Chapter 3 Flexible Budgets and Standards
Chapter 3 Flexible Budgets and Standards
Chapter 3 Flexible Budgets and Standards
A standard is a Flexible budgets and variances help managers gain insights into why the actual results differ
from the planned performance. This chapter focuses on the difference of static and flexible budgets and how
budgets –specifically flexible budgets – can be used to evaluate feedback on variances and aid managers in
their control function.
The static-budget variance is the difference between the actual result and the corresponding budgeted amount
in the static budget.
A Favorable variance - denoted F, has the effect of increasing operating income relative to the budgeted
amount. That is, actual revenue is higher than budgeted revenue, or actual cost is lower than budgeted cost.
An Unfavorable variance - denoted U, has the effect of decreasing operating income relative to the budgeted
amount. i.e., actual revenue is lower than budgeted revenue, or actual cost is higher than budgeted cost.
Assume that LSY produced and sold 10,000 suits at €160 each with actual variable costs of €120 per suit and
fixed manufacturing costs of €300,000. What was the actual operating profit?
Level 0 Analysis:
It gives the least detailed comparison of the actual and budgeted operating income.
It compares actual operating profit with budgeted operating profit.
It is the least detailed variance analysis.
( Flexible ) = {( )}
Result ) (
budget Actual − Flexible budget
variance amount
for operating income = €100,000 - €114,000
= €14,000 U - arises because actual selling price, actual variable cost per
unit, and actual fixed costs differ from their budgeted amounts.
The actual results and budgeted amounts for the selling price and variable cost per unit are as follows:
Actual Amount Budgeted Amount
Selling price €160 (1,600,000/10,0000) €155
Variable Cost €120 (1,200,000/10,000) €115
The flexible-budget variance for revenues is often called a selling-price variance because it arises solely
from the difference between the actual selling price and the budgeted selling price:
( Selling
variance ) ( selling price selling price ) ( units sold )
− price = Actual− Budgeted x Actual
( Standard
each variable direct −cost input ) ( for one output unit ) ( per input unit )
cost per output unit for = Standard input allowed x Standard price
( variance
Price
)= ( Actual of inputs ) ( of inputs )
price − Budgeted price x Actual quantity
of inputs
Price variance for direct materials:
DM PriceVariance = ( Actual
price price ) ( purc ℎ ases )
− Budgeted x Direct material
A company is inefficient if it uses a larger quantity of input than the budgeted quantity for its actual
level of output.
The company is efficient if it uses a smaller quantity of input than was budgeted for that output level.
Efficiency variance for direct materials:
( DMvariance
Efficiency
)= ( Actual
usage usage ) ( price )
− Budgeted x Budgeted
( DLvariance
Efficiency
)= (labor ℎrs labor ℎ rs ) ( price )
Actual − Budgeted x Budgeted
Machine hour is selected as cost-allocation base. Because it is believed that it is the only cost-driver of
variable overhead.
Based on an engineering study, LSY estimates it will take 0.5 of a machine-hour per actual output unit.
Total budgeted level of allocation base is 6,500 (0.5 x 13,000 suits) machine hours.
LSY's total budgeted variable overhead costs are €180,000.
Total budgeted VOH Costs
Predetermined VOH rate =
Total budgeted level of allocation bases
= 180,000/6,500 = €27.7 per machine hour
(VOHvariance ) ( unitActualVOH
Spending = per − Budgeted VOH per
of allocation base unit of allocation base ) x ( Actual level of t ℎ e )
allocationbase
= (€27 - €27.7) x 5,500 machine hours
= €3,850 F
Reasons
Decline in the price of items included in variable overhead costs.
Usage of materials per allocation base have been less than the budget.
SU, CoBE, AcFn, Prepared by Salahedin A. and Alemu M. Page 12
VOH Efficiency Variance
The variable overhead efficiency variance is the difference between actual quantity of the cost-allocation base
used and budgeted quantity of the cost-allocation base that should have been used to produce actual output,
multiplied by budgeted variable overhead cost per unit of the cost-allocation base.
It is due to using more or less of the allocation base. In other words, these variances are based on the
efficiency with which the cost allocation base is used.
(VOHvariance ) (t ℎ Actuallevel
Efficiency =
e allocationbase t ℎ e allocationbase ) ( unit of allocation base )
of − Budgeted level of x Budgeted VOH per
Example: LSY Company's budgeted fixed costs is €286,000. The allocation base is machine hour.
LSY estimates machine hour per unit. It is 0.5.
Budgeted Machine hours = 13,000 units x 0.5 hr = 6,500 machine hours.
Actual Fixed Costs = €300,000
¿ € 286,000
FOH Allocation Rate ¿ Budgeted ¿ Costs Budgeted Activity level = = €44 per machine hr.
6,500 ℎ rs
LSY can now calculate the budgeted fixed overhead cost per output unit as follows:
= €300,000 - €286,000
= €14,000 U
Reasons for the unfavorable spending variance
Higher plant leasing costs, Higher depreciation on plant and equipment
Higher administrative costs, such as higher salaries paid to the plant manager or supervisory.
Production Volume Variance
The production-volume variance, also referred to as the denominator-level variance, is the difference between
budgeted fixed overhead and fixed overhead allocated on the basis of actual output produced.
The allocated fixed overhead can be expressed in terms of allocation base units (machine-hours for LSY) or in
terms of the budgeted fixed cost per unit:
( volume ) (
Production = Budgeted −
variance FOH costs ) ( actual output units produced )
FOH allocated for