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COST Notes - Cost accounting and control
Cost Accounting and Control (Pontifical and Royal University of Santo Tomas, The
Catholic University of the Philippines)
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CHAPTER 1
INTRODUCTION TO COST ACCOUNTING
COMPARISON OF FINANCIAL, MANAGEMENT, &
COST ACCOUNTING
FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING
● preparation and provision of F/S
● Balance sheet
● Income statement
● Cash flow statement
● Statement of changes in stockholder’s equity
- complies with GAAP
- external parties
- historical, quantitative, monetary and verifiable
MANAGEMENT ACCOUNTING
- gather financial and nonfinancial info to internal
users
- not required to adhere to GAAP
- provides historical and forward looking info
FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING MANAGEMENT ACCOUNTING
Primary users external internal
Primary org whole (aggregated) parts (segmented)
focus
Info must be: may be:
Characteristics ● Historical ● Current or forecasted
● Quantitative ● Qualitative or quantitative
● Monetary ● Monetary or nonmonetary
● Verifiable
● Timely and estimated
Overriding GAAP usefulness
criteria
Recordkeeping formal formal and informal
COST ACCOUNTING
- determination and use of product of service costs
- provide product or service cost info to:
- external: investment and credit decisions
- internal: planning, controlling, decision
making and evaluating org performance
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CHAPTER 2
COST TERMINOLOGY AND COST
BEHAVIORS
COST TERMINOLOGY
COST MANAGEMENT SYSTEM -set of formal methods developed for
planning and controlling an org’s cost generating activities
COST CLASSIFICATION CATEGORIES
TYPES OF DEFINITION
COSTS
Association with cost ● Direct conveniently and
object economically traceable
Cost object - anything ● Indirect non traceable, must be
for which management allocated
want to collect or
accumulate costs
Reaction to changes in ● Variable TOTAL COST: fluctuates
activity (total cost) in total
Relevant range - UNIT COST: constant
assumed range of throughout relevant range
activity that reflects costs of material, hourly
the company’s normal wages and sales
operating cycle. Costs commissions
are variable and fixed. ● Fixed TOTAL COST: remains
Within the relevant constant throughout
range, firms experience relevant range
stable effects on UNIT COST: varies
costs. Beyond, inversely with changes in
inefficient. activity through relevant
range
⬆activity ⬇per unit
salaries, depreciation &
insurance
● Mixed part variable, part fixed
● Step increases at certain
activity levels
● Variable: small steps
● Fixed: large steps
Classification in F/S ● Unexpired BS (ALE)
● Expired IS (IEx)
● Product inventoriable (prime and
● Period conversion)
expensed (ex: salaries
paid to salesforce)
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NOTES
● Predictor - activity that when changed, is
accompanied by a consistent, observable change in a
cost item
● Cost driver - predictor that has an absolute cause
and effect relationship to a cost
● Distribution cost - cost incurred to warehouse,
transport or deliver a service. Expensed as incurred.
THE CONVERSION PROCESS
INVENTORY ACCOUNTS
1. RMI - work not started
2. WIPI - work started but not completed
3. FGI - work completed
MANUFACTURERS VS. SERVICE COMPANIES
- S ervice companies don’t have FGI
COMPONENTS OF PRODUCT COST
DM - readily identifiable part of a product
DL - manufacture or provide service
OH - includes Overtime or shift premiums, cost of idle time (waiting
for machines to be maintained), IM & IL
● Variable
○ costs of IM
○ Il on an hourly basis
○ Lubricants for machines
○ Variable portion of factory utility
○ Depreciation (units of production or service
life method)
● Fixed
○ Depreciation (straight line)
○ Factory license fees, insurance and property
taxes
○ Fixed Il (supervisors, plant managers, etc.)
○ Fixed portion of mixed costs (maintenance and
utilities)
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ACCUMULATION AND ALLOCATION OF OVERHEAD
COST ALLOCATION
- assignment of an indirect cost to one or more cost
objects using cost driver/allocation base
NORMAL COST SYSTEM
- Combines actual DM & Dl costs with OH that is
assigned using predetermined OHR
- POHR: charge per unit of activity to allocate (apply)
OH to WIP
NOTES
● Product costs - production/conversion area
● Period costs - nonproduction/non-conversion area
● Point of Sale - product/service costs will from FGI
to COGS
● High-quality products and services enhance a
company’s ability to generate revenues and provide
profits
● High production process quality leads to shorter
production time and reduced costs for spoilage and
rework
● Quality costs - costs of controlling quality/ failing
to control quality
○ Prevention costs - incurred to improve quality.
research customer needs, implementing training
programs
○ Appraisal costs - incurred to find mistakes.
monitoring or inspecting
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CHAPTER 3
PREDETERMINED OVERHEAD RATES &
FLEXIBLE BUDGETS
NORMAL COSTING AND PREDETERMINED OVERHEAD
FORMULA FOR POHR
T otal budgeted OH cost at a specif ied activity level
POHR =
V olume of specif ied activity level
*COST DRIVERS: DL hours, DL dollars, Machine hours
APPLYING OVERHEAD TO PRODUCTION
- Overhead is applied to WIPI as production occurs
- Applied OH debited to WIPI, credited to overall
general ledger account
Single overhead account for variable and fixed OH
Manufacturing OH Control
Total actual Total OH
OH incurred applied
Separate overhead accounts for variable and fixed OH
Manufacturing Variable OH Manufacturing Fixed OH
(VOH) Control (FOH) Control
Total actual Total VOH Total actual Total FOH
VOH incurred applied FOH incurred applied
ACTUAL APPLIED
Variable MOH xx WIPI xx
Fixed MOH xx Variable MOH xx
Various accounts xx Fixed MOH xx
UNDERAPPLIED OVERAPPLIED
Actual FOH Cost > Expected Actual FOH Cost < Expected
FOH Cost FOH Cost
Actual Utilization < Actual Utilization >
Expected Util. Expected Util.
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DISPOSITION OF UNDERAPPLIED AND OVERAPPLIED OVERHEAD
- Overhead accounts are temporary and are closed at
period end
- Disposition depends on materiality of the amount
MATERIAL IMMATERIAL
UNDERAPPLIED WIPI xx COGS xx
debit balance FGI xx Fixed MOH
in COGS xx xx
Manuf OH Fixed MOH COGS:debit
xx normal
OVERAPPLIED Fixed MOH xx Fixed MOH xx
credit balance WIPI xx COGS xx
in FGI xx
Manuf OH COGS xx
ALTERNATIVE CAPACITY MEASURES
● Theoretical capacity:
- estimated max. potential activity for a
specified time
- disregards realities such as machinery
breakdowns
● Practical capacity:
- reducing theoretical capacity by ongoing,
regular operating interruptions
● Normal capacity: (required under GAAP)
- encompasses firm’s long run average activity
and represents an attainable level of activity
● Expected capacity:
- short run concept that represents firm’s
anticipated activity level for the coming
period
SEPARATING MIXED COSTS
MIXED COST
- does not remain constant with changes in activity,
nor does it fluctuate on a per unit basis in direct
proportion to changes in activity
- y = a + bX
- y = total cost (dependent variable)
- a = fixed portion
- b = unit change of variable cost
- X = activity base to which y is being
related(cost driver/independent
variable/activity level)
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HIGH-LOW METHOD
- analyzes mixed cost by first selecting the highest
and lowest activity levels
*Activity levels are used because activities cause costs to
change, not vice versa
- Outliers are abnormal observations; disregarded
- Fixed cost does not fluctuate with changes in
activity
- y = a + bX
- Computation of b:
Cost at high activity − Cost at low activity
High activity − Low activity
FLEXIBLE BUDGETS
FLEXIBLE BUDGET
- planning document that presents expected variable and
fixed costs at different activity levels
- help set POHR
- Increment = variable cost per unit * quantity of add.
activity
PLANTWIDE VS. DEPARTMENTAL OH RATES
LEAST SQUARES REGRESSION ANALYSIS
LEAST SQUARES REGRESSION ANALYSIS
- analyzes the relationship between independent
(causal) and dependent (effect) variables
- Simple regression: one independent variable
- Multiple regression: two or more independent
variables
- Regression line: line that goes through the means of
the independent and dependent variables in a set of
observations
- Calculator
1. Mode 3
2. Select 2
3. Input values
4. AC
5. Shift 1
6. Select 5
CHAPTER 4
ACTIVITY-BASED COSTING
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ACTIVITY-BASED MANAGEMENT
ACTIVITY-BASED MANAGEMENT
● business process model focusing on the control of
production or performance activities so that they can
improve customer value and enhance profitability
*activity - repetitive action
VALUE ADDED VS. NON-VALUE-ADDED ACTIVITIES
● Value-added (VA) activity:
- increases the worth of a product or service to
a customer
- customer is willing to pay
● Non-value-added activity:
- increases the time spent on a product or
service but does not increase its worth
- unnecessary to customers
● Business-value-added (BVA) activities:
- essential to business but customers would not
willingly choose to pay
- ex. invoices (for sales and collections)
*process - series of activities that satisfy an objective
● Processing time: VA
- actual time spent performing all necessary
functions to manufacture a product or perform a
service
● Inspection time: NVA except pharma and food
industries
- time required to perform quality control
● Transfer time: NVA
- time consumed moving products or components
from one place to another
● Idle time: NVA
- time goods spend in storage or waiting at
production
Total cycle (lead) time = Value-Added time +
Non-Value-Added time
*value chart - process map and time assessments combine
MANUFACTURING CYCLE EFFICIENCY
Manufacturing Cycle Efficiency = Total Value-Added Time /
Total Cycle Time
● Just-in-time manufacturing process
- seeks to achieve higher efficiency by producing
components and goods at the precise time they
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are needed by next production station or the
customer
Service Cycle Efficiency = Total Actual Service Time /
Total Cycle Time
COST DRIVER ANALYSIS
COST DRIVER - have direct cause & effect to a cost
● Volume related - labor hours, machine hours
● Non-volume related - setups, work orders, distance
traveled
LEVELS AT WHICH COSTS ARE INCURRED
TYPES OF COSTS
Unit-Level Costs ● Direct material
caused by production or ● Direct labor
acquisition of single unit of ● Some machine costs if
product or delivery of single traceable
unit service
Batch-Level Costs ● Purchase orders
caused by group of things ● Setup
being made, handled or ● Inspection
processed at a single time
● Movement
- ex. Machine setup
● Scrap, if related to the
batch
Product/Process-Level Costs ● Engineering change orders
caused by development, ● Equipment maintenance
production or acquisition of ● Product development
different items
● Scrap, if related to
product design
Organizational/Facility-Level ● Building depreciation
Costs ● Plant or division
caused by supporting facility manager’s salary
operations ● Organizational advertising
*should not be assigned to
products or services
*should be subtracted only in
total from net product
revenues
ACTIVITY-BASED COSTING
ACTIVITY-BASED COSTING
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- focuses on attaching costs to products and services
based on activities conducted to produce, perform,
distribute, and support those products and services
TWO-STEP ALLOCATION
- Collect costs in general ledger and subsidiary
account
- Identify activity centers
- Accumulate costs into activity center cost pools—cost
drivers
- Allocate costs to products and services
*activity center - part of the production or service
process for which management wants a separate recording of
costs
*activity driver - measures the demands placed on
activities
TRADITIONAL VS. ABC COSTING
When ABC is implemented:
● Cost is reduced for high volume, standard products
● Cost is increased for low-volume, complex specialty
products
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