Standard Costing
Standard Costing
1. Definition of Terms
Actual or Historical Costing – actual cost of direct materials, labor and factory overhead.
Normal Costing – actual cost of direct materials, labor and APPLIED factory overhead
based on predetermined rate for the actual units of input.
Standard Costing – predetermined cost of material, labor, and overhead for a prescribed
set of working conditions.
Used for planning, control, pricing, costing, motivation, and performance.
It involves three activities: establishment of standard costs, accumulation of
actual cost and computation and analysis of variance.
Done at the beginning of the accounting period, after the approval of the firm wide
financial budgets by senior management.
Summary:
Inventories and cost of goods sold are reflected at standard amounts instead of actual
costs.
Difference between actual costs and standard cost are called variances, which need to be
investigated and studied.
Variances are either favorable or not favorable.
Favorable = actual cost < standard cost; actual profit may exceed planned profit;
Unfavorable = actual cost > standard cost; actual may not exceed planned profit;
Advantages Disadvantages
5. Limitations
Cannot be applied to non – standard products;
Process is complex and requires technical skills and experience with the organization;
Standard cost are not fixed; it needs to update periodically;
Variances are caused by different many factors and it is impractical to assign
responsibilities to specific individuals to ascertain the precise causes of the variances.
Variances are either controllable and non – controllable; standard costing is relevant to
controllable variances.
6. Types of Variances
Volume Variance
Materials Variance
1. Materials Price Variance (MPV) = [(Standard Price (SP) – Actual Price (AP)] x Actual
Quantity Purchased (AQP)
2. Materials Quantity Variance (MQV) = [Standard Quantity (SQ) – Actual Quantity (AQ)]
x Standard Price (SP)
Labor Variance
1. Labor Rate Variance (LRV) = [(Standard Rate (SR) – Actual Rate (AR)] x Actual Hours
(AH)
2. Labor Efficiency Variance (LEV) = [Standard hours (SH) – Actual hours (AH)] x
Standard Rate (SR)
Application:
Required: (a) calculate materials, labor and overhead variance (b) Journal entries to record the
variance
Solution:
a. Materials Variance
b. Labor Variance
SH x SR = AH x AR
20,000 x 60 = 19,000 x 62
1,200,000 = 1,178,000
Difference = 22,000 F
Journal Entries:
a. RMI (10,000 x P 120) 1,200,000
Material price variance 50,000
AP 1,250,000
c. Payroll 1,178,000
Accrued payroll 1,178,000
2. Assume that all variances are closed to cost of goods sold and considering the following
information:
Sales 4,600,000
Cost of Goods sold at standard 2,760,000
Selling expenses 620,000
Administrative expenses 200,000
Income tax 285,000
Requirements:
a. Closing entries to close the variances to COGS
b. Prepare an income statement.
Standard Costing
2. Hermosa Enterprises recently experienced a fire, forcing the company to use incomplete
information to analyze operations. Consider the following data and assume that all materials
purchased during the period were used in production.
Direct materials:
Standard price per pound: P 9
Actual price per pound: P 8
Price variance: P 20,000 F
Total of direct material variances, P 2,000 F
Direct labor:
Actual hours worked: 40,000
Actual rate per hour: P 15
Efficiency variance: P 28,000 F
Total of direct-labor variances: P 12,000 UF
Hermosa completed 12,000 units
Required: Determine the following: (1) actual materials used, (2) materials quantity variances,
(3) labor rate variance, (4) standard labor rate per hour, and (5) standard labor time per finished
unit.
3. Nancy Simon is the long-time catering director of Naples-on-the Beach, a hotel noted
throughout the industry for quality, profitability, and cost control. The hotel recently catered a
steak dinner for a 2,000-person convention. Strict standards were in place for the dinner: 0.75
pounds of beef per plate at P 9 per pound. A review of the accounting records shortly after the
convention showed that 1,680 pounds of beef were purchased and consumed, costing the hotel P
13,440.
Required:
a. Calculate the cost of beef budgeted for the dinner and the total beef variance (i.e. the
difference between budgeted and actual cost). Should this variance be of concern to the
hotel? Why?
b. Assess the job that Simon did in “managing” the beef purchase by performing a variance
analysis. Comment on your findings.
c. Assume that the hotel received a number of complaints shortly after the dinner
concluded. Explain a possible reason behind the conventioneers’ unhappiness.
Required:
a. Calculate the overall factory overhead variance
b. Two-way analysis of factory overhead variances
1. Controllable variance
2. Volume variance
Multiple Choice
1. Nicole Company uses a standard costing system in connection with the manufacture of a
“one size fit all” article of clothing. Each unit of finished product contains 2 yards of
direct materials. However, a 20% direct material spoilage calculated on input quantities
during the manufacturing process. The cost of direct material is P 3.00 per yard. The
standard direct material cost per unit of finished product is
a. P 4.80
b. P 6.00
c. P 7.20
d. P 7.50
2. X’OR uses a standard costing system, and data for the its direct labor costs are
summarized as follows:
Actual direct labor hours 72,500
Standard direct labor hours 75,000
Total direct labor payroll 275,500
Direct labor rate variance – favorable 14,500
Direct labor efficiency variance - favorable 10,000
3. Lewis Company calculates its predetermined rates using practical volume, which is
288,000 units. The standard cost system allows 2 direct labor hours per unit produced.
Overhead is applied using direct labor hours. The total budgeted overhead is P 3,168,000
of which P 864,000 is fixed overhead. The actual results for the year are as follows:
Units produced 296,000
Direct labor 570,000 hours @ P 9
Variable overhead P 2,230,000
Fixed overhead P 872,000
If Schneider, Inc. decides to use the actual results from 20x7 to determine the 20x8
overhead rate, what will the 20x8 overhead rate be?
a. P 1.650
b. P 1.7
c. P 1.738
d. P 1.740