Cost Behavior & Terminology
Cost Behavior & Terminology
The
Product
Costing of Material:
Company A produced 1,000 tables. To produce 1,000 tables,
the company incurred costs of:
$12,000 on wood
$100 for a bag of nails to hold the tables together
Total material costs: $12,000 (direct material) [$100
(indirect material)]
Per Unit Direct Material Cost= $ 12,000/1000 tables= $12
DIRECT LABOR
Direct labor consists of that portion of labor cost that can be easily traced
to a product. Direct labor is sometimes referred to as “touch labor,” since
it consists of the costs of workers who “touch” the product as it is being
made.
Costing of Labor:
Company A produced 1,000 tables. To produce 1,000 tables, the company
incurred costs of:
$2,000 on wages for carpenters and $500 on wages for security guards to
overlook the manufacturing facility
Total labor costs: $2,000 (direct labor) [$500 (indirect labor)]
Per Unit Direct Labor Cost= $2000/1000 tables= $2
MANUFACTURING OVERHEAD
Manufacturing overhead includes all manufacturing costs except
direct materials and direct labor. These costs cannot be easily
traced to specific units produced (also called indirect
manufacturing cost, factory overhead, and factory burden).
Company A produced 1,000 tables. To produce 1,000 tables, the company incurred
costs of:
•Total Manufacturing Overhead cost: $500 (Indirect Labor) + $ 100 (Indirect Material)
+ $ 500 (rent & utility-other cost)= $1100
•Per Unit Manufacturing Overhead (OH) Cost= $ 1100/1000= $ 1.1
MANUFACTURING OVERHEAD
Indirect materials Indirect labor
Other Cost
MANUFACTURING OVERHEAD
NON-MANUFACTURING COST (PERIOD COST)
Also called selling, general & administrative cost (SGA- cost)
Marketing & Selling costs include all costs necessary to get customer orders and
deliver the finished product into the hands of the customer. These costs are also
referred to as order-getting and order-filling costs.
General & Administrative costs include all executive (staff), organizational, and
clerical costs associated with the general management of an organization.
Administrati
ve Costs
A bicycle company has these costs: tires, salaries of employees who put tires on the
wheels, factory building depreciation, lubricants, spokes, salary of factory manager,
handlebars, and salaries of factory maintenance employees. Classify each cost as direct
materials, direct labor, or overhead.
• Prime cost is the sum of direct materials cost and direct labor cost
• Conversion cost is the sum of direct labor cost and manufacturing
overhead cost.
The term conversion cost is used to describe direct labor and
manufacturing overhead because these costs are incurred to convert
materials into the finished product.
Direct Direct Manufacturin
Material Labor g
Overhead
Prime Conversio
Cost n
Cost
Product cost= Direct materials +Direct labor + Manufacturing overhead
= $69,000 +$35,000 + $14,000
= $118,000
MERCHANDISER MANUFACTURER
S... S...
⮚ BUY FINISHED ⮚ BUY RAW
GOODS. MATERIALS.
⮚ SELL FINISHED ⮚ PRODUCE AND
GOODS. SELL FINISHED
MegaLoMart GOODS.
Cost of goods sold & cost of goods manufactured
• The cost of goods manufactured (COGM), also • The cost of goods sold calculates the
called cost of goods completed, calculates the total value of inventory (goods) that
total value of inventory (goods) that was was produced during the period and
produced during the period and is ready for already sold.
sale • COGS= beginning finished goods
• COGM= Beginning WIP inventory cost+ total inventory cost + cost of goods
manufacturing cost- ending WIP manufactured (COGM) or purchase of
inventory cost finished goods – ending finished goods
inventory cost
• Total manufacturing cost= direct material cost +
direct labor cost + manufacturing overhead cost • Merchandising companies only have
cogs but manufacturing companies
may have both COGM & COGS
PRODUCT COST FLOWS
PRODUCT COST FLOWS
PRODUCT COST FLOWS
PRODUCT COST FLOWS
PRODUCT COST FLOWS
Beginning raw materials inventory was $32,000. During the month, $276,000 of raw material
was purchased. A count at the end of the month revealed that $28,000 of raw material was still
present. What is the cost of direct material used?
A. $276,000
B. $272,000
C. $280,000
D. $ 2,000
Beginning work in process was $125,000. Manufacturing costs incurred for the month were
$835,000. There were $200,000 of partially finished goods remaining in work in process
inventory at the end of the month. What was the cost of goods manufactured during the
month?
A.$1,160,000
B. $ 910,000
C. $ 760,000
D.CANNOT BE DETERMINED.
Beginning finished goods inventory was $130,000. The cost of goods manufactured for
the month was $760,000. And the ending finished goods inventory was $150,000. What
was the cost of goods sold for the month?
A. $ 20,000.
B. $740,000.
C. $780,000.
D. $760,000.
OVERTIME COST
The overtime cost for all factory workers are usually
considered to be part of manufacturing overhead.
This is done to avoid penalizing particular products
or customer orders simply because they happen to
fail to be completed end of the daily production
schedule.
LABOR FRINGE BENEFITS
Labor fringe benefit costs are employment-related
costs paid by an employer, such as insurance
programs, retirement plans, provident funds, home
rent, medical allowance, transport allowance,
entertainment allowance etc.
Number of Texts
Sent
VARIABLE COST PER UNIT
Although variable costs change in total as the activity
level rises and falls, variable cost per unit is
constant.
The cost per text sent is constant at 5 cents per text.
Volume
STEP-VARIABLE COSTS
Volume
STEP-VARIABLE COSTS
Volume
STEP-VARIABLE COSTS
Volume
FIXED COST
• A fixed cost is constant within the relevant range. In other words, fixed costs do not
change for changes in activity that fall within the “relevant range.”
• For example, your monthly contract fee for your cell phone is a fixed amount for a certain
number of minutes. The monthly contract fee does not change based on the number of
calls you make.
Phone Contract
Monthly Cell
Fee
Number of Minutes
Used
Within Monthly Plan
FIXED COST PER UNIT
• A fixed cost is inversely related to activity—the per unit cost decreases when
activity rises and increases when activity falls.
• For example, the average fixed cost per cell phone call made decreases as
more calls are made in the month.
Committed Discretionary
Long-term, cannot be May be altered in the short-
significantly reduced in the term by current
short term. managerial decisions
Examples Examples
investment in buildings Advertising and
& equipment, Research and
insurance expense,
federal tax Development
COST CLASSIFICATIONS FOR
PREDICTING COST BEHAVIOR
MIXED COSTS (ALSO CALLED SEMI VARIABLE COSTS)
Y
Total Utility Cost
ost
d c
i xe
l m
ota
T Variable
Cost per KW
X Fixed Monthly
Activity (Kilowatt Hours)
Utility Charge
MIXED COSTS (ALSO CALLED SEMI VARIABLE COSTS)
Y
Total Utility Cost
ost
d c
ixe
l m
ota
T Variable
Cost per KW
X Fixed Monthly
Activity (Kilowatt Hours)
Utility Charge
MIXED COSTS – AN EXAMPLE
Direct Materials
Product
Product Direct Labor
Costs
Costs Variable Manufacturing Overhead
• Notice the emphasis on cost behavior. Variable costs are separate from
fixed costs.
40
0
THE CONTRIBUTION APPROACH
If company sells one more bike (401 bikes),
net
Operating income will increase by $200.
40
1
CVP RELATIONSHIPS IN GRAPHIC FORM
The relationship among revenue, cost, profit and volume can be expressed graphically by
preparing a cvp graph.
Dbl developed contribution margin income statements at 300, 400, and 500 units sold.
We will use this information to prepare the cvp graph.
CVP GRAPH
Dollars
Total Expenses
Fixed Expenses
Units
CVP GRAPH
Total Sales
Dollars
Total Expenses
Fixed Expenses
Units
CVP GRAPH
Break-even point
(400 units or $200,000 in sales)
r e a
fit A
P ro
Dollars
re a
s A
L o s
Units
CONTRIBUTION MARGIN RATIO
Where:
Q = number of bikes sold
$500 = unit selling price
$300 = unit variable expense
$80,000 = total fixed expense
EQUATION METHOD
$200Q = $180,000
Q = 900 bikes
CONTRIBUTION MARGIN
METHOD
$80,000 + $100,000
= 900 bikes
$200/bike
Coffee klatch is an espresso stand in a downtown
office building. The average selling price of a cup
of coffee is $1.49 and the average variable
expense per cup is $0.36. The average fixed
expense per month is $1,300. How many cups of
coffee would have to be sold to attain target
profits of $2,500 per month?Unit sales
= Fixed expenses + Target profit
A. 3,363 cups to attain Unit CM
B. 2,212 cups target profit $1,300 + $2,500
C. 1,150 cups
=
$1.49 - $0.36
D. 4,200 cups = $3,800
$1.13
= 3,363 cups
Margin of safety
Margin of safety is defined as the difference between total
sales & break-even sales.
In case of prev. Example of dbl group, total sales = 500 unit & break even sales
= 400 unit
$100,000 = 5
$20,000
Operating Leverage