ABC
ABC
ABC
Activity-Based
Costing
Cost Hierarchies
Product-sustaining costs (service-
sustaining costs) are the costs of activities
undertaken to support individual products or
services regardless of the number of units
or batches produced. Design costs are an
example of this type of cost.
Cost Hierarchies
Facility-sustaining costs are the costs of
activities that cannot be traced to individual
products or services but support the
organization as a whole. Examples of this
type of cost include general administration,
rent, and building security. These costs
usually lack a cause-and-effect relationship
between the cost and the allocation base.
Plastims ABC System
To identify activities, Plastim organizes a team of
managers from design, manufacturing,
distribution, accounting and administration.
The team identifies hundreds of task performed at
Plastim. The team then focuses on those activities
that account for a sizable fraction of indirect costs
and combines activities that have same cost driver
into single activity. For example the team decides
to combine maintenance of molding machine,
operation of molding machine, and process control
into single activitymolding machine operations.
Plastims ABC System
The team identifies the following seven
activities needed to design, manufacture,
and distribute S3 and C5 lenses:
1. Design products and processes
2. Set up molding machines to ensure that
the molds are properly held in place and
parts are properly aligned before
manufacturing starts.
3. Operate molding machines to
manufacture lenses
Plastims ABC System
4. Clean and maintain the molds after
lenses are manufactured.
5. Prepare batches of finished lenses for
shipment
6. Distribute lenses to customers
7. Administer and manages all processes at
Plastim
# 4 consists of salaries and wages paid to
workers who clean the mold (direct cost).
All other costs are indirect cost pool.
Plastims ABC System
Design costs are product sustaining costs
and are function of complexity of mold,
measured by the number of parts in the
mold multiplied by the area (in square feet)
over which the molten plastic must flow (12
parts * 2.5 Sq Ft for the S3 lens and 14
parts and * 5 Sq Ft for the C5 lens.
Molding machine set up costs are batch
level activity, S3 lens require, 60,000/240
lens per batch=250 batches.
Plastims ABC System
Each batch requires 2 hours Setup time.
Thus total setup hours required for S3 lens
are 500 hours.
For 15,000 C5 lenses require 50 lens per
batch=300 batches. Each batch requires 5
hours setup time. Thus total setup hours
required for C5 lens are 1,500 hours
Plastims ABC System
Machine operations costs are related to the
activity of running the automated molding
machines and are output unit level costs.
S3 requires 9,000 molding machine hours to
manufacture 60,000 lens and C5 require
3,750 molding machine hours to
manufacture 15,000 lens.
Shipment Setup activity is a batch level
activity and each category of lenses require
100 shipments.
Plastims ABC System
Distribution is an output unit level activity.
S3 45,000 cubic feet delivered and C5
22,500 cubic feet delivered
Administration is facility sustaining activity
and is measured in terms of direct
manufacturing labor required for both types
of lenses. S3 require 30,000 MLH and C5
require 9,750 MLH respectively.
Plastim and ABC Illustrated
Plastim and ABC Rate
Calculation
Plastim and ABC Product Costs
Plastim: Simple & ABC
Compared
Conclusions
Each method is mathematically correct
Each method is acceptable
Each method yields a different cost figure, which will lead
to different Gross Margin calculations
Only Overhead is involved. Total Costs for the entire firm
remain the same they are just allocated to different cost
objects within the firm
Selection of the appropriate method and drivers should be
based on experience, industry practices, as well as a cost-
benefit analysis of each option under consideration
A Cautionary Tale
A number of critical decisions can be made
using this information;
Should one product be pushed over another?
Should one product be dropped?
Accounting for overhead costs is an
imprecise science. Accordingly, best efforts
should be put forward to arrive at a cost that
is fair and reasonable.
Activity-Based Management
A method of management that used ABC as
an integral part in critical decision-making
situations, including:
Pricing & product-mix decisions
Cost reduction & process improvement
decisions
Design decisions
Planning & managing activities
Signals that suggest that ABC
implementation could help a firm:
Significant overhead costs allocated using one or
two cost pools
Most or all overhead is considered unit-level
Products that consume different amounts of
resources
Products that a firm should successfully make and
sell consistently show small profits
Operations staff disagreeing with accounting over
manufacturing and marketing costs
ABC and Service / Merchandising
Firms
209.00 x 1.25
Learning
Objective
2
Stage One
Identify significant
activities and assign overhead
costs to each activity in
proportion to resources used.
Activity Based Costing System
(ABC)
ABC systems follow a
two-stage procedure Overhead assigned to
to assign overhead activities are called
activity cost pools.
costs to products.
Stage Two
Identify cost drivers
appropriate to each activity
and allocate overhead to
the products.
Learning
Objective
3
Receiving/Inspection
cost pool $200,000
Material-Handling
cost pool $600,000
Quality-Assurance
cost pool $421,000
Packaging/Shipping
cost pool $250,000
Learning
Objective
4
Various overhead
Maintenance Lubrication
costs related
to machinery Depreciation Electricity
Activity
cost Machinery Cost Pool
pool Total budgeted cost = $1,212,600
STAGE TWO
Calculate Budgeted Machinery Costs = $1,212,600
the pool Budgeted Machine Hours 43,000
rate = $28.20/hour
Cost
Assignment
STAGE ONE
Calculation of
total setup cost
Activity
cost Setup Cost Pool
pool Total budgeted cost = $3,000
STAGE TWO
Calculate Budgeted Setup Costs = $3,000
the pool Planned Production Runs 15 runs
rate = $200 per run
Cost
Assignment
STAGE ONE
Various overhead Engineering salaries Engineering software
costs related
to engineering Engineering supplies Depreciation
Activity
cost Engineering Cost Pool
pool Total budgeted cost = $700,000
STAGE TWO
Allocate based Engineering Cost Pool
on engineering Total budgeted cost = $700,000
transactions
Cost
Assignment
Exh.
Activity
cost Facility Cost Pool
pool Total budgeted cost = $507,400
Exh.
Cost
Assignment
Other Overhead Costs
Receiving and Inspection Cost Pool
Board Overhead % Units = Cost/Unit
Mode I $ 200,000 6% 10,000 = $ 1.20
Mode II 200,000 24% 20,000 = 2.40
Mode III 200,000 70% 4,000 = 35.00
A
A large
large proportion
proportion of of non-
non- Product
Product diversity
diversity
unit-level
unit-level activities
activities When
When the
the consumption
consumption
A
A unit-level
unit-level cost
cost driver,
driver, ratios
ratios differ
differ widely
widely
such
such asas direct
direct labor,
labor, between
between activities,
activities, no
no
machine
machine hours,
hours, oror single
single cost
cost driver
driver will
will
throughput,
throughput, will
will not
not be
be accurately
accurately assign
assign the
the
able
able to
to assign
assign the
the costs
costs resulting
resulting overhead
overhead costs.
costs.
of
of non-unit-level
non-unit-level activities
activities
accurately.
accurately.
Learning
Objective
6
Degree of
Correlation
Cost Drivers
A characteristic of an event or activity that results
in the incurrence of costs. In selecting a cost
driver, we must consider . . .
Degree of
Correlation
Cost of
Measurement
Cost Drivers
A characteristic of an event or activity that results
in the incurrence of costs. In selecting a cost
driver, we must consider . . .
Degree of Behavioral
Correlation Effects
Cost of
Measurement
Learning
Objective
7
Indirect
Costs
Indicators of Need for ABC
Direct
Direct labor
labor is
is aa Product-line
Product-line profit
profit
small
small percentage
percentage margins
margins are
are hard
hard
of
of total
total costs
costs to
to explain
explain
Line
Line managers
managers dodo not
not
Sales
Sales are
are increasing,
increasing, believe
believe the
the product
product
but
but profits
profits are
are declining.
declining. costs
costs reports
reports
Some
Some products
products that
that
Marketing
Marketing does
does not
not have
have reported
reported high
high
use
use costs
costs reports
reports for
for profit
profit margins
margins are
are not
not
pricing
pricing decisions
decisions sold
sold by
by competitors
competitors
Exh.
5-13
Cost of
inferior
decisions
resulting Design, implementation
from and maintenance costs
inaccurate
information.
Information
Low
System
Low High Accuracy
Optimal
system
Learning
Objective
8
Objectives
End of Chapter 5
This is
my kind of cost
pool!