Process Costing
Process Costing
• Process costing: a product costing system that accumulates costs according to processes or
departments. A processing department is any location in the organization where work is performed
on a product and where materials, labor, and overhead costs are added to the product. Processing
departments should also have two other features. First, the activity performed in the processing
department should be essentially the same for all units that pass through the department. Second, the
output of the department should be homogeneous.
• Firms that produce homogeneous output in batch or continuous production processes can use process
costing eg. Cement, Beer factories, steel, sugar etc
Similarities between job-order and process costing: Job-order and process costing systems share some
characteristics:
a. Both systems have the same basic purpose—to assign material, labor, and overhead cost to
products.(ascertainment)
b. Both systems use the same basic manufacturing accounts: Manufacturing Overhead, Raw
Materials, Work In Process, and Finished Goods.
c. The flow of costs through the manufacturing accounts is basically the same.
In order to calculate the average cost per unit, the total number of units must be determined. Partially
completed units pose a difficulty that is overcome using the concept of equivalent units.
Compute cost per equivalent unit for each manufacturing cost element
To illustrate, let consider the case of Global Defense Inc., manufacturing thousands of components for
missiles and military equipment. These components are assembled in the Assembly Department. Upon
completion, the units are immediately transferred to the Testing Department. We will focus on the
Assembly Department Process for one of these components, DG-19. Every effort is made to ensure that
all DG-19 units are identical and meet a set of demanding performance specifications. The process-
costing system for DG-19 in the assembly Department has a single direct –cost category (direct material)
and a single indirect-cost category (conversion costs). Conversion costs are all manufacturing labor,
indirect material, energy, plant depreciation, and so on. Direct material is added at the beginning of the
process in Assembly. Conversion costs are added evenly during assembly. The following graph
summarizes these facts:
Conversion costs
added evenly during
process
Assembly
Transfer Testing
Department
Department
Direct materials
added at the beginning
of the process
Process costing system separate costs into cost categories according to the timing of when costs are
introduced into the process. Often, as in the case of Global Defense example ,only two cost
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classifications, direct material and conversion costs, are necessary to assign costs to products. These is
because, all direct materials are added to the process at one time and all conversion costs are generally
added to the process uniformly through time. If however, two different direct materials are added to the
process at different times, two different direct material categories would be needed to assign these costs to
products. Similarly, if manufacturing labor is added to the process at a time that is different from other
conversion costs, an additional cost category (direct manufacturing labor costs) would be needed to
separately assign these costs to products.
To illustrate, we will use the production of the DG-19 component in the Assembly Department to
illustrate process costing in three cases:
Case-1: Process costing with zero beginning and zero ending work-in-process inventory of
DG-19, that is, all units are started and fully completed by the end of the accounting period.
This case presents the most basic concepts of process costing and illustrates the key feature of
averaging of costs.
Caes-2: Process costing with zero beginning work-in-process inventories but some ending
work-in-process inventory of DG-19,that is, some units of DG-19 started during the
accounting period are incomplete at the end of the period. This case builds on the basics and
introduces the concepts of equivalent units.
Case-3: Process costing with both beginning and some ending work-in-process inventory of
DG-19 units. This case adds detail and describes the effect of weighted-average and first –in-
first-out (FIFO) cost flow assumptions on cost of units completed and cost of work-in-
process inventory.
Case-1: Process costing with zero beginning and zero ending work-in-process inventories
On January 1, 2001, there was no beginning inventory of DG-19 units in the Assembly Departments.
During January 2001, Global Defense started, complete assembly, and transferred out to the Testing
Department, 400 DG-19 units
Data for Assembly department for January are:
Case-2: Process costing with zero beginning but some ending work-in-process inventory
The accuracy of the completion percentages depends on the care and skill of the estimator and the nature
of the process. Estimating the degree of completion is usually easier for direct materials than it is for
conversion costs. This is because, the materials for partially completed units can be measured more
easily. In contrast, the conversion sequence usually consists of a number of basic operations for a
specified number of hours, days or weeks, for various steps in assembly, testing, and so forth. Thus, the
degree of completion for conversion costs depends on what proportion of the total effort needed to
complete one unit or both of production has been devoted to units still in process. This estimate is more
difficult to make because of the difficulties in estimating conversion cost completion percentages,
department supervisors and line managers –individual most familiar with the process often make these
estimates.
The key points to note in case-2 are that a partially assembled unit is not the same as a fully assembled
unit. Whenever there are some fully assembled and some partially assembled units, as to how should
Global Defense calculate (1) the cost of fully assembled units in February 2001, and (2) the cost of the
partially assembled units still in process at the end of February 2001 is a very important points to be
noticed here.
Global Defense calculates these costs by using the following five steps:
Step-1: Summarize the flow of physical units of outputs
Step-2: Compute output in terms of equivalent units
Step-3: Compute equivalent unit costs
Step-4: Summarize total costs to account for
Step-5: Assign total costs to units completed and to units in ending work in process.
Step-1: This steps tracks the physical units of output. It identifies or shows from where the units come
from and where the units go. The physical units column of exhibit 7-1 below indicates:
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i) 400 units are started during February 2001
ii) 175 units are completed and transferred out
iii) 225 units are remained in work-in-process inventory
Step-2: Focuses on how the output for February should be measured. The out put is 175 fully completed
units plus 225 units partially assembled units. Since all 400 physical units are not uniformly completed,
output in step-2 is computed in equivalent units, not in physical units. Equivalent units- is a derived
amount of output units that takes the quantity of each input (factor of production) in units completed or in
work in process, and converts it into the amount of completed output units that could be made with that
quantity of input. For example, if 50 physical units of a product in ending work-in-process inventory are
70% complete with respect to conversion costs, there are 35 (70% × 50) equivalent units of output for
conversion costs. That is, if all the conversion costs input in the 50-units in inventory were used to make
completed output units, the company would be able to make 35 completed units of output. Equivalent
units are calculated separately for each input (cost category).
(Step-1) (Step-2)
Physical Equivalent units
units
Direct Conversion
Flow of production materials costs
-Work-in-process, beginning 0
- Started during current period 400
-To account for 400
-Completed and transferred out
during current period 175 175 175
- Work-in-process ending * 225
225 × 100%;225 ×60% 225 135
- Account for 400
-Work done in current period only 400 310
*Degree of completion in this department: direct material, 100%; conversion costs, 60%.
When calculating equivalent units in step-2, focus on quantities. The dollar amounts should be
disregarded until after equivalent units are computed. In the Global Defense example:
i) All 400-physical units i.e. the 175 units fully assembled ones and the 225 partially
assembled ones are complete in terms of equivalent units of direct materials. This
is because; direct materials are added in the assembly Department at the initial
stage of the process. Exhibit 7-1 shows output as 400 equivalent units for direct
materials because all 400-units are fully complete with respect to direct materials.
ii) The 175 fully assembled units are completely processed with respect to
conversion costs. The partially assembled units in ending work in process are
60% complete (on average). Therefore, the conversion costs in the 225 partially
assembled units are equivalent to conversion costs in 135 (60% of 225) fully
assembled units. Hence, exhibit 7-1 shows output as 310 equivalent units with
respect to conversion costs i.e. 175 equivalent units assembled and transferred out
and 135 equivalent units ending work-in-process inventory.
Exhibit 7-2 shows steps 3, 4, and 5. Together, they are called the production cost worksheet.
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Step-3 calculates equivalent-units costs by dividing direct material and conversion costs added during
February by the related quantity of equivalent units in ending work-in-process inventory. Here, the use of
equivalent unit in calculating unit costs can be seen by comparing conversion costs for the Month of
January and February 2001.Accordingly it is possible to observe that:
i) The total conversion costs of $18,600 for the 400 units worked on during February are less
than the conversion costs of $24,000 for the 400 units worked on in January. However,
the conversion costs to fully assemble a unit are $60 in both January and February.
ii) Total conversion costs are lower in February because fewer equivalent units of conversion
costs work were completed in February (310) than were in January (400). If however,
we had used physical units instead of equivalent units in the per unit calculation, we
would have erroneously concluded that conversion costs per unit declined from $60 in
January to $46.50 ($18,600÷400) in February. Such incorrect costing might prompted
companies to lower the selling price of their products inappropriately.
Step-4 in exhibit 7-2 summarizes total costs to account for. Because the beginning balance of the
work-in-process inventory is zero, total costs to account for (that is, total charges or debits to work-in-
process-Assembly) consists of the costs added during February –direct material of $32, 000, and
conversion costs of $18,600, for a total of $50,600.
Step-5 in exhibit 7-2 below assigns these costs to units completed and transferred out and to units still in
process at the end of February 2001.The key idea is to attach dollar amounts to the equivalent outputs
units for direct materials and conversion costs in (a) units completed and (b) ending work in process
calculated in exhibit 7-1, step-2.To do so, the equivalent output units for each input are multiplied by the
cost per equivalent unit calculated in step-3 of exhibit 7-2.
EXHIBIT 7-2
Steps 3, 4, and 5: Compute Equivalent-units costs, Summarize Total costs to Account for, and
Assign costs to units completed and to units in ending Work-in-process
Assembly Department of Global Defense, Inc., for February 2001.
Journal entries
Case 3: Process costing with both some beginning and ending work-in-process inventory
At the beginning of March 2001, Global Defense had 225 partially assembled DG-19 units in the
Assembly Department. During March 2001, Global Defense placed another 275 units into production.
Data for the Assembly Department for March 2001 are:
Physical units for March 2001
Work in process, beginning inventory (march-1) 225 units
Direct materials (100% complete)
Conversion costs (60% complete)
Started during March 275 units
Completed and transferred out during March 400 units
Work in process, ending inventory (March 31) 100 units
Direct materials (100% complete)
Conversion costs (50% complete)
Total costs for March 2001
Work in process, beginning inventory
Direct material (225 equivalent units×$80 per units) $18,000
Conversion costs (135 equivalent units×$60 per units) 8,100 $26,100
Direct material costs added during March 19,800
Conversion costs added during March 16,380
Total costs to accounts for $62,280
We now have incomplete units in both beginning and ending work-in-process inventory to account for.
Our goal is to use the five steps we describes earlier to calculate
1) The costs of units completed and transferred out, and
2) The cost of ending work in process.
To assign costs to each of these categories, however, we need to choose an inventory cost-flow method.
We next describe the five-step approach to process costing using two alternative inventory cost-flow
methods-the weighted average method and the first-in-first-out method. The different assumption will
assign different amounts of costs to units completed and tounits in ending work in process.
The weighted average process costing method calculate-unit cost of the work done to date (regardless of
the period in which it was done) and assigns this cost to equivalent units completed and transferred out of
the process and to equivalent units in ending work-in-process inventory. The weighted –average cost is
the total of all costs entering thk8e Work in process account (regardless of whether it is from beginning
work in process or form work started during the period) divided by total equivalent units of work done to
date. We now describe the five-step procedure introduced in case-2 using weighted average method.
Step-1: Summarize the flow of physical units- exhibit 7-3 below indicates that:
i) 225-units are from beginning inventory From where
ii) 275 units are started during the current period they came
Step-2: Compute output in terms of Equivalent units- as we can see from case-2 above that even
partially assembled units are completed in terms of direct materials because direct materials are
introduced at the beginning of the process. For conversion costs, the fully assembled physical units
transferred out are, of course, fully completed. The Assembly Department supervisor estimates the
partially assembled physical units in March 31 work in process to be 50% complete (on average).
The equivalent units columns in exhibit 7-3 below show the equivalent units of work done to date-
equivalent units completed and transferred out and equivalent units in ending work in process (500
equivalent units of direct materials and 450 equivalent units of conversion costs). Notice that the
equivalent units of work done to date also equal the sum of the equivalent units in beginning inventory
(work done in the previous period) and the equivalent units of work done in the current period, because:
Steps 1 and 2: Summarize Output in physical units and compare Equivalent units Weighted-
Average Method of process costing: Assembly Department of Global Defense, inc., for March 2001
(Step-1 (Step-2)
Physical unit’s Equivalent units
(Given)
Direct Conversion
Flow of Production Materials Costs
Step-3: Compute Equivalent-units costs- Exhibit 7-4 , step-3, shows the computation of equivalent –
units costs separately for direct materials and conversion costs. The weighted-average cost per equivalent
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unit is obtained by dividing the sum of costs for beginning work in process and costs for work done in the
current period by total equivalent units of work done to date. When calculating the weighted-average
conversion costs per unit in exhibit 7-4, for example, we divide total conversion costs, $24,480
(beginning work in process, $8,100, plus work done in current period, ($16,380), by total equivalent
units, 450 (equivalent units of conversion costs in beginning work in process and in work done in current
period), to get a weighted-average cost per equivalent unit of $54.40
i.e. [($8,100 + $16,380) ÷ 450 units] = $54.40
Step-4: Summarize Total costs to Account for- The total costs to account for in March 2001 are
described in the example data on page-14 –beginning work in process, $26,100 (direct materials, $18,000
and conversion cost,$8,100) plus $36,180 (direct materials costs added during March, $19,800, and
conversion costs, $16,380). The total of these costs is $62,280.
Step-5: Assign costs to units completed and to units in ending work in process - The key point in this
step is to cost all work done to date i.e.
1) The cost of units completed and transferred out of the process ,and
2) The cost of ending work in process.
Step-5 in exhibit7-4 takes the equivalent units completed and transferred out and equivalent units in
ending work in process calculated in exhibit7-3, step-2 and attaches dollar amounts to them. These dollar
amounts are the weighted-average costs per equivalent unit for direct material and conversion costs
calculated in step-3. For example, note that the total cost of the 100 physical units in ending work in
process consists of:
Direct materials:
100 equivalent units ×weighted-average cost per equivalent unit of $75.60 = $7,560
Conversion costs:
50-equivalent units × weighed-average cost per equivalent unit of $54.40 = 2,720
Total costs of ending work in process ---------------------------------------------- $10,280
The following table summarizes the total costs to account for and the $62,280 accounted for in exhibit 7-5
below.
The arrow indicate that the costs of units completed and transferred out and in ending work in process in
process are calculated using average total costs obtained after merging costs of beginning costs of
beginning work in process and costs added in the current period.
Costs accounted for
Costs to Account for calculated at weighed-average cost
Exhibit 7-4
Steps3, 4,and 5: Compute Equivalent-unit costs, summarizes total costs to Account for, and assign
costs to units completed and to units in Ending Work in process Weighted-average method of
process costing
Total
Production Direct Conversion
Costs Materials costs
Using dollar amounts from exhibit 7-4, summary journal entries under the weighted –average method for
the month of March at Global Defense, Inc., are:
1. Work in process-Assembly 19,800
Accounts payable control 19,800
To record direct materials purchased and used in production during March.
2. Work in Process-Assembly 16,360
Various accounts 16,380
To record assembly department conversion costs for March; examples include energy,
manufacturing supplies, all manufacturing labor, and plant depreciation
3. Work in process-Testing 52,000
Work in process-Assembly 52,000
To record cost of goods completed and transferred from Assembly to Testing during March.
The key T-account, Work in process-Assembly, under the weighted-average method would
shows the following:
Work-in process-Assembly
In contrast to the weighed-average method, the first-in, first-out (FIFO) process costing method assigns
the costs of the previous period’s equivalent units in beginning work in process inventory to the first units
completed ad transferred out of the process, and assign the costs of equivalent units worked on during the
current period first to complete beginning inventory, then to start and complete new units, and finally to
units in ending work-in-process inventory. This method assumes that the earliest equivalent units in the
work in process-Assembly accounts are completed.
A distinctive feature of the FIFO process-costing method is that work done on beginning inventory before
the current period is kept separate from work done in the current period. Costs incurred in the current
period and units produced in the current period are used to calculate costs per equivalent unit of work
done in the current period. In contrast, equivalent-unit and costs per equivalent unit calculation in the
weighted average method merge the units and costs in beginning inventory with units and costs of work
done in the current period.
We now describe the five-step produced in case-2 using the FIFO method
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Step-1: Summarize the flow of physical units-exhibit 7-5, step, traces the flow of physical units of
production. The following observation help explains the physical units calculation
The first physical units assumed to be completed and transferred out during the
period are the 225 units from the beginning work-in-process inventory.
Of the 275 physical units started, 175 are assumed to be completed. Recall from
the March data given on page-14 that 400 physical units were completed during
March. FIFO method assumes that the first 225 of these units were from beginning
inventory; thus 175 (400-225) physical units must have been started and completed
during March.
Ending work-in-process inventory consists of 100 physical units-the 275 physical
units started minus the 175 of these physical units completed.
Note that the physical units “to account for” equal the physical units “accounted
for” (500 -units)
Step-2: Compute output in terms of equivalent units- Exhibit7-5 also presents the computations for
step-2 under the FIFO method. The equivalent-units calculated for each cost category focus on the
equivalent units of work done in the current period (March) only.
Under FIFO method the work done in the current period is assumed to first complete the 225 units in
beginning work in process. The equivalent units of work done in March on the beginning work-in-process
inventory are computed by multiplying the 225 physical units by the percentage of work remaining to be
done to complete these units i.e. 0% for direct material, because the beginning work in process is 100%
complete with respect to direct materials, and 40% for conversion costs, because the beginning work in
process is 60% complete with respect to conversion costs. The results are 0 ( 0%×225) equivalent units
of work for direct materials and 90 (40% ×225) equivalent units or work for conversion costs.
Next, the work done in the current period is assumed to start and completes the next 175 units. The
equivalent units of work done on the 175 physical units started and completed are computed by
multiplying 175 units by 100% for both direct materials and conversion costs, because all work on these
units is done in the current period.
Finally, the work done in the current period is assumed to start but leave incomplete the final 100 units as
ending work in process. The equivalent units of work done on the 100 units of ending work in process are
calculated by multiplying 100 physical units by 100% for direct materials (because all direct materials
have been added for these units in the current period) and 50% for conversion costs (because 50% of
conversion costs work has been done on these units in the current period)
EXHIBIT 7-5:
Steps 1 and 2:Summarize output in physical units and computed Equivalent FIFO method of
process costing –Assembly department of Global Defense,Inc., for March 2001
(Step-1) Step-2
Physical Equivalent units
units Direct materials Conversions costs
Flow of production
-Work in process, beginning (page-14) 225 ( work done before current period)
-Started during current period (page-14) 275
-To account for 500
- Completed and transferred out
during current period:
-Form beginning work in processa 225
(225× (100%-100%); 225× (100%-60%) 0 90
b
-Started and completed 175
(175×100%; 175×100% 175 175
-Work in process,endingc (page-14) 100
100×100%; 100×50% 100 50
-Accounted for 500
-Work done in current period only 275 315
a
Degree of completion in this department: direct materials,100%;conversioncosts,60%
From the above summary it can be seen that the weighted –average ending inventory is higher than the
FIFO ending inventory by $480, or 4.9% ($480÷$9,800). This is a significant difference when aggregated
over the many thousands of products that Global Defense makes. The weighted-average method in our
example also results in lower cost of goods sold and hence higher operating income and higher income
taxes than does the FIFO method. Differences in equivalent-unit costs of beginning inventory and work
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done during the current period, account for the difference in weighted-average and FIFO costs. Recall
from the data on page-14 that direct materials costs per equivalent units in beginning work-in –process
inventory is $80, and conversion cost per equivalent unit in beginning work-in-process inventory is $60..
These costs are greater than the $72 direct materials and $52 conversion costs per equivalent unit of work
done during the current period. This reduction could be due to a decline in the prices of direct
materials and conversion cost inputs or could be a result of Global Defense becoming more
efficient.
For Assembly department, FIFO assumes that all the higher-cost units from the previous period in
beginning work in process are the first to be completed and transferred out of the process, and ending
work-in-process consist of only the lower-cost current-period units. The weighted-average method,
however, smoothes out cost per equivalent unit by assuming that more of the lower-cost units are
completed and transferred out, and some of the higher-cost units are placed in ending work in process.
Hence, in this example, the weighted-average method results in a lower cost of units completed and
transferred out and a higher ending work-in-process inventory relative to FIFO.
Cost of units completed and hence operating income can differ materially between the weighted-average
and FIFO methods when (1) the direct materials or conversion costs per unit vary significantly from
period to period, and (2) the physical inventory levels of work in process are large in relation to the total
number of units transferred out of the process. Thus, as companies move towards long-term procurement
contract that reduce difference in unit costs from period to period, and reduce inventory levels, the
difference in cost of units completed under the weighted-average and FIFO method will decrease.
Managers need information from process-costing systems to aid them in the pricing and product mix
decisions and to provide them with feedback about their performance. The major advantage of FIFO is
that it provides managers with information about changes in the costs per unit from one period to the next.
Managers can use this information to evaluate their performance in the current period compared to a
benchmark or compared to their performance in the previous period. By focusing on work done and the
costs of work done during the current period, the FIFO method provide useful information for these
planning and control purposes. The weighed-average method merges unit costs from different periods and
so obscures period-to-period comparisons. The major advantages of the weighted –average method
however are its computational simplicity and its reporting of a more representative average unit cost when
input prices fluctuate markedly from month to month.
Types of Spoilage
1. Normal spoilage
2. Abnormal Spoilage
Normal Spoilage
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It is spoilage inherent in a particular production process that arises even under efficient operating
conditions.
It is acceptable (unavoidable), planned for and can be estimated as a percentage of total good
units that pass the inspection point of the operations.
Costs of normal spoilage are typically included as a component of the costs of good units
manufactured because good units cannot be made without also making some units that are
spoiled (i.e., normal spoilage is a product cost)
Abnormal Spoilage
Spoilage in excess of what is considered normal for a particular production process is called
abnormal spoilage. Abnormal spoilage, unlike normal spoilage, cannot be anticipated /estimated.
It is not inherent in a particular production process and would not arise under efficient operating
conditions. They arise for unusual or abnormal reasons such as: machine breakdown and
operator errors, when production line equipment is not adjusted properly, when inferior raw
materials are purchased, or by fire, explosion, or other unusual events.
Usually regarded as avoidable and controllable – by identifying the reasons for machine
breakdowns and accidents and the like, and taking a remedial action, giving proper training to line
operations and other plant personnel
Not inventoriable (not included in the cost of good units) rather they are reported as “loss from
abnormal spoilage” account.
Process Costing & Spoilage
The cost of spoiled units depends on when the units are removed from the production process
rather than on when spoilage actually occurs, i.e. cost of spoiled units is assumed to be all costs
incurred on them prior to inspection point.
An inspection point is the stage of the production cycle at which products are examined to
determine whether they are acceptable or unacceptable units.
Spoilage is typically assumed to occur at the stage or completion where inspection takes place.