Management and Cost Accounting, 6 th edition, ISBN 1-84480-028-8 © 2004 Colin Drury © 2000 Colin Drury MANAGEMENT AND COST ACCOUNTING SIXTH EDITION COLIN.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Activity-Based Costing: A Tool to Aid Decision Making
Advertisements

Activity-Based Costing Systems Chapter 4. Traditional overhead allocation system  Single predetermined rate is used to allocate overhead to products.
Activity Based Costing
Chapter 5 Activity-based Cost Systems
© John Wiley & Sons, 2005 Chapter 7: Activity-Based Costing and Management Eldenburg & Wolcott’s Cost Management, 1eSlide # 1 Cost Management Measuring,
Advanced Costing - ABC Activity Based Costing
The Islamic University of Gaza Cost Accounting
FDM5 Strategic cost analysis 1 Strategic cost analysis 1.
PowerPoint Authors: Susan Coomer Galbreath, Ph.D., CPA Charles W. Caldwell, D.B.A., CMA Jon A. Booker, Ph.D., CPA, CIA Cynthia J. Rooney, Ph.D., CPA Copyright.
Management and Cost Accounting, 6 th edition, ISBN © 2004 Colin Drury MANAGEMENT AND COST ACCOUNTING SIXTH EDITION COLIN DRURY.
© 2007 Pearson Education Canada Slide 5-1 Cost Allocation and Activity-Based Costing Systems 5.
Strategic Management Accounting
Prepared by Diane Tanner University of North Florida Chapter 5 1 Allocation of Indirect Costs: Simple Costing & ABC.
Introduction Overhead costs are a major cost area for many organisations. Planning and control of overhead costs is an ongoing challenge to managers.
Product Costing Process Costing Job Order Allocates costs to products
Activity-Based Costing and Analysis
Unit 5 ACTIVITY-BASED COSTING Study Objectives  Recognize the difference between traditional costing and activity based costing.  Identify the steps.
Management and Cost Accounting, 6 th edition, ISBN © 2004 Colin Drury MANAGEMENT AND COST ACCOUNTING SIXTH EDITION COLIN DRURY.
1 © 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd, Accounting for Managers, 4th edition, Chapter 13 Overhead Allocation Decisions.
1 Activity-based costing. 2 Introduction In the past, overhead costs were relatively small, and the problems arising from inappropriate overhead allocations.
AFM Activity Based Costing ABC By Isuru Manawadu B.Sc in Accounting Sp. (USJP), ACA.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., Cost Allocation and Performance Measurement Chapter 21 Modified from Publisher Provided.
1 Activity-Based Costing and Activity-Based Management
© The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2007 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Chapter 21 Cost Allocation and Performance Measurement.
Activity-based Costing
Kinney ● Raiborn Cost Accounting: Foundations and Evolutions, 9e © 2013 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied, duplicated,
ActivityBased Costing Systems Dr. Nancy Mangold California State University, East Bay.
Chapter 8 Activity-based costing. §A methodology that can be used to measure both the cost of cost objects and the performance of activities §Can help.
ABC - 1 Activity- Based Costing Systems. ABC - 2 Activity-Based Costing Activity-based costing (ABC) involves determining the cost of activities and tracing.
Chapter 4 Product Costing for Management Decisions: Activity-Based Costing and Activity-Based Management.
© The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2002 Slide 22-1 McGraw-Hill/Irwin 22 Cost Allocation and Performance Measurement.
Management and Cost Accounting, 6 th edition, ISBN © 2004 Colin Drury.
Cost and Management Accounting: An Introduction, 7 th edition Colin Drury ISBN © 2011 Cengage Learning EMEA CHAPTER 3 Accounting for.
Chapter 11 Standard costs for control: flexible budgets and manufacturing overhead 11-1 Copyright  2009 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd PowerPoint Slides.
Copyright  2006 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd PPTs t/a Management Accounting: Information for managing and creating value 4e Slides prepared by Kim Langfield-Smith.
An introduction to cost terms and concepts
Use with Management and Cost Accounting 9e by Colin Drury ISBN © 2015 Colin Drury Part Five: Cost management and strategic performance management.
Foundations and Evolutions
Cost and Management Accounting: An Introduction, 7 th edition Colin Drury ISBN © 2011 Cengage Learning EMEA Cost assignment CHAPTER 4.
Copyright  2006 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd PPTs t/a Management Accounting: Information for managing and creating value 4e By Kim Langfield-Smith 11-1.
Allocating Overhead Chapter 16 … “Job Order Costing”: allocated overhead using Pred. Overhead Rate with Direct Labor as an allocation.
Chapter 6 A closer look at overhead costs. What are overhead costs? §Product costing perspective l indirect manufacturing costs, or l all indirect costs.
1 Bruce Bowhill University of Portsmouth ISBN: © 2008 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
Chapter 5 Activity-Based Cost Management Systems.
Financial and Managerial Accounting Wild, Shaw, and Chiappetta Fifth Edition Wild, Shaw, and Chiappetta Fifth Edition McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2013.
Part One: Introduction to Management and Cost Accounting
Cost and Management Accounting: An Introduction, 7 th edition Colin Drury ISBN © 2011 Cengage Learning EMEA Cost and Management Accounting:
Activity Based Costing Nancy R. Mangold Professor, Department of Accounting California State University, East Bay.
© 2013 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd, Accounting for Managers, 1Ce, Ch 11 1.
Cost and Management Accounting: An Introduction, 7 th edition Colin Drury ISBN © 2011 Cengage Learning EMEA Cost and Management Accounting:
Management and Cost Accounting, 6 th edition, ISBN © 2004 Colin Drury MANAGEMENT AND COST ACCOUNTING SIXTH EDITION COLIN DRURY.
Copyright 1998 Dekker, Ltd. 1. Copyright 1998 Dekker, Ltd. 2.
Part Three: Information for Decision-making Chapter Ten: Pricing Decisions and Profitability Analysis Use with Management and Cost Accounting 8e by Colin.
Management and Cost Accounting, 6 th edition, ISBN © 2004 Colin Drury © 2000 Colin Drury MANAGEMENT AND COST ACCOUNTING SIXTH EDITION COLIN.
Part Two: Cost accumulation for inventory valuation and profit measurement Chapter Three: Cost assignment Use with Management and Cost Accounting 8e by.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., Cost Allocation and Performance Measurement Chapter 21.
Part One: Introduction to Management and Cost Accounting Chapter Two: An introduction to cost terms and concepts Use with Management and Cost Accounting.
Prepared by Diane Tanner University of North Florida ACG Allocating Indirect Costs: Simple Costing & ABC 2-2.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2007 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved CHAPTER 13 McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2007 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.,
Advanced Cost Accounting Lectures 2017
A closer look at overhead costs
Preface The use of modern manufacturing practices (such as automation, computer control machines, robotics, JIT) can significantly change the structure.
Activity-Based Management and Activity-Based Costing
Cost Accounting and Reporting Systems
Activity-Based Costing
Information for Decision-making Chapter Ten:
Introduction to Accounting IM51005B Lecture 8 Overhead allocation
Use with Management and Cost Accounting 8e by Colin Drury
Part Three: Information for decision-making
MANAGEMENT AND COST ACCOUNTING
Presentation transcript:

Management and Cost Accounting, 6 th edition, ISBN © 2004 Colin Drury © 2000 Colin Drury MANAGEMENT AND COST ACCOUNTING SIXTH EDITION COLIN DRURY

Management and Cost Accounting, 6 th edition, ISBN © 2004 Colin Drury © 2000 Colin Drury Part Three: Information for decision-making Chapter Ten: Activity based costing

Management and Cost Accounting, 6 th edition, ISBN © 2004 Colin Drury 10.1a © 2000 Colin Drury Generating relevant cost information There are 3 main reasons why a cost accumulation system is required to generate relevant cost information: 1. Many indirect costs are relevant for decision-making: The cost of many joint resources (e.g.support function costs)fluctuate according to the demand for them. Product introduction, discontinuation, redesign decisions determine the demand for support function resources and thus future costs. Costs of support functions are difficult to trace directly to cost objects.

Management and Cost Accounting, 6 th edition, ISBN © 2004 Colin Drury 10.1b © 2000 Colin Drury 2. An attention directing system is required to identify potentially unprofitable products that require more detailed special studies: It is not feasible to periodically undertake special studies for all products or combination of product mixes. 3. Many product-related decisions are not independent: Focusing only on individual products ignores impact that the culmination of many decisions will have on those joint resources that fluctuate according to the demand for them.

Management and Cost Accounting, 6 th edition, ISBN © 2004 Colin Drury 10.2 © 2000 Colin Drury Types of cost systems Direct costing systems: 1.Indirect costs are not assigned to cost objects so that only contributions to indirect costs are reported. 2. Appropriate where the majority of costs are direct. 3. Require that indirect costs are incorporated at the special study stage. Traditional costing systems: 1. Use unsophisticated methods to allocate indirect costs to cost objects. ABC systems: 1. Use sophisticated methods to allocate indirect costs to cost objects.

Management and Cost Accounting, 6 th edition, ISBN © 2004 Colin Drury 10.3 © 2000 Colin Drury A comparison of traditional and ABC systems Both systems use the two-stage allocation process. In the first stage traditional systems tend to allocate costs to departments whereas ABC systems allocate costs to activities: (ABC systems tend to have more cost centres/cost pools) In the second stage traditional systems rely on a small number of volume-based cost drivers (typically direct labour or machine hours) whereas ABC systems use many second stage cost drivers. ABC systems seek to use only cause-and-effect cost drivers whereas traditional systems often rely on arbitrary allocation bases. ABC systems tend to establish separate cost driver rates for support departments whereas traditional systems merge support and production centre costs.

Management and Cost Accounting, 6 th edition, ISBN © 2004 Colin Drury 10.4 © 2000 Colin Drury A two-stage allocation process (traditional costing system)

Management and Cost Accounting, 6 th edition, ISBN © 2004 Colin Drury 10.5 © 2000 Colin Drury The two-stage allocation process (ABC System)

Management and Cost Accounting, 6 th edition, ISBN © 2004 Colin Drury 10.6 © 2000 Colin Drury The emergence of ABC systems Traditional systems were appropriate when: 1.Direct costs were the dominant costs 2.Indirect costs were relatively small 3.Information costs were high 4.There was a lack of intense global competition 5.A limited range of products was produced.

Management and Cost Accounting, 6 th edition, ISBN © 2004 Colin Drury 10.7a © 2000 Colin Drury Errors from relying on misleading product costs Traditional costing systems use volume-based (e.g.direct labour and machine hours) second stage drivers but if volume bases are not the cause of indirect costs reported costs will be misleading. Example Products HV (a high volume product)and LV (a low volume product)are two of several products produced by a company. HV is made in large batches and LV is made in small batches. HV consumes 30%of DLH ’s and LV consumes 5% but each product consumes 15%of the batch-related indirect costs.The traditional system uses DLH ’s as the cost driver and the ABC system uses the number of batches processed. All overheads (total =£1m)are batch-related.

Management and Cost Accounting, 6 th edition, ISBN © 2004 Colin Drury 10.7b © 2000 Colin Drury Traditional system reports misleading information —In the longer term overheads will not decline by £ if HV is discontinued. ABC allocates on a cause-and-effect basis and shows high level of resources consumed by LV —The 2 costing systems report different messages (Traditional =Drop HV ABC =Drop LV). Traditional system motivates the wrong strategy. Reported product costs:

Management and Cost Accounting, 6 th edition, ISBN © 2004 Colin Drury © 2000 Colin Drury Designing ABC systems 1. Identify the major activities that take place in an organization: The activities chosen should be at a reasonable level of aggregation based on cost/benefit criteria. Choice of activities influenced by the total cost of theactivity centre and the ability of a single cost driver to provide a satisfactory determinant of the cost of the activity. 10.8

Management and Cost Accounting, 6 th edition, ISBN © 2004 Colin Drury 10.8b © 2000 Colin Drury Designing ABC systems (contd.) 2. Assign costs to cost pools /cost centre for each activity: Costs assigned to activity cost pools will include direct and indirect costs. Resource cost drivers used to assign indirect costs. Reliability of cost information will be reduced if arbitrary allocations are used to assign a significant proportion of costs to activities.

Management and Cost Accounting, 6 th edition, ISBN © 2004 Colin Drury 10.8c © 2000 Colin Drury Designing ABC systems (contd.) 3. Determine the cost driver for each major activity: Drivers at this stage called activity drivers.They should: (a) provide a good explanation of costs of each activity pool. (b) be easily measurable (c) the data should be easy to obtain and identifiable with the product. Activity cost drivers consist of three types (Transaction, duration and intensity drivers). 4. Assign the cost of activities to products: The cost driver must be measurable so that it can be identified with individual products.

Management and Cost Accounting, 6 th edition, ISBN © 2004 Colin Drury 10.9a © 2000 Colin Drury Classification of activities Unit-level activities: 1.Performed each time a unit of the product or service is produced. 2.Resources are consumed in proportion to the number of units produced or sold. 3.Examples —Direct materials and labour,energy costs and expenses consumed in proportion to machine processing time. Batch-related activities: 1.Performed each time a batch of goods is produced. 2.Costs vary with the number of batches made. 3.Examples include set-ups, purchase ordering and first-item inspection activities.

Management and Cost Accounting, 6 th edition, ISBN © 2004 Colin Drury 10.9b © 2000 Colin Drury Classification of activities contd. Product/service sustaining activities: 1.Performed to enable the production of individual products or services. 2.Examples include activities related to maintaining an accurate bill of materials, preparing engineering change notices. Facility-sustaining (or business-sustaining) activities: 1.Performed to support the organization as a whole. 2.Examples include plant management,property costs and salaries of general administrative staff. 3.Common to all products and services –.not allocated to products/services.

Management and Cost Accounting, 6 th edition, ISBN © 2004 Colin Drury © 2000 Colin Drury Activity-based profitability analysis Applies ABC hierarchical activity classification to profitability analysis. Used for attention directing —claimed provides more accurate information. Hierarchical approach can be applied to different cost objects (e.g. products/services, customers, locations.) See sheet 11 for an illustration of the ABC hierarchical profitability analysis. Aim is to assign all organizational expenses to a particular hierarchical level where cause-and-effect cost assignments can be established. The approach helps to identify the impact of resource consumption of adding or dropping items at each level of the hierarchy.

Management and Cost Accounting, 6 th edition, ISBN © 2004 Colin Drury © 2000 Colin Drury (Fig 10.2) An illustration of hierarchical profitability analysis) 10.11

Management and Cost Accounting, 6 th edition, ISBN © 2004 Colin Drury 10.12a © 2000 Colin Drury Resource consumption models ABC systems measure the cost of using resources and not the cost of supplying resources: Cost of resources =Cost of resources +Cost of unused Supplied used capacity Periodic financial statements measure the cost of resources supplied (i.e orders at a cost of £ in Example10.2). ABC systems measure the cost of resources used (i.e orders at a cost of £20 per order in Example 10.2). The difference between the cost of resources supplied and the cost of resources used represents the cost of unused capacity (i.e orders at £20 per order =£40 000)

Management and Cost Accounting, 6 th edition, ISBN © 2004 Colin Drury 10.12b © 2000 Colin Drury Unused capacity arises with committed resources because they must be acquired in discrete amounts in advance of usage. With flexible resources supply can be continually adjusted to match exactly the usage of resources. Managers make decisions that will result in a change of activity usage (e.g.discontinuation decisions reduce cost of resources used and increase the cost of unused capacity). Cash flow consequences will only arise if action is taken to remove unused capacity by reducing spending on the supply of resources. The periodic reporting of unused capacity signals the need for a change in the spending on the supply of resources.

Management and Cost Accounting, 6 th edition, ISBN © 2004 Colin Drury © 2000 Colin Drury Example 10.2 (1) Resources supplied 10 staff at £ per year = £ annual activity cost Cost driver = Number of orders processed Annual quantity of cost driver supplied: (1 500 orders per employee) = purchase orders Estimated cost driver rate = £20 per purchase order (£ / orders) (2) Resources used Estimated annual number of orders to be processed = Estimated cost of resources used assigned to parts/ materials = £ (13 000*£20) (3) Cost of unused capacity Resources supplied (15 000) –Resources used (13 000) at £20 per order = £ (2 000*£20)

Management and Cost Accounting, 6 th edition, ISBN © 2004 Colin Drury © 2000 Colin Drury Selecting the cost driver denominator level The correct denominator activity level to use is the level of capacity supplied (practical capacity)and not the anticipated usage. Using anticipated usage in Example 10.2 would result in a cost driver rate of £23.08 (£ /13 000)so that the cost of unused capacity will be hidden in the cost driver rate rather than being separately reported. Using anticipated usage would result in high cost driver rates in periods of low sales demand. The ABC data base Ideally maintained at estimated standard costs and periodically reviewed. In addition a cost and profitability audit of a firm’s products,customers and sales outlets should be periodically undertaken.

Management and Cost Accounting, 6 th edition, ISBN © 2004 Colin Drury 10.15a © 2000 Colin Drury ABC cost management applications ABC can be used for a range of cost management applications besides product costing.

Management and Cost Accounting, 6 th edition, ISBN © 2004 Colin Drury 10.15b © 2000 Colin Drury Criticisms of ABC ABC unit costs must be used with care —They can suggest an inappropriate degree of variability. The concept of unused capacity within the resource consumption model is questionable for physical resources. Reported costs may not significantly differ from a less costly traditional system if indirect costs are a low proportion of total costs.