Chapter Two Outline For Management Accounting
Chapter Two Outline For Management Accounting
Chapter Two Outline For Management Accounting
Cost Objects:
A cost object is any activity for which a separate measurement of costs is desired. In other words,
if the users of accounting information want to know the cost of something, this something is
called a cost object.
[A cost object is a term used primarily in accounting to describe something to which costs are
assigned; product lines, geographic territories, customers, departments or anything else for
which management would like to quantify cost.]
The cost collection system typically accounts for costs in two broad stages:
1) It accumulates costs by classifying them into certain categories such as by type of
expense or even by cost behavior
Cost categories could be; direct labor, direct materials and indirect costs. Whereas cost behavior
accounts for things like fixed or variable costs.
2) It then assigns these costs to cost objects
In the following notes, we focus on the following cost terms and concepts:
- Direct and indirect costs
- Period and product costs
- Cost behavior in relation to volume of activity
- Relevant and irrelevant costs
- Avoidable and unavoidable costs
- Sunk costs
- Opportunity costs
- Incremental and marginal costs
Manufacturing organizations purchase raw materials from suppliers and convert these materials
into tangible products through the use of labor and capital inputs. This process results in
manufacturing organizations having the following types of inventory:
- Raw material inventories consisting of purchased raw materials in stock awaiting use in
the manufacturing process
- Work in progress inventory (also called work in process) consisting of partially complete
products awaiting completion
- Finished goods inventory consisting of fully completed products that have not yet been
sold
Merchandising companies such as supermarkets, sell tangible products that they have previously
purchased in the same basic form from suppliers. Therefore, they have only finished goods
inventories. Service organizations such as accounting firms, provide tasks or activities for
customers. A major feature of service organizations is that they provide perishable services that
cannot be stored for future use.
Service organizations do not have finished goods inventory, but some service organizations do
have work in progress.
The figure above is an illustration of the various classifications of manufacturing and non-
manufacturing costs. There are a further two more classifications of manufacturing costs; prime
and conversion costs.
Prime costs consist of all direct manufacturing costs – the sum of direct material and direct labor
costs.
Conversion costs are the sum of direct labor and manufacturing overhead costs – it represents
the cost of converting raw materials into finished products.
In contrast, indirect costs cannot be traced to cost objects. Instead, an estimate must be made of
the resources consumed by cost objects using cost allocations.
A cost allocation is the process of assigning costs when a direct measure does not exist for the
quantity of resources consumed by a particular cost object – these allocations involve the use of
surrogate rather than direct measures.