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CHAPTER I Lecture Note

This document discusses different types of cost behavior including fixed costs, variable costs, and mixed costs. It provides examples and explanations of each type. Fixed costs do not change with production volume, while variable costs change proportionally. Mixed costs have both fixed and variable components. The document also describes methods for analyzing mixed costs, including the high-low method which uses data from the highest and lowest activity levels to split a mixed cost into its fixed and variable portions.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
104 views12 pages

CHAPTER I Lecture Note

This document discusses different types of cost behavior including fixed costs, variable costs, and mixed costs. It provides examples and explanations of each type. Fixed costs do not change with production volume, while variable costs change proportionally. Mixed costs have both fixed and variable components. The document also describes methods for analyzing mixed costs, including the high-low method which uses data from the highest and lowest activity levels to split a mixed cost into its fixed and variable portions.

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gere
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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CHAPTER I

COST BEHAVIOR

Types of Cost Behavior Patterns


Cost behavior is the manner in which a cost changes as a related activity
changes. Thebehavior of costs is useful to managers for a variety of reasons.
For example, knowinghow costs behave allows managers to predict profits as
sales and production volumeschange. Knowing how costs behave is also useful
for estimating costs, which affects avariety of decisions such as whether to
replace a machine.

Understanding the behavior of a cost depends on:

1. Identifying the activities that cause the cost to change. These activities are
called activitybases (or activity drivers).

2. Specifying the range of activity over which the changes in the cost are of
interest.This range of activity is called the relevant range.

There are three main types of costs according to their behavior:

Fixed Costs

Fixed costs are those which do not change with the level of activity within the
relevant range. These costs will incur even if no units are produced. For
example rent expense, straight-line depreciation expense, etc.
Fixed cost per unit decreases with increase in production. Following example
explains this fact:
Total Fixed Cost $30,000 $30,000 $30,000

÷ Units Produced 5,000 10,000 15,000

Fixed Cost per Unit $6.00 $3.00 $2.00

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Types of Fixed Costs

Fixed costs are sometimes referred to as capacity costs because they result
from outlaysmade for buildings, equipment, skilled professional employees,
and other items neededto provide the basic capacity for sustained operations.
For planning purposes, fixed costscan be viewed as either committed or
discretionary.

Committed Fixed Costs Investments in facilities, equipment, and the basic


organizationoften can’t be significantly reduced even for short periods of time
without makingfundamental changes. Such costs are referred to as committed
fixed costs . Examplesinclude depreciation of buildings and equipment, real
estate taxes, insurance expenses,and salaries of top management and
operating personnel. Even if operations are interruptedor cut back, committed
fixed costs remain largely unchanged in the short term.

During a recession, for example, a company won’t usually eliminate key


executive positionsor sell off key facilities—the basic organizational structure
and facilities ordinarilyare kept intact. The costs of restoring them later are
likely to be far greater than anyshort-run savings that might be realized.

Once a decision is made to acquire committed fixed resources, the company


may belocked into that decision for many years to come. Consequently, such
commitments should be made only after careful analysis of the available
alternatives.

Discretionary Fixed Costs Discretionary fixed costs (often referred to as


managedfixed costs ) usually arise from annual decisions by management to
spend on certain fixedcost items. Examples of discretionary fixed costs include
advertising, research, publicrelations, management development programs,
and internships for students.

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Two key differences exist between discretionary fixed costs and committed
fixedcosts. First, the planning horizon for a discretionary fixed cost is short
term—usually asingle year. By contrast, committed fixed costs have a planning
horizon that encompassesmany years. Second, discretionary fixed costs can be
cut for short periods of time withminimal damage to the long-run goals of the
organization. For example, spending onmanagement development programs
can be reduced because of poor economic conditions.

Although some unfavorable consequences may result from the cutback, it is


doubtful thatthese consequences would be as great as those that would result
if the company decidedto economize by laying off key personnel.

Whether a particular cost is regarded as committed or discretionary may


depend onmanagement’s strategy. For example, during recessions when the
level of home buildingis down, many construction companies lay off most of
their workers and virtually disbandoperations. Other construction companies
retain large numbers of employees on the payroll,even though the workers have
little or no work to do. While these latter companiesmay be faced with short-
term cash flow problems, it will be easier for them to respondquickly when
economic conditions improve. And the higher morale and loyalty of
theiremployees may give these companies a significant competitive advantage.

The most important characteristic of discretionary fixed costs is that


management isnot locked into its decisions regarding such costs. Discretionary
costs can be adjustedfrom year to year or even perhaps during the course of a
year if necessary.

Variable Costs

Variable costs change in direct proportion to the level of production. This


means that total variable cost increase when more units are produced and
decreases when less units are produced. Although variable in total, these costs
are constant per unit.

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For example

Total Variable Cost $10,000 $20,000 $30,000

÷ Units Produced 5,000 10,000 15,000

Variable Cost per Unit $2.00 $2.00 $2.00

Types of Variable Costs

Not all variable costs have exactly the same behavior pattern. Some variable
costs behavein a true variable or proportionately variable pattern. Other variable
costs behave in astep-variable pattern.

True Variable Costs.Direct material is a true or proportionately variable


costbecause the amount used during a period will vary in direct proportion to
the level ofproduction activity. Moreover, any amounts purchased but not used
can be stored andcarried forward to the next period as inventory.

Step-Variable Costs.The cost of a resource that is obtained in large chunks


and thatincreases or decreases only in response to fairly wide changes in
activity is known as astep-variable cost. For example, the wages of skilled
repair technicians are often consideredto be a step-variable cost. Such a
technician’s time can only be obtained in largechunks—it is difficult to hire a
skilled technician on anything other than a full-time basis.

Moreover, any technician’s time not currently used cannot be stored as


inventory andcarried forward to the next period. If the time is not used
effectively, it is gone forever.Furthermore, a repair technician can work at a
leisurely pace if pressures are light butintensify his or her efforts if pressures
build up. For this reason, small changes in the levelof production may have no
effect on the number of technicians employed by thecompany.

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Notice that the cost of repair technicians changes only with fairlywide changes
in volume and that additional technicians come in large, indivisiblechunks.
Great care must be taken in working with these kinds of costs to prevent
“fat”from building up in an organization. There may be a tendency to employ
additionalhelp more quickly than needed, and there is a natural reluctance to
lay people off whenvolume declines.

Mixed Costs

Mixed costs or semi-variable costs have properties of both fixed and variable
costs due to presence of both variable and fixed components in them. An
example of mixed cost is telephone expense because it usually consists of a
fixed component such as line rent and fixed subscription charges as well as
variable cost charged per minute cost. Another example of mixed cost is
delivery cost which has a fixed component of depreciation cost of trucks and a
variable component of fuel expense.

Since mixed cost figures are not useful in their raw form, therefore they are
split into their fixed and variable components by using cost behavior analysis
techniques such as High-Low Method, Scatter Diagram Method and Regression
Analysis.

Analysis of Mixed Costs


High Low Method

High-Low method is one of the several techniques used to split a mixed cost
into its fixed and variable components. Although easy to understand, high
low method is relatively unreliable. This is because it only takes two extreme
activity levels (i.e. labor hours, machine hours, etc.) from a set of actual data of
various activity levels and their corresponding total cost figures. These figures
are then used to calculate the approximate variable cost per unit (b) and total
fixed cost (a) to obtain a cost volume formula:

y = a + bx

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High-Low Method Formulas

Variable Cost per Unit

Variable cost per unit (b) is calculated using the following formula:
Variable Cost per Unit y2 − y1
= x2 − x1
Where,
y2 is the total cost at highest level of activity;
y1 is the total cost at lowest level of activity;
x2 are the number of units/labor hours etc. at highest level of activity; and
x1 are the number of units/labor hours etc. at lowest level of activity
The variable cost per unit is equal to the slope of the cost volume line (i.e.
change in total cost ÷ change in number of units produced).

Total Fixed Cost

Total fixed cost (a) is calculated by subtracting total variable cost from total
cost, thus:
Total Fixed Cost = y2 − bx2 = y1 − bx1

Example

Company A wants to determine the cost-volume relation between its factory


overhead cost and number of units produced. Use the high-low method to split
its factory overhead (FOH) costs into fixed and variable components and create
a cost volume formula. The volume and the corresponding total cost
information of the factory for past eight months are given below:
Month Units FOH
1 1,520 $36,375
2 1,250 38,000
3 1,750 41,750
4 1,600 42,360
5 2,350 55,080
6 2,100 48,100
7 3,000 59,000
8 2,750 56,800

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Solution:
We have,
at highest activity: x2 = 3,000; y2 = $59,000
at lowest activity: x1 = 1,250; y1 = $38,000
Variable Cost per Unit = ($59,000 − $38,000) ÷ (3,000 − 1,250) = $12 per unit
Total Fixed Cost = $59,000 − ($12 × 3,000) = $38,000 − ($12 × 1,250)
= $23,000
Cost Volume Formula: y = $23,000 + 12x
Due to its unreliability, high low method is rarely used.

Scatter Graph Method

Scatter graph method is a graphical technique of separating fixed and variable


components of mixed cost by plotting activity level along x-axis and
corresponding total cost (mixed cost) along y-axis. A regression line is then
drawn on the graph by visual inspection. The line thus drawn is used to
estimate the total fixed cost and variable cost per unit. The point where the line
intercepts y-axis is the estimated fixed cost and the slope of the line is the
average variable cost per unit. Since the visual inspection does not involve any
mathematical testing therefore this method should be applied with great care.

Procedure

Step 1: Draw scatter graph

Plot the data on scatter graph. Plot activity level (i.e. number of units, labor
hours etc.) along x-axis and total mixed cost along y-axis.

Step 2: Draw regression line

Draw a regression line over the scatter graph by visual inspection and try to
minimize the total vertical distance between the line and all the points. Extend
the line towards y-axis.

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Step 3: Find total fixed cost

Total fixed is given by the y-intercept of the line. Y-intercept is the point at
which the line cuts y-axis.

Step 4: Find variable cost per unit

Variable cost per unit is equal to the slope of the line. Take two points (x 1,y1)
and (x2,y2) on the line and calculate variable cost using the following formula:

y2 − y1
Variable Cost per Unit = Slope of Regression Line = 
x2 − x1

Example

Company A decides to use scatter graph method to split its factory overhead
(FOH) into variable and fixed components. Following is the data which is
provided for the analysis.
Month Units FOH
1 1,520 $36,375
2 1,250 38,000
3 1,750 41,750
4 1,600 42,360
5 2,350 55,080
6 2,100 48,100
7 3,000 59,000
8 2,750 56,800

Solution:

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Fixed Cost = y-intercept = $18,000
Variable Cost per Unit = Slope of Regression Line
To calculate slop we will take two points on line: (0,18000) and (3500,68000)
Variable Cost per Unit = (68000 − 18000) ÷ (3500 − 0) = $14.286

Least-Squares Regression Method

Least-squares linear regression is a statistical technique that may be used to


estimate the total cost at the given level of activity (units, labor/machine hours
etc.) based on past cost data. It mathematically fits a straight cost line over a
scatter-chart of a number of activity and total-cost pairs in such a way that the
sum of squares of the vertical distances between the scattered points and the
cost line is minimized. The term least-squares regression implies that the ideal
fitting of the regression line is achieved by minimizing the sum of squares of
the distances between the straight line and all the points on the graph.

Assuming that the cost varies along y-axis and activity levels along x-axis, the
required cost line may be represented in the form of following equation:

y = a + bx

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In the above equation, a is the y-intercept of the line and it equals the
approximate fixed cost at any level of activity. Whereas b is the slope of the line
and it equals the average variable cost per unit of activity.
By using mathematical techniques beyond the scope of this article, the
following formulas to calculate a and b may be derived:
Unit Variable Cost = b = nΣxy – Σx.Σy

nΣx2 - (Σx)2

Total Fixed Cost = a = Σy – bΣx

Where,
n is number of pairs of units—total-cost used in the calculation;
Σy is the sum of total costs of all data pairs;
Σx is the sum of units of all data pairs;
Σxy is the sum of the products of cost and units of all data pairs; and
Σx2 is the sum of squares of units of all data pairs.
The following example based on the same data as in high-low method tries to
illustrate the usage of least squares linear regression method to split a mixed
cost into its fixed and variable components:

Example

Based on the following data of number of units produced and the


corresponding total cost, estimate the total cost of producing 4,000 units. Use
the least-squares linear regression method.
Month Units Cost
1 1,520 $36,375
2 1,250 38,000
3 1,750 41,750
4 1,600 42,360
5 2,350 55,080
6 2,100 48,100
7 3,000 59,000
8 2,750 56,800

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Solution:
x y x2 xy
1,520 $36,375 2,310,400 55,290,000
1,250 38,000 1,562,500 47,500,000
1,750 41,750 3,062,500 73,062,500
1,600 42,360 2,560,000 67,776,000
2,350 55,080 5,522,500 129,438,000
2,100 48,100 4,410,000 101,010,000
3,000 59,000 9,000,000 177,000,000
2,750 56,800 7,562,500 156,200,000
16,32 377,465 35,990,400 807,276,500
0

We have,
n = 8;
Σx = 16,320;
Σy = 377,465;
Σx2 = 35,990,400; and 
Σxy = 807,276,500

Calculating the average variable cost per unit:

B = 8 X 807,276,500 - 16,320 X 377,465 = 13.8


8 X 35,990,400 – (16,320)2

Calculating the approximate total fixed cost:

A = 377,465 - 13.8078 X 16,320 = 19,015

The cost-volume formula now becomes:

y = 19,015 + 13.8x
At 4,000 activity level, the estimated total cost is $74,215 [= 19,015 + 13.8 ×
4,000].

Coefficient of Determination

R2 is a statistic that will give some information about the goodness of fit of a
model. In regression, the R2 coefficient of determination is a statistical
measure of how well the regression line approximates the real data points.
An R2 of 1 indicates that the regression line perfectly fits the data.

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The coefficient of determination (denoted by R2) is a key output
of regression analysis. It is interpreted as the proportion of the variance in the
dependent variable that is predictable from the independent variable.

 The coefficient of determination is the square of the correlation (r)


between predicted y scores and actual y scores; thus, it ranges from 0 to
1.

 With linear regression, the coefficient of determination is also equal to


the square of the correlation between x and y scores.

 An R2 of 0 means that the dependent variable cannot be predicted from


the independent variable.

 An R2 of 1 means the dependent variable can be predicted without error


from the independent variable.

 An R2 between 0 and 1 indicates the extent to which the dependent


variable is predictable. An R2 of 0.10 means that 10 percent of the
variance in Y is predictable from X; an R2 of 0.20 means that 20 percent
is predictable; and so on.

The formula for computing the coefficient of determination for a linear


regression model with one independent variable is given below.

R2 = { ( 1 / N ) * Σ [ (xi - x) * (yi - y) ] / (σx * σy ) }2

where N is the number of observations used to fit the model, Σ is the


summation symbol, xi is the x value for observation i, x is the mean x value,
yi is the y value for observation i, y is the mean y value, σx is the standard
deviation of x, and σy is the standard deviation of y.

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