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Module 9. Cost Accumulation 1
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Module 9. Cost Accumulation 1. Direct /Indirect Cost Cost Allocation Cost Apportionment Cost Driver Cost Absorbtion Treatment of Over/Under.

Jan 16, 2016

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Page 1: Module 9. Cost Accumulation 1.  Direct /Indirect Cost  Cost Allocation  Cost Apportionment  Cost Driver  Cost Absorbtion  Treatment of Over/Under.

Module 9.

Cost Accumulation

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Page 2: Module 9. Cost Accumulation 1.  Direct /Indirect Cost  Cost Allocation  Cost Apportionment  Cost Driver  Cost Absorbtion  Treatment of Over/Under.

Cost Accumulation

Direct /Indirect Cost Cost Allocation Cost Apportionment Cost Driver Cost Absorbtion Treatment of Over/Under

absorbed overheads2

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Material

Elements of Cost

Labour Expenses

Direct Material

Direct Labour

Direct Expenses

Indirect Material

Indirect Labour

Indirect Expenses

DirectCost

IndirectCost

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Direct Costs

A cost that can be directly traced to a particular department or other subunit of an organization is called a direct cost.

e.g.: The cost of materials required for a particular product is a direct cost because it can be directly traced to the product.

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Direct Material Cost

• Includes the cost of materials and reasonable allowances for scrap and defective units.

• The cost considered for material include freight and related charges but exclude purchase discounts.

Direct Labour Cost

• Consists the cost of the labour that is used in the actual manufacture of the product or that is used to provide the service.

• It also includes the cost associated with the nonproductive time that is considered unavoidable and normal.

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Direct Expenses

• It includes all expenses other than direct material or direct labour which are specially incurred for a particular cost object and can be identified in an economically feasible way.

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Indirect Costs An indirect cost has no

convenient or economical trace from the cost to the cost pool (the meaningful groups into which the jobs are often collected) or from the cost pool to the cost object (any product, service, customer, activity or organizational unit to which costs are assigned for some management purpose).

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Indirect Material Cost• Refers to the cost of materials used in

manufacturing that are not physically a part of finished good.

• E.g.: supplies used by manufacturing employees, materials required by machines such as lubricants.

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Indirect Labour cost• Includes the costs associated with

quality control, supervision, support cost associated with manufacturing, inspection, purchase and receiving costs.

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Indirect Expenses Other Indirect Expenses include depreciation on machines and plant, property taxes, utilities, carriage outward, etc.

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• Enable a business to identify where costs are arising

• To manage those

costs more effectively.

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Cost Centres

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Cost Centres

• Cost centre means a location, person or an equipment for which cost may be ascertained, accumulated and accounted for.

• The main objective is to account and control the cost.

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Cost Centres

Example, In rent a cab system cost centre can be a particular cab, for a carpentry workshop activities like crafting, assembling, polishing & finishing etc. can be cost centres.

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All indirect factory costs are commonly combined into a single cost pool called manufacturing overhead.In a manufacturing firm, it is also called factory overhead.

All indirect factory costs are commonly combined into a single cost pool called manufacturing overhead.In a manufacturing firm, it is also called factory overhead.

Manufacturing Overheads

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ManufacturingOverheads

IndirectMaterial

Indirect Labour

IndirectExpenses

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Manufacturing

Overhead

Direct Material

Direct Labour

FinishedGoods

Inventory

Cost of

GoodsSold

Work in Process

InventoryDirect

Expenses

Prime Cost

MANUFACTURING COST FLOW

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Cost allocation is the process of assigning direct costs to a cost centre.

All direct costs are traced to cost centres through allocation.

Indirect costs (overheads) have to be assigned to cost centers through cost apportionment.

The basis on which costs are apportioned to cost centers is called cost driver.

Cost Allocation

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Cost Apportionment

• At this stage, those items of estimated overheads which cannot be directly allocated to various cost centers or departments are apportioned.

• Apportionment implies the allotment of proportions of items of cost to cost centers or departments. It implies that

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unallocable expenses are to be spread over the cost centers or departments on an equitable basis.

• After this stage, all the overhead costs would have been either allocated to or apportioned over various departments.

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COST DRIVER

A cost driver is a factor such as the level of activity or volume, that casually affects costs. That is, a cause and effect relationship exists between a change in level of activity or volume and a change in the level of total costs of that cost object.

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Activities Cost Driver

Machining operations

Machine Hours

Setup Setup Hours

Inspection Pieces Inspected

Order Cost Purchase Orders

Example

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Methods of Absorbing Overheads

Percentage of direct materialPercentage of prime costPercentage of direct labour costLabour hour rateMachine hour rate

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Pre-determined overhead rate

Pre-determined Overhead rate is a rate, based on budgeted factory overhead cost and budgeted activity, which is calculated before a period begins.

A pre-determined overhead rate normally applies for a a single, plant-wide base to calculate and

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apply overhead. Overhead is then applied by

multiplying the pre-determined overhead rate by the actual driver units.

Predetermined Overhead Rate

Budgeted yearly Factory OverheadsBudgeted Yearly Activity (direct labor-hours, etc.)

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Steps for calculating Pre-determined overhead rate

Step 1: Estimate the amount of the activity base will be required to support operations in the coming period.

Step 2: Estimate the total manufacturing cost at that level of activity.

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Step 3: Compute the predetermined overhead rate by dividing the estimated total manufacturing overhead costs by the estimated total amount of cost driver or activity base. (Note: Common activity bases used in the calculation include direct labour costs, direct labour hours, or machine hours)

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Over and Under Application of Overheads

•Through the use of pre-determined overhead rate, overheads are applied into actual production throughout accounting period.•Since the pre-determined rates are based on expected overheads to be incurred and estimated

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production, usually the overheads absorbed into the production cost may not fully agree with actual overheads.•If the overheads absorbed are higher than actual incurred then it is called Over Application.•If the overheads absorbed are lesser than actual incurred for the accounting period, it is called Under Application.

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Reasons

•The actual hours worked can be more or less than the estimated hours•The actual overhead costs are different from budgeted overhead.•The application method used may not be correct.

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•Both actual overhead costs and actual activity levels are different from the budgeted costs and level•Extra-ordinary expenses might have been incurred during the accounting period.•Seasonal variations in the overhead expenses from period to period.

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•Major changes might have taken place for example replacement of manual labour with machines, replacement of general purpose machine with automatic high speed machine etc.

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Treatment of over/under absorbed overheads in cost

accounting

Application of supplementary rate: The supplementary rate is calculated by dividing the under or over application amount by the actual base.In case of under application, by applying the supplementary rate

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the uncovered amount will be adjusted and vice versa.

Write off to costing profit and loss account: If the under or over absorbed overheads is small, the it will be written off by transferring it to the costing P&L Account.

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Carry forward to subsequent year: By treating the under or over absorbed as seasonal fluctuations, we can carry forward it to subsequent accounting year.This may be transferred to Overhead Suspense A/c or Overhead Reserve A/c.