by: Relevance Behaviour Controllability Traceability Function 7
  • 8. Costs Classification by Relevance  Relevant  If costs influence a decision →Costs that are applicable to a particular decision. →Costs that should have a bearing on which alternative a manager selects. →Costs that are avoidable. →Future costs that differ between alternatives.  Irrelevant  If costs do not influence a decision 8
  • 9. Costs Classification by Relevance  Sunk Costs All costs incurred in the past that cannot be changed by any decision made now or in the future. should not be considered in decisions. Irrelevant Example: You bought an automobile that cost $30,000 two years ago. The $30,000 cost is sunk because whether you drive it, park it, trade it, or sell it, you cannot change the $30,000 cost. 9
  • 10. Costs Classification by Relevance  Out-of-pocket costs  require future outlays of cash  associated with a particular decision  relevant for future decisions  Example: Considering the decision to take a vacation or stay at home, if you choose a vacation, you will only have travel costs (out-of- pocket costs). 10
  • 11. Costs Classification by Relevance Opportunity Costs The potential benefit that is given up when one alternative is selected over another. Example: If you were not attending college or university, you could be earning $25,000 per year. Your opportunity cost of attending college or university for one year is $25,000. 11
  • 12. Costs Classification by Behavior Cost behavior refers to how a cost will react to changes in the level of business activity. Fixed costs do not change when activity changes. Variable costs change in proportion to changes in the volume of activity 12
  • 13. Costs Classification by Behavior  Total fixed costs remain unchanged when activity changes within a relevant range.  Fixed costs per unit decline as activity increases. Fixed costs per unit Total fixed costs Volume of Activity Volume of Activity 13
  • 14. Costs Classification by Behavior Total variable costs change when activity changes. Variable costs per unit do not change as activity increases. Variable costs per unit Total variable costs Volume of activity Volume of activity 14
  • 15. Costs Classification by Behavior  Mixed costs contain a combination of fixed and variable costs. Total Compensation Variable Sales Commissions Fixed Monthly salary Sales 15
  • 16. Costs Classification by Behavior  Step-Wise Costs remain fixed over limited ranges of volumes but increase by a lump sum when volume increases beyond maximum amounts. Example: additional production supervisors must be added when another shift is added. Supervisory Salaries Production Volume 16
  • 17. Costs Classification by Controllability Controllable vs. not controllable depends upon the employee’s responsibilities. Example: A lower level manager may have control over overtime costs but not over the purchase of high-cost machinery. 17
  • 18. Costs Classification by Traceability Management often traces costs to cost objects To obtain a better measure of their total cost Cost objects include →Products →Services →Departments →Divisions →Customer groups 18
  • 19. Costs Classification by Traceability Traceable costs are classified as Direct costs →can be conveniently traced to a unit of product or other cost objective. →Examples: salaries of production workers, salary of maintenance department employees. Indirect costs →must be allocated to a unit of product or other cost objective. →Examples: factory rent, factory light and heat, factory accounting costs. 19
  • 20. Costs Classification by Function Manufacturing Costs are necessary and integral to the production of finished goods. Examples: direct labour, direct materials, and manufacturing overhead. Non-Manufacturing Costs are not integral to the manufacture of finished goods. Examples: selling and administrative expenses. 20
  • 21. Costs Classification by Function Direct Direct Manufacturing Material Labour Overhead Manufacturing Costs 21
  • 22. Costs Classification by Function  Direct materials Materials that are clearly and easily identified with a particular product. Example: Steel used to manufacture an automobile  Direct labour Labour costs that are clearly traceable to, or readily identifiable with, the finished product. Example: Wages paid to an automobile assembly worker. 22
  • 23. Costs Classification by Function Manufacturing overhead All manufacturing costs except direct material and direct labour. Manufacturing costs that cannot be traced directly to specific units produced. Examples: →Indirect labour – maintenance →Indirect material – cleaning supplies →Factory utility costs →Supervisory costs 23
  • 24. Costs Classification by Function Manufacturing costs are often combined as follows: Direct Direct Manufacturing Material Labour Overhead Prime Conversion Cost Cost 24
  • 25. Costs Classification by Function Non-Manufacturing costs (period costs) are expenses not charged to the product. Selling Costs →Costs incurred to obtain customer orders and to deliver finished goods to customers —advertising and shipping. Administrative Costs →Non-manufacturing costs of staff support and administrative functions —accounting, data processing, personnel, research and development. 25
  • 26. Discussions  ABC company manufactures a portable radio designed for mounting on the wall of the bathroom. The following list represents some of the different types of costs incurred in the manufacture of these radios: 1. The plant manager's salary. 2. The cost of heating the plant. 3. The cost of heating executive offices. 4. The cost of printed circuit boards used in the radios. 5. Salaries and commissions of company salespersons. 26
  • 27. Discussions 6. Depreciation on office equipment used in the executive offices. 7. Depreciation on production equipment used in plant. 8. Wages of janitorial personnel who clean the plant. 9. The cost of insurance on the plant building. 10. The cost of electricity to light the plant. 11. The cost of electricity to power plant equipment. 12. The cost of maintaining and repairing equipment in the plant. 13. The cost of printing promotional materials for trade shows. 14. The cost of solder used in assembling the radios. 15. The cost of telephone service for the executive offices. 27
  • 28. Discussions Required: Classify each of the items above as product cost or period costs. 28
  • 29. Discussions: the answer 1 Product 6 Period 11 Product 2 Product 7 Product 12 Product 3 Period 8 Product 13 Period 4 Product 9 Product 14 Product 5 Period 10 Product 15 Period 29
  • 30. Flow of Manufacturing Activities Materials Activity Production Activity Marketing Activity (raw materials) (goods in process) (finished goods) Goods in Process Raw Materials Finished Goods Beginning Inventory Beginning Inventory Beginning Inventory Raw Materials Used Raw Materials Goods Purchases Manufactured Direct Labour Used Factory Overhead Used Financial Reports Raw Materials Goods in Process Finished Goods Cost of Goods Ending Inv. Ending Inv. Ending Inv. Sold (income statement) (balance sheet) (balance sheet) (balance sheet) 30
  • 31. Job Order Cost Accounting Systems Job Order Cost Accounting Systems The production of products in response to special orders. quite flexible in the number of products they can produce. →Jobs involving the production of more than one unit of product are called job lots. 31
  • 32. Job Order Cost Accounting Systems Direct Materials Indirect Factory Allocate Goods in Completed Finished Overhead Process Goods Indirect Delivered Cost of Direct Labour Goods Sold 32
  • 33. Job Order Cost Accounting Systems Direct Materials Finished Cost per unit Job No. 1 for Job No. 1 Goods Direct Labour Finished Cost per unit Job No. 2 for Job No. 2 Goods Factory Overhead 33
  • 34. Process Cost Accounting Systems Process Cost Accounting Systems Used for production of small, identical, low- cost items. Mass produced in automated continuous production process. Costs cannot be directly traced to each unit of product. 34
  • 35. Process Cost Accounting Systems Direct Materials Finished Process 1 Process 2 Goods Direct Labour Cost per Cost per Total cost equivalent equivalent per Factory unit for unit for equivalent Overhead Process 1 Process 2 unit 35
  • 36. Process Cost Accounting Systems Unit cost To determine the cost of goods transferred from department to department and to finished goods, we need to calculate unit cost. Unit cost is computed by dividing the accumulated costs by the number of equivalent units produced in the period. Cost per Product costs for the period equivalent unit = Equivalent units for the period 36
  • 37. Process Cost Accounting Systems Costs are accumulated for a period of time by process or department. Equivalent units is a concept expressing a number of partially completed units as a smaller number of fully completed units. Example: Three one-third full pitchers are equivalent to one full pitcher. Equivalent units may be different for material and labour and overhead at different stages of a process. 37
  • 38. Comparing Job Order and Process Production Similarities Same objective →to determine the cost of products Same inventory accounts →raw materials, goods in process, and finished goods Same overhead assignment method →predetermined rate times actual activity 38
  • 39. Comparing Job Order and Process Production Differences  Job Order Systems  Process Systems Custom orders Repetitive production Heterogeneous Homogeneous offerings products High output volume Low output volume Low product flexibility High flexibility High standardization Low to medium standardization 39
  • 40. Cost Allocation  Methods of Overhead Cost Allocation Plant-wide Overhead Rate Low Complexity Two-stage Cost Allocation Activity-based Costing High 40
  • 41. Cost Allocation Plant-wide Overhead Rate A single plant-wide overhead rate is relatively easy to use but may result in inaccurate product costs 41
  • 42. Cost Allocation Two-stage Cost Allocation more accurate method than plant-wide Stage 1: Allocate service department costs to production departments. Service department costs are assigned to operating (or production) departments. Stage 2: Allocate production department costs to cost objects. Costs accumulated within operating (or production) departments are assigned to cost objects. 42
  • 43. Cost Allocation Service Departments Janitorial Maintenance Factory Accounting Stage 1 Machining Assembly Department Department Stage 2 Job 236 Job 237 Job 238 43
  • 44. Cost Allocation Activity-based Costing Attempts to better allocate costs to the desired cost objects by focusing on activities consumed by the cost objects. Many activities within a department drive overhead costs. →Products require activities. →Activities consume resources. 44
  • 45. Cost Allocation  Activity-based Costing: Procedures  Identify activities that consume resources.  Assign costs to a cost pool for each activity.  Identify cost drivers associated with each activity.  Compute overhead rate for each cost pool. Estimated overhead costs in activity cost pool Rate = Estimated number of activity units  Allocate overhead cost: Overhead × Actual Rate Activity 45
  • 46. Cost Allocation  Activity-based Costing: Identifying Cost Drivers Most cost drivers are related to either volume or complexity of production. Examples: purchasing, invoicing, quality inspection, product design. Three factors in choosing a cost driver: → Causal relationship → Benefits received → Reasonableness. 46
  • 47. Cost Allocation Activity-based Costing: Cost and Cost Driver Cost Cost Driver Materials purchasing Number of purchase orders Materials handling Number of materials requisitions Personnel Number of employees Equipment amortization Number of products produced or hours of use Quality inspection Number of units inspected Indirect labour in setting up Number of setups required equipment 47
  • 48. Cost Allocation Activity-based Costing: Benefits More detailed measures of costs Better understanding of activities More accurate product costs for . . . →Pricing decisions →Product elimination decisions →Managing activities that cause costs Benefits should always be compared with costs of implementation 48
  • 49. Summary  Managerial accounting is quite important to planning, control, and decision making activities.  Managerial accounting and financial accounting are different in users, time focus, requirements, etc.  Costs can be classified by relevance, behavior, controllability, traceability, and function.  Flow of manufacturing activities.  Similarities and differences between job order and process cost accounting systems  The methods of cost allocation: plant-wide overhead rate, two stage cost allocation, activity-based costing 49
  • 50. ATTENTION COMMERCE STUDENTS ACCOUNTING(FINANCIAL & COST) OF ICMAP STAGE 1,2,3,4 (CRASH CLASSES) CA..MODULE B,C,D PIPFA (FOUNDATION,INTERMEDIATE,FINAL) ACCA-F1,F2,F3 BBA,MBA B.COM(FRESH),M.COM MA-ECONOMICS..O/A LEVELS KHALID AZIZ…..0322-3385752 http://finance.groups.yahoo.com/group/cost- accountants