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1 Activity-Based Management CHAPTER 3 © 2012 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part, except for use as permitted in a license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website for classroom use. PowerPointPresentation by PowerPoint Presentation by LuAnn Bean Professor of Accounting Florida Institute of Technology Managerial Accounting 11E Maher/Stickney/Weil
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2 CHAPTER GOAL This chapter shows how ABC and ABM rest on the premise that: Products require activities and activities consume resources. For products to be competitive, managers must know Activities for producing goods, services Cost of activities ABC analyses ways to allocate indirect costs while ABM uses analysis to manage costs. ☼☼
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3 How do ABC and ABM work? ABC provides information about profitability in mix of activities, products ABM encourages managers to use information to become low-cost producer or seller. LO 1
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4 ABM ACTIVITY ANALYSIS Chart, start to finish, activities used to complete product or service Classify activities as value-added or non- value-added Eliminate non-value-added activities Continuously improve, reevaluate efficiency of value-added activities or replace with more efficient activities LO 1
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5 Research and Development DesignProductionMarketingDistributionCustomer Service Organization Strategy and Administration Customer Value Chain EXHIBIT 3.1 LO 1
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6 Research and Development DesignProductionMarketingDistributionCustomer Service Organization Strategy and Administration Customer ABM analyses and evaluates every step of the Value Chain. Value Chain EXHIBIT 3.1 & 3.2 LO 1
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7 NON-VALUE-ADDED COSTS: Definition Are costs of activities that the company can eliminate without reducing product quality, performance, or value. LO 1
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8 Research and Development DesignProductionMarketingDistributionCustomer Service Organization Strategy and Administration Customer ABM analyses and evaluates every step of the Value Chain. Value Chain EXHIBIT 3.1 & 3.2 LO 1 Eliminate
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9 ABC ANALYSIS Potential candidates for elimination because they do not add value are Storage Moving: parts, materials, etc. around the factory floor Idle time Other production process components LO 1
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10 EXAMPLE You and a friend go to dinner. You order tea ($2.50) and a salad ($8.00). Your friend orders appetizer, expensive entree, and dessert. The total bill is $60. Traditional cost allocation leads to splitting the bill, $30 apiece. What does activity analysis suggest each of you should pay? LO 2 YOU: $ 10.50 + tax & tip FRIEND: $49.50 + tax & tip
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11 ABC COST-BENEFIT Applying ABC has a cost of information gathering. Managers must take cost-benefit into account. Managers reject activity analysis, staying with traditional methods that are simpler. Smaller companies don’t need sophisticated information systems Managers use ABC because information helps them be competitive Complex organizations facing heavy competition use ABC Managers use ABC in special circumstances LO 2
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12 COST POOLS Three major types of cost pools: The “plant” (traditional) Sets one indirect cost allocation rate plantwide The department (traditional) Sets indirect cost allocation rates for each department The activity center (ABC) Determines cost pool for each activity LO 2
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13 ABC STEPS TO FOLLOW Accountants required to follow four steps: 1.Identify activities that consume resources; assign costs to those activities. Example: purchasing materials 2.Identify cost drivers for each activity. Cost driver for purchasing materials: # of orders 3.Compute a cost rate per cost driver unit. Cost per order 4.Assign costs to products. (Cost per order) X (number of purchase orders) LO 4
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14 COST DRIVER: Definition Is a factor that causes, “drives,” an activity’s costs. LO 4
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15 EXAMPLE: Cost Drivers LO 4 Machine hours Computer time Labor hours, cost Items produced, sold Pounds of material handled Clients served Pages typed Flight hours Machine setups Number of surgeries Purchase orders Scrap/rework orders Quality inspections Hours of testing time # of parts in product # of different clients Miles driven Which cost drivers listed below would a law firm use? EXHIBIT 3.3
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16 EXAMPLE: Cost Drivers LO 4 Machine hours Computer time Labor hours, cost Items produced, sold Pounds of material handled Clients served Pages typed Flight hours Machine setups Number of surgeries Purchase orders Scrap/rework orders Quality inspections Hours of testing time # of parts in product # of different clients Miles driven Which cost drivers listed below would a law firm use? EXHIBIT 3.3
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17 How do managers decide which cost driver to use? Typically, managers choose a cost driver that causes the cost. LO 4
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18 COST RATE EQUATION LO 4 Predetermined indirect cost rate = Estimated Indirect Cost ÷ Estimated Volume of Allocation Base
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19 EXAMPLE: Traditional Costing LO 4 Ciudad Juarez factory makes 2 products: mountain bikes and racing bikes. 1,000 mountain bikes and 200 racing bikes will be produced. Direct materials include Frames: $100 per mountain bikes and $200 per racing bike Direct labor: $30 per mountain bike and $60 per racing bike Overhead, allocated at 5 times direct labor What would be the cost of each bike under traditional costing? Continued
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20 EXAMPLE: Traditional Costing LO 4 Continued Mountain BikesRacing Bikes Direct materials$100$200 Direct Labor3060 Manufacturing overhead 1,2 150300 Total cost per bike$280$560 1 5 * DL 2 ($150 * 1,000 + $300 * 200) = $210,000
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21 EXAMPLE: ABC Costing LO 4 Ciudad Juarez factory makes 2 products: mountain bikes and racing bikes. 1,000 mountain bikes and 200 racing bikes will be produced. Direct materials include Frames: $100 per mountain bikes and $200 per racing bike Direct labor: $30 per mountain bike and $60 per racing bike Overhead, allocated by activity costs What would be the cost of each bike under ABC costing? Continued
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22 EXAMPLE: ABC Costing LO 4 ActivityRateCost driver units Cost Allocated Cost driver units Cost Allocated Purchasing$20/frame1,000 frames$ 20,0001,000 frames$ 4,000 Setups$2,000/setup13 setups26,00013 setups60,000 Inspections$100/inspect hr200 hours20,000200 hours20,000 Running machines $30/hour1,500 hrs45,0001,500 hrs15,000 Total$111,000$99,000 Mountain Bike Racing Bike Mountain Bike = $111,000 / 1,000 = $111 Racing Bike = $99,000 / 200 = $495 EXHIBIT 3.5
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23 COST HIERARCHY: Definition Categorizes costs so changes in one cost can be examined for its effects on other cost categories. LO 6
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24 Activity Category Example CapacitySize limitationsAircraft depreciation CustomerNeedsSpecial promotions ProductProduction needsRoute schedules Batch Fuel, baggage handling UnitVariable costsCredit card fees EXAMPLE: Hierarchy of Costs LO 6
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25 RESOURCES USED: Definition Are measured by ABC. LO 7
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26 UNUSED RESOURCES Knowing the difference between resources used and supplied helps managers to identify unused capacity. Finding unused capacity helps managers reduce or use it. LO 7
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27 LO 7 Imprinting a hierarchy of costs on ABM statements helps managers understand what costs can be reduced or better used. EXHIBIT 3.9 Capacity-sustaining costs will have unused resources unless operating at full capacity.
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28 End of CHAPTER 3
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