ACC 202 Ch. 2 &3
Place these in order in which they appear on a schedule of cost of goods sold: unadjusted cost of goods sold, cost of goods available for sale, add: underapplied overhead, adjusted cost of goods sold, deduct: finished goods inventory, ending
1. Cost of goods available for sale. 2. Deduct: finished goods inventory, ending 3. Unadjusted cost of goods sold 4. Add: underapplied overhead 5. Adjusted cost of goods sold
Direct cost
A cost that can be easily and conveniently traced to a specific cost object.
Cost object
Anything for which cost data are desired- including products, customers, jobs, and organizational subunits.
Purpose of direct and indirect costs
Assign costs to cost objects
Cost of goods sold =
Beginning merchandise inventory+ purchases- Ending merchandise inventory
Variable cost=
Change in cost/ change in activity
Fixed costs that are long- term and cannot be significantly reduced in the short- term
Committed
2 types of fixed costs
Committed and Discretionary
Behavior of cost- Fixed cost per unit decreases as the activity level rises and increases as the as the activity level rises and increases as the activity level falls
Fixed cost per unit
Labor costs that cannot be physically traced to particular products, or that can be traced only at great cost and inconvenience, included as part of manufacturing overhead
Indirect labor
Materials such as solder and glue, included as part of manufacturing overhead
Indirect materials
Used in situations where many different products, each with individual and unique features, are produced each period.
Job- order costing
Purpose of differential, sunk, and opportunity costs
Making decisions
Includes all manufacturing costs except direct materials and direct labor. Includes items such as indirect materials, indirect labor, maintenance and repairs on production equipment, heat and light, property taxes, depreciation, and insurance on manufacturing facilities.
Manufacturing overhead
Indirect manufacturing cost, factory overhead, and factory burden
Names for manufacturing overhead
Selling, general, and administrative costs or just selling and administrative costs
Nonmanufacturing costs
The potential benefit that is given up when one alternative is selected over another
Opportunity cost
The input factor used to compute the applied overhead for the job
Predetermined overhead rate
The range of activity within which the assumption that cost behavior is strictly linear is reasonably valid, or the range of activity over which the graph of the cost is flat.
Relevant range
All costs that are incurred to secure customer orders and get the finished product to the customer.
Selling costs
Raw materials
The materials that go into the final product
Y=, a=, b=, X=
Total mixed cost, total fixed cost (y- intercept), variable cost per unit of activity (slope), the level of activity
T/ F: Because the variable cost per unit equals the slope of the straight line, the steeper the slope, the higher the variable cost per unit.
True
T/F: The term conversion cost is used to describe direct labor and manufacturing overhead because these costs are incurred to convert materials into the finished product.
True
Varies, in total, in direct proportion to changes in level of activity.
Variable cost
Behavior of cost- Total variable cost increases and decreases in proportion to changes in the activity level.
Variable cost in total
Executive compensation, general accounting, secretarial, public relations, and similar costs involved in the overall, general administration of the organization as a whole are examples of....
administrative costs
Product costs _____ to units of product as the goods are purchased or manufactured, and they remain _____ed as the goods go into inventory waiting sale.
attach
Cost is known as the _________ ________ because the amount of cost incurred during a period depends on the level of activity for the period.
dependent variable
A difference in costs between any two alternatives
differential cost
A difference in revenues between any two alternatives
differential revenue
Some of the most common activity bases (5)
direct- labor hours, machine- hours, units produced, miles driven, and units sold
A differential cost is also known as an _______ cost
incremental
The equation for a straight- line can be used to express the relationship between ________ _____ and the ______ __ ________.
mixed costs, level of activity
The predetermined overhead rate is multiplied by the actual allocation base incurred by a job to find:
overhead applied to job
All selling and administrative expenses are treated as _______ _______.
period costs
Contribution margin is _____ ________ minus _________ costs
sales revenue, variable
Advertising, shipping, sales travel, sales commissions, sales salaries, and costs of finished goods warehouses are examples of....
selling costs
A cost that has already been incurred and that cannot be changed by any decision made now or in the future
sunk cost
Mixed costs are commonly known as semi- ______ costs; they have both a fixed and a variable component.
variable
To obtain the contribution margin, deduct _______ ________ from ______.
variable expenses, sales
3 common classifications for cost behavior
variable, fixed, and mixed
Variable cost= y2-y1/x2-x1=
(Cost at the high activity level- Cost at the low activity level)/ (High activity level- low activity level)
Indirect cost
A cost that cannot be easily and conveniently traced to a specific cost object
Purpose of Manufacturing and Nonmanufacturing costs
Accounting for costs in manufacturing companies
A measure of whatever causes the incurrence of a variable cost.
Activity base
All costs associated with the general management of an organization rather than with manufacturing or selling.
Administrative costs
A cost that is incurred to support a number of cost objects but cannot be traced to them individually.
Common cost
The amount remaining from sales revenues after variable expenses have been deducted. It contributes toward covering fixed expenses and then toward profits for the period.
Contribution margin
The sum of direct labor cost and manufacturing overhead cost.
Conversion cost
How a cost reacts to changes in the level of activity
Cost behavior
The relative proportion of each type of cost in an organization.
Cost structure
Labor costs that can be easily (physically and conveniently) traced to individual units of product.
Direct labor
Sometimes called touch labor because the workers typically touch the product while it is being made
Direct labor
Widely used allocation bases in manufacturing
Direct labor cost, direct labor hours, machine hours, units of product
Materials that become an integral part of the finished product and whose costs can be conveniently traced to the finished product
Direct materials
3 types of Manufacturing costs and whether they are direct or indirect
Direct materials (direct cost), Direct Labor (direct cost), and Manufacturing Overhead (indirect cost)
Advertising and Research and Development
Examples of discretionary fixed costs
T/F: To be traced to a cost object such as a particular product, the cost does not have to be caused by the cost object.
False, it must
A cost that remains constant, in total, regardless of changes in the level of activity.
Fixed cost
Behavior of cost- Total fixed cost is not affected by changes in the activity level within the relevant range.
Fixed cost in total
Purpose of variable, fixed, and mixed costs
Predicting cost behavior in response to changes in activity
Purpose of product and period costs
Prepare financial statements
The sum of direct materials cost and direct labor cost
Prime cost
All costs involved in acquiring or making a product.
Product costs
In the case of manufactured goods, these costs consist of direct materials, direct labor, and manufacturing overhead.
Product costs
Sometimes called order- getting or order- filling costs
Selling costs
2 categories of nonmanufacturing costs
Selling costs and administrative costs
T/ F: Only those costs associated with operating the factory are included in manufacturing overhead
True
T/ F: Raw materials may include both direct and indirect materials
True
T/ F: The activity base under consideration is the total volume of goods and services provided by the organization.
True
T/F: Administrative costs can be either direct or indirect costs
True
T/F: Selling costs can be either direct or indirect costs
True
Behavior of cost- Variable cost per unit stays constant
Variable cost per unit
Mixed cost line equation
Y= a+bX
In ________ ________, all manufacturing costs, both fixed and variable, are assigned to units of product- units are said to fully absorb manufacturing costs.
absorption costing
In ______ __________, an account is classified as either variable or fixed based on the analyst's prior knowledge of how the cost in the account behaves.
account analysis
For a cost to be variable, it must be variable with respect to something. That something is its _______ ____.
activity base
The fixed portion of a mixed cost represents the minimum cost of having a service ready and ________ for use.
available
Variable cost is ________ if expressed on a per unit basis.
constant
The variable portion represents the cost incurred for actual __________ of the service.
consumption
An activity base is sometimes referred to as a ____ ______.
cost driver
Decreases in cost should be referred to as _______ costs.
decremental
A predetermined overhead rate is calculated by dividing the _______ total manufacturing overhead by the _______ total amount of the allocation base
estimated, estimated
Period costs are not included as part of the cost of either purchased or manufactured goods; instead, period costs are _________ on the income statement in the period in which they are incurred using the usual rules of accrual accounting.
expensed
When the goods are sold, the costs are released from inventory as _________ (called cogs) and matched against ____ _______ on the income statement.
expenses, sales revenue
Straight- line depreciation, insurance, property taxes, rent, supervisory salaries, administrative salaries, and advertising are examples of...
fixed costs
Cost behavior is considered _____ whenever a straight line is a reasonable approximation for the relation between cost and activity.
linear
All the costs that are not product costs
period costs
Sales commissions, advertising, executive salaries, public relations, and the rental costs of administrative offices are examples of _______ _____.
period costs
Because total fixed costs remain constant for large variations in the level of activity, the average fixed cost per unit becomes progressively _______ as the level of activity increases.
smaller
Costs are classified as either _____ or _______.
Direct or Indirect
Fixed costs that may be altered in the short time by current managerial decisions.
Discretionary
Depreciation on buildings and equipment and real estate taxes
Examples of committed fixed costs
Fixed and variable cost elements of a mixed cost can be estimated using the ______- ____ method, which is based on the rise over run formula for the slope of a straight line.
high- low
Activity is known as the _______ ________ because it causes variations in the cost.
independent variable
Janitors, supervisors, materials handlers, and night security guards are examples of.....
indirect labor
Because product costs are initially assigned to inventories, they are also known as __________ _____.
inventoriable costs
Product costs are initially assigned to an _______ account on the balance sheet
inventory
Product costs are recorded as expenses in the period in which the related products are _____.
sold