Caso Fase 2 Gestion
Caso Fase 2 Gestion
Caso Fase 2 Gestion
7.1 Introduction
Comment
Activities of people within the quality assurance department which are
substantial in terms of time consumed, which must have a preventive
content, which are difficult to quantify and which may not be identified
under the elements listed above are the daily review meetings, work
aimed at changing from a corrective approach to a prevention-based/
process control approach, involvement in reliability work, and post-
warranty performance analysis. Similarly, the involvement of personnel
APPLICABILITY OF BS 6143 AT COMPANY 2 105
Comment
Important appraisal cost elements not accounted for above are the
depreciation cost of capital equipment used for inspection, gauging
and balancing, and the costs of items needing frequent replacement.
Presumably inventories and costs of all inspection and gauging equip-
ment are available and should make these costs easily determinable.
APPLICABILITY OF BS 6143 AT COMPANY 2 107
Comment
Because scrap and rework costs are collected and probably amount to
an impressive sum of money, there may be a tendency to assume it is
the whole cost (or indeed a reluctance to investigate more closely in
APPLICABILITY OF BS 6143 AT COMPANY 2 109
ling and accounting for rejected products including any recall and
retrofit costs.
It is unlikely that the handling and accompanying costs of this
limited activity are sufficiently large to warrant them being ident-
ified separately.
04 Returned material repair - the costs associated with analysing and
repairing customer-returned material.
Such costs should be readily identifiable because of their non-
routine nature and because of customer (i.e. external) involve-
ment. Recovered material or components should not be credited
to this account.
05 Warranty replacement - the cost of replacing failures within the
warranty period.
This cost should relate strictly to the replacement cost of the faulty
item. Other costs incurred (e.g. investigation of warranty claims)
should be included under 01 above.
The BS and ASQC documents suggest that these costs may be
subdivided to show the warranty costs incurred from errors arising
in different departments, e.g. marketing, engineering, production
and quality assurance. Analysis of warranty claims may reveal
sources of error but it is debatable whether quantifying blame by
allocating costs is helpful in eliminating errors, or is worth the
effort.
The value of material or components recovered from failed prod-
ucts should not be credited to the warranty account.
Comment
This category probably incurs the same type of problem that arises with
internal failure cost, i.e. because a substantial cost is already known,
there is little incentive to refine it further. Refining the costs may be
difficult because the activity at the company-customer interface is not
within the sphere of direct influence of the quality manager and hence
would require an extremely high level of commitment and cooperation
from the customer service and marketing functions. The costs involved
may not warrant the effort, especially if there is little potential to reduce
them.
DISCUSSION OF FINDINGS 111
Other minor points on costing worth noting from the work at com-
pany 2 are:
1. although scrap valuation includes overheads, rework costs do not;
2. apparently US tax law encourages companies to value all scrap at
full sales value;
3. although there was good agreement between the accounts depart-
ment and quality assurance department on scrap costs, there was
no evidence of an independent check from a materials balance.
A noticeable feature of the accounting system at company 2 and that
at other companies is the greater accountability the nearer one gets to
the manufacturing operation. This has implications for the cost collec-
tion exercise because the bulk of quality costs are incurred close to the
maufacturing operation. Hence the accountability bias is in the quality
cost collector's favour. A factor working in the opposite direction is the
involvement of personnel from a wide spectrum of functions. It is not
usual for personnel in functions such as purchasing and accounting to
make returns of how they spend their time. Indeed, it is the general
lack of information about how people, other than direct workers, spend
their time which presents a considerable obstacle to the collection of
quality costs.
A pitfall waiting for the unwary was the reporting of changes in
provision (e.g. for warranty) as opposed to actual expenditure in the
period. According to the Institute of Cost and Management Account-
ants' [3] official terminology, provisions for liabilities and charges are:
Amounts retained as reasonably necessary for the purpose of providing for
any liability or loss which is either likely to be incurred, or certain to be
incurred but uncertain as to amount or as to the date on which it will rise
(Companies Acts).
Although this seems perfectly straightforward, problems can arise for
cost collectors because the provision for a particular liability may be
topped up with arbitrary amounts of money from time to time. Hence
to determine the true expenditure it is necessary to know about the
topping up as well as the change in provision. A more familiar trap
met with was the reporting of net costs of scrap. The errors which may
be unwittingly introduced by this practice are quite large in company
2's case, because many of its components are made of expensive alloys
which have a high scrap value.
The use of costs as motivators to shopfloor workers in company 2
was interesting. The costs displayed were the costs of scrapped goods,
because shopfloor workers could see the relevance of them to their
work. Further, although the scrap costs are relatively small in company
cost terms, they are large in relation to the wages of operatives on the
DISCUSSION OF FINDINGS 113
Appraisal
Quality control 430 61
Test 200 28
Product inspection 6 1
Gauges 32 5
Operating supplies* 12 2
Laboratory services 7 1
Quality audit 12 2
699 100 42.3 2.4
Internal failure
Scrap* 276 52.5
Rework* 135 25.8
Materials Review Board
(production) 45 8.7
Materials Review Board
(quality) 12 2.3
Data processing 4 0.7
Purchasing/manufacturing
engineering/product
engineering 53 10.0
525 100 31.8 1.8
External failure
Warranty* 37 11.6
Abnormal warranty* 116 36.4
Rejected materials* 16 5.0
Service/administration/other 150 47.0
Total 319 100 19.3 1.1
References
1. BS 6143 (1981) The Determination and Use of Quality-Related Costs,
British Standards Institution, London.
2. ASQC Quality Costs Committee (1974) Quality Costs - What and
How, American Society for Quality Control, Milwaukee, WI.
3. Anon (1982) Management Accounting: Official Terminology of the lCMA,
Institute of Cost and Management Accountants, London.
4. Anon (1977) Quality cost survey. Quality, 20-2.