Practicality of Activity Based Costing Over Conventional Methods
Practicality of Activity Based Costing Over Conventional Methods
Practicality of Activity Based Costing Over Conventional Methods
Activity Based
Costing over
Conventional
Methods Project Report
Management Accounting II
Aakriti Kakkar
Group 1
91001
Aditi Bindlish 91003
Ankita Maheshwari 91007
Gourab Kundu 91020
H. Sanchay Grover 91021
Neha Kasturia 91037
FMG XVIII A
FORE School of Management
Practicality of Activity Based Costing over Conventional Methods
PREFACE
A
ctivity Based Costing (ABC) is an alternative to the traditional way of
accounting. Traditionally it is believed that high volume customers
are profitable customers, a loyal customer is also a profitable one,
and profits will follow a happy customer. Studies on customer profitability
have unveiled that the above is not necessarily true.
ABC is a costing model that identifies the cost pool, or activity centers, in an
organization and assign costs to products and services (cost drivers) based on
the number of events or transactions involved in the process of providing a
product or a service.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
10. Appendix 17
11. References 18
Expenses that can be traced directly to (or identified with) a specific cost
center or cost object such as a department, process, or product are called
direct costs.
Direct costs (such as for labor, material, fuel or power) vary with the rate of
output but are uniform for each unit of production, and are usually under
the control and responsibility of the department manager.
Under the traditional absorption costing system, cost accountants had arbitrarily
charged a broad percentage of expenses into the direct costs (of the direct costs)
to allow for the indirect costs or overheads.
However as the percentages of indirect or overhead costs had risen, this technique
became increasingly inaccurate because the indirect costs were not caused equally
by all the products.
For example, one product might take more time in an expensive machine than
another product, but since the amount of direct labor and materials might be the
same, the additional cost for the use of the machine would not be recognized
when the same broad 'on-cost' percentage is added to all products.
Keeping in view the limitations of the above method, the concepts of ABC were
developed in the manufacturing sector of the United States during the 1970s and
1980s. During this time, the Consortium for Advanced Management-International,
now known simply as CAM-I, provided a formative role for studying and formalizing
the principles that have become more formally known as Activity-Based Costing.
Activity-based costing, simply put, is a process where costs are assigned due to the
cause and effect relationship between costs and the activities that drive costs.
Once costs of the activities have been identified, the cost of each activity is
attributed to each product to the extent that the product uses the activity.
In this way ABC often identifies areas of high overhead costs per unit and so directs
attention to finding ways to reduce the costs or to charge more for costly
products. ABC is a method that measures cost of a Product/Service, based on the
activities performed to produce the product / service. An Activity is an event, task
or unit of work with a specified purpose.
For example:
Designing products
Setting up machines
Operating machines
Distributing products
Administer Processes
Identification of cost during activities and their causes not only help in
computation of more accurate cost of a product or a job but also eliminate
non value added activities. The elimination of non value added activities
would drive down the cost of the product.
category which streamline the flow of the product from the producer to the
end user.
This process uses unitary cost, or marginal cost as the computation base in
contrast to the traditional cost accounting methods which employ total
cost.
The company works 50, 000 direct labour hours each year as given below:
Material and labour costs for each product (per unit) are given below:
The company’s total manufacturing overhead costs are Rs 8,75, 000 per annum.
The company has analysed its operations and has determined that five activities
act as cost drivers in the incurrence of overhead costs.
Total 875,000
COMPUTATION OF PER UNIT COST
Using this rate, the cost to manufacture each of the products is given below:
Manufacturing Overheads
35 35
(2 x Rs.17.50)
NUMBER OF
TRACEABLE COSTS RATE PER EVENT
ACTIVITY EVENTS OR
(Rs) OR TRANSACTION
TRANSACTIONS
Machine setups 2,30,000 5,000 Rs 46 per set up
Rs 20 per
Quality inspections 1,60, 000 8,0000
inspection
Production orders 81,000 600 Rs 135 per order
Machine-hours
3,14,000 40,000 Rs 7.85 per hour
worked
PRODUCT A PRODUCT B
PARTICULARS Events or Events or
Amount (Rs) Amount (Rs)
transactions transactions
Machine setups (at
3,000 1,38,000 2, 000 92,000
Rs 46 per setup)
Quality inspections
(at Rs 20 per 5, 000 1,00,000 3, 000 60,000
inspection)
Production orders
200 27,000 400 54,000
(at Rs 135 per order)
Machine-hours
worked (at Rs 7.85 12,000 94,200 28, 000 2,19,800
per hour)
Material receipts (at
150 18,000 600 72,000
Rs 120 per receipt)
Total overhead cost
3,77,200 4,97,800
assigned (a)
Number of units
5,000 20,000
produced (b)
Overhead cost per
75.44 24.89
unit (a)/(b)
The analysis shows that in case a company adopts direct labour rate method for
absorption of overhead costs, the amount of overheads charged would be Rs 35 per
unit for each product. In other words, the overhead cost is the same for both the
products in spite of the fact that they have widely different cost driving activities.
For instance the company recorded 5,000 machine setups during the year of which
3000 setups were traceable to product A and 2,000 to product B. It is therefore
appropriate to use activity based costing for charging overhead costs to prevent
any distortions in assigning costs to products.
5
and product B is overcharged as per traditional costing systems.
CASE STUDY: BANKING INSTITUTIONS
Suppose a small bank has an Administration Department which serves two main
departments i.e. Investment Department and Loan Department. Traditionally,
all costs incurred in Administration Department are distributed between the
beneficiaries according to number of employees.
MISCELLANEOUS 15,000
TOTAL 170,000
Now we need to find out cost of each activity. This would be ascertained on the
following basis:
A study was conducted to find out cost per job. It was observed that, in terms of
rupees, staff and computer time was Rs. 2,000 and Rs. 1,500 respectively per job.
Time Sheet shows that a sum of Rs.10, 000 was due to computer time spent
in record keeping.
The building area occupied by the staff in various activities was estimated
as under:
o Recruitment 25%
o Court Cases 15%
o Record Keeping 60%
The misc. expanses can be distributed equally among these three activities.
Given below are the details for the same:
(the figures mentioned are in Rs.)
NO COURT NO RECORD NO
PARTICULARS RECRUITMENT TOTAL
. CASES . KEEPING .
ACTIVITIES INVESTMENT
LOAN DEPARTMENT TOTAL
PERFORMED DEPARTMENT
RECRUITMENT 11 1 12
HANDLING COURT
4 0 4
CASES
EMPLOYMENT
50 450 500
RECORDS
TOTAL 65 451 516
Table 2: The total costs associated with the Investment and the Loan
Department.
(Figures in Rs.)
ACTIVITIES INVESTMENT
LOAN DEPARTMENT TOTAL
PERFORMED DEPARTMENT
RECRUITMENT 53,396 4,854 58,250
HANDLING COURT
63,750 - 63,750
CASES
EMPLOYMENT
4,800 43,200 48,000
RECORDS
TOTAL 121,946 48,054 1,70,000
Table 3: The Loan Department was charged 90% of total costs where as its true
share was only 28% as per ABC Costing.
(Figures in Rs.)
Traditional Cost
17,000 1,53,000 1,70,000
Accounting
Because ABC reveals the links between performing particular activities and the
demands those activities make on the organization’s resources, it can give
managers a clear picture of how products, brands, customers, facilities, regions, or
distribution channels both generate revenues and consume resources. The
profitability picture that emerges from the ABC analysis helps managers focus their
attention and energy on improving activities that will have the biggest impact on
the bottom line.
insights ABC analysis provides. Managers must refrain from allocating all expenses
to individual units and instead separate the expenses and match them to the level
of activity that consumes the resources. Very simply, managers should separate
the expenses incurred to produce individual units of a particular product from the
expenses needed to produce different products or to serve different customers,
independent of how many units are produced or sold. Then managers must be
prepared to act. First, they should explore ways to reduce the resources required
to perform various activities. Then to transform those reductions into profits, they
must either reduce spending on those resources or increase the output those
resources produce. The actions allow the insights from ABC to be translated into
increased profits at the bottom line.
The capital expenditure on the activity based system and its subsequent
running costs can be a road block for firms.
The system is very transparent which some managers would not approve
of as they would like to keep some things out of the view of the owners
of the company
supports time equations, a feature that enables the ABC model to reflect the
complexity of real- world operations by showing how specific order, customer, and
activity characteristics cause processing times to vary.
10 APPENDIX
Terminology
1. Cost Object: Generally, the products are cost objects, but the customers,
services or locations can also be the cost objects.
5. Cost driver: The causes for incurrence of overhead costs are known as cost
drivers.
Example:
a) Machine setups
b) Purchase orders
c) Quality inspections
d) Production orders.
6. Activity hierarchies:
a) Unit level activities: These are activities which are performed each time
a unit of product or service is produced.
11 REFERENCES
hbr.harvardbusiness.org/1991/05/profit-priorities-from-activity-based-
costing/ar/1
accounting.suite101.com/article.cfm/activitybased_costing_abc
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Activity-based_costing
www.businessdictionary.com/definition/direct-cost.html
www.scribd.com/doc/3163579/Activity-Based-Costing
www.scribd.com/doc/14751986/Advantages-and-disadvantages-of-activity-
based-costing-with-reference-to-economic-value-addition
hubpages.com/hub/CASE-STUDY-ACTIVITY-BASED-COSTING
BOOKS REFERRED