Top Banner
1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH
139
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

1

Chapter 1Costing Principles

Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH

Page 2: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

2

Page 3: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

3

Page 4: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

4

Planning Deals with the estimation of

product costs, setting up of costing system to record cost data, preparation of cost standards and budgets, planning of materials and manpower resources, analysing cost behavior with changes in levels of activity

Page 5: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

5

Control Deals with the maintenance of

product costing record, comparison of actual performance with standards or budgets, anlaysis of variances, recommendation of corrective actions, controlling cost to ensure operational efficiency and effectiveness

Page 6: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

6

Decision-making Deals with whether it is more

profitable to make or buy a component, determine the economic order quantity and production batch size, replace fixed asset, add or drop products, decide pricing

Page 7: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

7

Application Cost accounting has extended

from manufacturing operations to a variety of service industries such as hotels, bands, airline, etc

Cost accounting system should be flexible and adaptable to meet the new business environment and the changing nature of the company

Page 8: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

8

Meanings Financial accounting Cost accounting Management accounting

Page 9: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

9

Financial Accounting

Financial accounting measures and records business transactions and provides financial statements that are based on Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP)

Managers are responsible for the financial statements issued to investors, government regulators, and other parties outside the organization

Financial accounting focuses on external parties

Financial accounting reports on what happened in the past

Page 10: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

10

Financial accounting Provides information to users who

are external to the business It reports on past transactions to

draw up financial statements The format are governed by law

and accounting standards established by the professional accounting policies

Page 11: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

11

Cost Accounting

Cost accounting measures and reports information relating to the cost of acquiring and utilizing resources

Cost accounting provides information for management and financial accounting

Cost management describes the approaches and activities of managers in short-run and long-run planning and control decisions

These decisions increase value of customers and lower costs of products and services

Cost management is an integral part of a company’s strategy

Page 12: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

12

Cost accounting Is concerned with internal users of

accounting information, such as operation managers

The generated reports are specific to the requirement of the management

The reporting can be in any format which suits the user

Page 13: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

13

Cost Accounting

It provides information for both management accounting and financial accounting.

It measures and reports from financial and non financial data.

Page 14: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

14

Management accounting Comprises all cost accounting

functions The accounting for product and

service costs, management accounting extends to use various internal accounting reports for planning, control and decision making

Page 15: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

15

Cost and management accounting Provides management with costs

for products, inventories, operations or functions and compares actual to predetermined data

It also provides a variety of data for many day-to-day decision as well as essential information for long-range decisions

Page 16: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

16

Functions of managerial accounting Determining the cost Providing relevant information for

better decision-making Providing information for planning,

control, decision-making and application

Page 17: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

17

Comparison of cost, management and financial accounting

Page 18: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

18

Management (cost)accounting

Financial accounting

Nature Records material, labour and overhead costs in product or jobReports produced are for internal management and contol

Records company transaction eventsExternal financial statements are produced

Accounting system

Not based on the double entry system

Follows the double entry system

Page 19: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

19

Management (cost)accounting

Financial accounting

Accounting principles

No need to use accounting principlesAdopt any accounting techniques that generates useful accounting information

Use Generally Accepted Accounting Principles for recording transactions

Users of information

Used by different levels of management or departments responsible for respective activities

Used by external parties: shareholders, creditors, government, etc

Page 20: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

20

Management (cost)accounting

Financial accounting

Operation guidelines or standards

Based on management instructions and requirements

Conforms to company Ordinances, stock exchange rules, HKSSAPs

Time span

Reports are prepared whenever neededThey may be prepared on a weekly or daily basis

Reports are prepared for a definite period, usually yearly and half yearly

Page 21: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

21

Management (cost)accounting

Financial accounting

Time focus

Future orientation: forecasts, estimates and historic data for management actions

Past orientation: use of historic data for reporting and evaluation

Perspective

Detailed analysis of parts of the entity, products, regions, etc

Financial summary of the whole orgainisation

Page 22: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

22

Cost accountingvs.

Management accounting

Page 23: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

23

Management accounting

Cost accounting

Objective To provide information for planning and decision making by the management

To ascertain and control cost

Basic of recording

Concerned with transactions related to the future

Based on both present and future transactions for cost ascertainment

Page 24: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

24

Management accounting

Cost accounting

Coverage Covers a wider area: financial accounts, cost accounts, taxation, etc.

Covers matters relating to ascertainment and control of cost of product or service

Utility Only the needs of internal management

The needs of both internal and external interested groups

Page 25: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

25

Management accounting

Cost accounting

Types of transactions

Deals with both monetary any non-monetary transactions, covering both quantitative and qualitative aspects

Deals only with monetary transactions, covering only quantitative aspect

Page 26: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

26

Page 27: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

27

Page 28: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

28

Page 29: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

29

Page 30: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

30

Page 31: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

31

Page 32: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

32

Page 33: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

33

Page 34: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

34

Page 35: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

Chapter 2Basic Cost Terminology

© 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.

Cost—sacrificed resource to achieve a specific objective

Actual cost—a cost that has occurredBudgeted cost—a predicted costCost object—anything of interest for which

a cost isdesired

Page 36: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

Cost Object Examples at BMW

© 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.

Cost Object IllustrationProduct BMW X 5 sports activity vehicleService Dealer-support telephone hotlineProject R&D project on DVD system

enhancementCustomer Herb Chambers Motors, a dealer that

purchases a broad range of BMW vehicles

Activity Setting up production machinesDepartment Environmental, Health and Safety

Page 37: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

Basic Cost Terminology

© 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.

Cost accumulation—a collection of cost data in an organized manner

Cost assignment—a general term that includes gathering accumulated costs to a cost object. This includes:Tracing accumulated costs with a direct

relationship to the cost object andAllocating accumulated costs with an indirect

relationship to a cost object

Page 38: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

Direct and Indirect Costs

© 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.

Direct costs can be conveniently and economically traced (tracked) to a cost object.

Indirect costs cannot be conveniently or economically traced (tracked) to a cost object. Instead of being traced, these costs are allocated to a cost object in a rational and systematic manner.

Page 39: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

BMW: Assigning Costs to a Cost Object

© 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.

Page 40: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

Cost Examples

© 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.

Direct CostsPartsAssembly line

wagesIndirect Costs

ElectricityRentProperty taxes

Page 41: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

Factors Affecting Direct/Indirect Cost Classification

© 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.

Cost materialityAvailability of information-gathering

technologyOperational design

Page 42: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

Cost Behavior

© 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.

Variable costs—changes in total in proportion to changes in the related level of activity or volume.

Fixed costs—remain unchanged in total regardless of changes in the related level of activity or volume.

Costs are fixed or variable only with respect to a specific activity or a given time period.

Page 43: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

Cost Behavior

© 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.

Variable costs are constant on a per-unit basis. If a product takes 5 pounds of materials each, it stays the same per unit regardless if one, ten, or a thousand units are produced.

Fixed costs change inversely with the level of production. As more units are produced, the same fixed cost is spread over more and more units, reducing the cost per unit.

Page 44: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

44

Page 45: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

Cost Behavior Visualized

© 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.

Page 46: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

Other Cost Concepts

© 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.

Cost driver—a variable that causally affects costs over a given time span

Relevant range—the band of normal activity level (or volume) in which there is a specific relationship between the level of activity (or volume) and a given costFor example, fixed costs are considered fixed

only within the relevant range.

Page 47: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

Relevant Range Visualized

© 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.

Page 48: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

Multiple Classification of Costs

© 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.

Costs may be classified as:Direct/Indirect, andVariable/Fixed

These multiple classifications give rise to important

cost combinations:Direct and variableDirect and fixedIndirect and variableIndirect and fixed

Page 49: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

Multiple Classification of Costs, Visualized

© 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.

Page 50: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

Total Costs and Unit Costs

50

Page 51: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

Total Costs and Unit Costs

51

Page 52: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

52

Page 53: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

Total Costs and Unit Costs

© 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.

Unit costs should be used cautiously. Because unit costs change with a different level of output or volume, it may be more prudent to base decisions on a total dollar basis.Unit costs that include fixed costs should

alwaysreference a given level of output or activity.

Unit costs are also called average costs.Managers should think in terms of total costs

ratherthan unit costs.

Page 54: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

54

Page 55: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

Different Types of Firms

© 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.

Manufacturing-sector companies purchase materials and components and convert them into finished products.

Merchandising-sector companies purchase and then sell tangible products without changing their basic form.

Service-sector companies provide services (intangible products).

Page 56: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

56

Page 57: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

Types of Manufacturing Inventories

© 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.

Direct materials—resources in-stock and available for use

Work-in-process (or progress)—products started but not yet completed, often abbreviated as WIP

Finished goods—products completed and ready for

sale

Page 58: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

58

Page 59: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

Types of Product Costs

© 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.

Also known as inventoriable costsDirect materials—acquisition costs of all

materials that will become part of the cost object.

Direct labor—compensation of all manufacturing labor

that can be traced to the cost object.Indirect manufacturing—factory costs that are

not traceable to the product in an economically feasible way. Examples include lubricants, indirect manufacturing labor, utilities, and supplies.

Page 60: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

60

Page 61: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

61

Page 62: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

62

Page 63: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

Accounting Distinction Between Costs

© 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.

Inventoriable costs—product manufacturing costs.

These costs are capitalized as assets (inventory) until they are sold and transferred to Cost of Goods Sold.

Period costs—have no future value and are expensed in the period incurred.

Page 64: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

64

Page 65: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

65

Page 66: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

66

Page 67: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

Cost Flows Visualized

© 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.

Page 68: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

68

Page 69: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

Cost of Goods Manufactured

STEP 1

STEP 3

STEP 2

PANEL B: COST OF GOODS MANUFACTUREDCellular Products

Schedule of Cost of Goods Manufactured*For the Year Ended December 31, 2011 (in Thousands)

Direct materials:Beginning inventory, January 1, 2011 $11,000Purchases of direct materials $73,000Cost of direct materials available for use $84,000Ending inventory, December 31, 2011 $8,000

Direct materials used $76,000Direct manufacturing labor $9,000Manufacturing overhead costs:

Indirect manufacturing labor $7,000Supplies $2,000Heat, light, and power $5,000Depreciation-plant building $2,000Depreciation-plant equipment $3,000Miscellaneous $1,000

Total manufacturing overhead costs $20,000Manufacturing cost incurr3ed during 2011 $105,000Beginning work-in-progress inventory, January 1, 2011 $6,000Total manufacturing costs to account for $111,000Ending work-in-progress inventory, December 31, 2011 $7,000Cost of goods manufactured (to income Statement) $104,000* Note that this schedule can beco me a Schedule of Cost of Goo ds M anufactured and So ld simply by including the beginning and ending finished go o ds invento ry figures in the suppo rting schedule rather than in the bo dy of the inco me statement.

Page 70: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

70

Page 71: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

zz

71

Page 72: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

Multiple-Step Income Statement

STEP 4

© 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.

PANEL A: INCOME STATEMENTCellular ProductsIncome Statement

For the Year Ended December 31, 2011 (in thousands)Revenues $210,000Costs of goods sold:

Beginning finished goods inventory, January 1, 2011 $22,000Costs of goods manufactured (see Panel B) $104,000Costs of goods available for sale $126,000

Ending finished goods inventory, December 31, 2011 $18,000Cost of goods sold $108,000

Gross margin (or gross profit) $102,000Operating costs

R&D, design, mktg., dist., & cust.-service cost $70,000Total operating costs $70,000

Operating income $32,000

Page 73: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

73

Page 74: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

74

Page 75: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

Other Cost Considerations

© 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.

Prime cost is a term referring to all direct manufacturing costs (materials and labor).

Conversion cost is a term referring to direct labor and indirect manufacturing costs.

Overtime labor costs are considered part of indirect

overhead costs.

Page 76: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

76

Page 77: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

Different Definitions of Costs for Different Applications

© 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.

Pricing and product-mix decisions—decisions about pricing and maximizing profits

Contracting with government agencies—very specific definitions of allowable costs for “cost plus profit” contracts

Preparing external-use financial statements—GAAP- driven product costs only

Page 78: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

Different Definitions of Costs for Different Applications

© 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.

Page 79: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

Cost-Volume-Profit Analysis

© 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.

Page 80: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

80

Page 81: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

A Five-Step Decision-Making Process inPlanning and Control Revisited

1. Identify the problem and uncertainties2. Obtain information3. Make predictions about the future4. Make decisions by choosing between

alternatives, using cost-volume-profit (CVP) analysis

5. Implement the decision, evaluate performance, and

learn

Page 82: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

Foundational Assumptions in CVP

Changes in production/sales volume are the sole cause for cost and revenue changes.

Total costs consist of fixed costs and variable costs.

Revenue and costs behave and can be graphed as a

linear function (a straight line).Selling price, variable cost per unit, and fixed

costs are all known and constant.In many cases only a single product will be

analyzed. If multiple products are studied, their relative sales proportions are known and constant.

The time value of money (interest) is ignored.

Page 83: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

83

Page 84: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

84

Page 85: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

85

Page 86: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

86

Page 87: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

87

Page 88: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

88

Page 89: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

89

Page 90: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

90

Page 91: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

Basic Formulae

© 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.

Page 92: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

CVP: Contribution Margin

© 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.

Manipulation of the basic equations yields an extremely important and powerful tool extensively used in cost accounting: contribution margin (CM).

Contribution margin equals revenue less variable

costs.Contribution margin per unit equals unit

selling price less unit variable costs.

Page 93: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

Contribution Margin

© 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.

Contribution margin also equals contribution margin per unit multiplied by the number of units sold.

Contribution margin percentage is the contribution margin per unit divided by unit selling price.

Page 94: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

Cost–Volume–Profit Equation

© 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.

Revenue – Variable Costs – Fixed Costs = Operating Income

Selling

Sales

Price

Quantity

*( ) (

)*Unit-

Varia

bleCosts

SalesQuantit

y

- Fixed Costs

= Operating Income

Page 95: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

Breakeven PointAt the breakeven point, a firm has no profit or loss at the given sales level.

Sales – Variable Costs – Fixed Costs = 0Calculation of breakeven number of units

Breakeven Units = Fixed Costs__

Contribution Margin per Unit

Calculation of breakeven revenuesBreakeven Revenue = Fixed Costs_

_Contribution Margin Percentage

Page 96: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

96

Page 97: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

97

Page 98: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

98

Page 99: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

99

Page 100: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

100

Page 101: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

101

Page 102: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

102

Page 103: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

103

Page 104: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

104

Page 105: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

105

Page 106: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

106

Page 107: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

107

Page 108: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

108

Page 109: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

109

Page 110: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

110

Page 111: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

111

Page 112: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

112

Page 113: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

113

Page 114: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

114

Page 115: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

115

Page 116: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

116

Page 117: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

117

Page 118: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

118

Page 119: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

Job Costing

Page 120: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

120

Page 121: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

121

Page 122: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

122

Page 123: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

123

Page 124: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

124

Page 125: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

125

Page 126: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

Costing ApproachesActual costing—allocates:

Indirect costs based on the actual indirect-cost rates times the actual activity consumption.

Normal Costing—allocates:Indirect costs based on the budgeted indirect-cost

rates times the actual activity consumption.Both methods allocate direct costs to a cost

object the same way: by using actual direct-cost rates times actual consumption.

Page 127: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

127

Page 128: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

Costing Approaches Summarized

Page 129: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

…logically extendedCost pool—any logical grouping of related

cost objectsCost-allocation base—a cost driver is

used as a basis upon which to build a systematic method of distributing indirect costs.For example, let’s say that direct labor hours cause

indirect costs to change. Accordingly, direct labor hours will be used to distribute or allocate costs among objects based on their usage of that cost driver.

Page 130: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

130

Page 131: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

131

Page 132: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

132

Page 133: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

133

Page 134: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

134

Page 135: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

135

Page 136: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

136

Page 137: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

137

Page 138: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

138

Page 139: 1 Chapter 1 Costing Principles Eng. MHMD RAWSHDH.

139