1FE105 M ANAGEMENT A CCOUNTING P RODUCT AND SERVICE COSTING Elin K. Funck.
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Transcript of 1FE105 M ANAGEMENT A CCOUNTING P RODUCT AND SERVICE COSTING Elin K. Funck.
1FE105 MANAGEMENT ACCOUNTING
PRODUCT AND SERVICE COSTING
Elin K. Funck
TODAYS AGENDA
What is Cost Accounting? How can Cost Accounting be used? Direct and indirect costs Traditional costing method
(full costing/product costing) How to calculate material and labour Overhead and overhead absorption rate
WHAT IS COST ACCOUNTING?
“Cost Accounting is a method to calculate positive and negative consequences of a
decision.”
It’s a model, a simplified picture of the reality.
Reality Our model
HOW CAN COST ACCOUNTING BE USED?
Costing involves the gathering of cost information and its attachment to cost objects
in a certain situation.
Cost objects: Situations: Product
Component
Order
Project
Department
Customer
Market
• Pricing• Profitability calculations• Cost control• Product choice (what,
how, how much)• Produce ourselves/
outsource
PRODUCT COSTING
In a manufacturing environment there are three basic components of cost:
Material costs Labour costs Production overheads
These are often classified as: Direct costs Indirect costs Direct expenses
EXAMPLE: DIRECT AND INDIRECT COSTS
A bus company arrange bus tours for older people. Which costs are direct and indirect for a specific tour which include entrance, coffee and food?
a.) Salary to the bus driver and the guideb.) Costs for administrationc.) Reparation of heater in the officed.) Fuele.) Entrance to a guided tourf.) Advertising
DirectIndirectIndirectDirectDirectIndirect
FULL COSTING MODEL/PRODUCT COSTING
Type of cost-material-labour costs-heating-advertising
Cost object- Product- Order- Batch
Cost centres-departments-functions
Direct costs
Indirect costs(overheads)
Apportioned costs
Why do we call it full costing? Because all costs taken together add up to the total cost of running the business.
PRODUCT COSTING (THE BASIC MODEL)
Direct material: material costs that directly can be assigned to the product.
Direct labour: labour that directly an be assigned to the product.
Direct expenses: other expenses that directly can be assigned to the product.
Production overheads: all those costs of running the production facility which cannot be directly identified with units of production.
Other overheads: indirect costs not incurred in the production facility.
PRODUCT COSTING
+ Direct material+ Direct labour+ Direct expenses= PRIME COST+ Production overheads= PRODUCTION COST+ Other overheads=TOTAL COST
Direct costs
Indirect costs
EXAMPLE: PRODUCT COSTING
A company produces jeans and has the following total costs per month:
jeans fabric 1000 SEK
salary to dressmakers 3000 SEK
tread, buttons etc 200 SEK
heating in production 200 SEK
electricity in production 100 SEK
administration 2000 SEK
1. What is the prime cost, the production cost and the total cost for the company?
Prime cost = 4 200 SEK, Production cost = 4 500 SEK, Total cost = 6 500 SEK
EXAMPLE: TYPE OF COST
What type of cost is the following costs normally?
a) Joint advertising for all our products
b) Royalty to the inventor of one of our products
c) Invoice on reparation of a truck used in the production
d) Salary to Smith at material handling
e) Rent for a copying machine at the administration
f) Sales commission for product Zig
g) Salary to purchaser Johnson
h) Heating in production
i) New forms to personnel
j) Participation in an exhibition where the company's entire range of products is demonstrated
a) Other overheads
b) Direct expense
c) Production overhead
d) Production overhead
e) Other overheads
f) Direct costg) Production
overheadh) Production
overheadi) Other
overheadsj) Other
overheads
OTHER IMPORTANT COST CONCEPTS
Period cost: costs which are incurred in a specific period of account.
Example. We want to know the costs of each quarter of a year. Smiths yearly salary = 400 000 SEK
jan-mar april-june july-sep oct-dec
100 000 SEK 100 000 SEK 100 000 SEK 100 000 SEK
Absorption costing: the same as full-costing. A costing system that allocates all manufacturing costs, including fixed manufacturing costs, to products.
OTHER IMPORTANT COST CONCEPTS
Product costing: the accumulation of costs related to the production of a large number of identical units.
- Dependent of the time aspect. (year, month, quarter)
- Common when we have a single product/service or products that are similar.
- Common in mass production. Ex. Textile, food industry
OTHER IMPORTANT COST CONCEPTS
Job costing: the accumulation of costs related to one identifiable job or task.
- Independent of the time aspect.
- Common when the cost object differs in resource consumption (other material, work methods, distribution etc.)
- Common in insurance companies, building companies, banking industry
OTHER IMPORTANT COST CONCEPTS
When it is not possible to classify accumulation systems to product or job costing. The goods have some common and some individual characteristics. A combination to use is then...
Batch costing: accumulation of costs related to a batch of identical products.
Example. Footwear or furniture. A batch is a variation of a single design.
CALCULATION OF MATERIAL COSTS
A company buys 5000 units of material for 1 SEK each. What’s the total cost of material transferred into production?
A company buys 5000 units of material for 1 SEK each. A further 5000 units are purchased 20 days later at 1,50 SEK each. At the end of the month 6000 units were issued to job Z. What’s the total cost of material transferred into production?
How do we make sure the right pricing is used?
5000 x 1 SEK = 5000 total cost
CALCULATION OF MATERIAL COSTS
Two alternatives:1. First in, First out (FIFO)2. Weighted Average cost (AVCO)
Back to our example: 6000 items were issued to job Z. 5000 bought for 1 SEK and another 5000 for 1,50 SEK.
Alternativ 1: 5000 items x 1 SEK + 1000 items x 1,50 SEK
= 6 500 SEK.
Alternativ 2: (5000 items x 1 SEK + 5000 items x 1,50 SEK) = 12 500 SEK 12 500 SEK / 10 000 units = 1,25 SEK1,25 SEK x 6 000 units = 7 500 SEK.
CALCULATION OF LABOUR COSTS
As long as a worker is involved in just one production we have no problem.
BUTwhat if they work on a range of different cost units.
How do we make sure the right cost is booked on each cost object?
CALCULATION OF LABOUR COSTS
1. Employees performs a combination of direct and indirect labour tasks.
Example. Work in the production but also perform more general tasks like cleaning the machine , sweeping up, etc.
Allocate time between direct and indirect
2. Variation in methods of payment.Example. Basic salary but also special payment
for working overtime or unsocial hours, or fixed amount and bonus.
Grade direct labour
CALCULATION OF LABOUR COSTS
3. Idle or non-productive time.Example. If a machine brakes down or the time
we spend on breaks, lunches or talking to colleges.
Is usually accounted for. Instead we use an hourly rate for each grade of labour.
EXAMPLE: CALCULATION OF LABOUR COSTS
An employee in the production with an average salary of 50 SEK/hour has reported his monthly work hours:
at assembly line product A 100 hours
administration 30 hours
quality control product A 10 hours
breaks and lunches 20 hours
How much of his time is direct labour cost?Direct labour 110 hours
OVERHEADS
Type of cost-material-labour costs-heating-advertising
Cost object- Product- Order- Batch
Cost centres-departments-functions
Direct costs
Indirect costs(overheads)
Apportioned costs
OVERHEADS
Detailed steps in allocating costs to cost objects:1. Decide upon direct costs2. Allocate indirect costs to cost centres3. Decide how indirect costs should be
apportioned
HOW TO CALCULATE OVERHEAD ABSORPTION RATE
Four possible approaches: 1. Rate per machine hour2. Rate per labour hour3. Rate per unit of production4. Percentage of direct labour5. Percentage of direct material
The most important thing to remember is that overheads absorption should be based on what
drives the costs.
HOW TO CALCULATE OVERHEAD ABSORPTION RATE
1. Rate per machine hour: If manufacturing is machine intensive this approach is
usually most appropriate. Example. Car industry. Example. Overhead cost is 56 000 SEK and machine
hour per year is 16 000 hours
overhead absorption rate = 56 000 / 16 000 =
3,50 SEK per machine hour
HOW TO CALCULATE OVERHEAD ABSORPTION RATE
2. Rate per labour hour: If manufacturing is labour intensive this approach is
usually most appropriate. Example. Textile industry Example. Overhead cost is 48 000 SEK and direct
labour hour is 24 000 hours
overhead absorption rate = 48 000 / 24 000 =
2 SEK per labour hour
HOW TO CALCULATE OVERHEAD ABSORPTION RATE
3. Rate per unit of production: Sometimes a good approach is to calculate per unit. Example. Quality control activity Example. Overhead cost is 32 000 SEK and estimated
units of production is 16 000 units
overhead absorption rate = 32 000 / 16 000 =
2 SEK per unit
HOW TO CALCULATE OVERHEAD ABSORPTION RATE
4. Percentage of direct labour: When we may assume that direct labour drives the
cost. Example. Personnel activities Example. Overhead cost is 30 000 SEK and direct
labour cost is 120 000 SEK
overhead absorption rate = 30 000 / 120 000 =
0,25 or 25%
5. Percentage of direct material: When we assume that direct material drives the cost. Example. Material handling
OVERHEADS
Detailed steps in allocating costs to cost objects:1. Decide upon direct costs2. Allocate indirect costs to cost centres3. Decide how indirect costs should be
apportioned4. Calculate overhead absorption rate 5. Apportion overhead costs to cost object6. Calculate total cost
EXAMPLE PRODUCT COSTINGA company produces two products X and Y. They have the following direct costs:
X Y
Direct material SEK/unit 12 8
Direct labour SEK/unit 22 28
Summary 34 36
The company produces 10 000 X and 12 000 Y per year. Indirect costs per year is:
Production overheads 216 200 SEK (overhead rate 26 %)
Other overheads 118 584 SEK (overhead rate 12 %)
a) Calculate the total cost per unit for X and Y.
b) What will the total cost for the company be if X is reduced to
8 000 units/year and Y is increased to 14 000 units/years?