Cost Ch 4
The numerator reason
(indirect-cost pool) the shorter the period, the influence of seasonal patterns on the amount of costs. An annual period incorporates the effects of all four seasons into a single, annual indirect cost rate. Levels of total indirect costs are also affected by nonseasonal erratic costs. Pooling all indirect costs together over the course of a full year and calculating a single annual indirect cost rate helps smooth some of the erratic bumps in the costs associated with shorter periods
Denominator reason
(quantity of the cost-allocation base) avoid spreading monthly fixed indirect costs over fluctuating levels of monthly output and fluctuating quantities of the cost-allocation base. variable indirect costs vary with the quantity of the cost-allocation base. Fixed indirect costs do not vary with sort-run fluctuations in the quantity of the cost-allocation base
Five step decision-making process
1 Identify the problems and uncertainties 2 Obtain information 3 Make predictions about the future 4 Make decisions by choosing amount alternatives 5 Implement the decision, evaluate performance, and learn
Normal costing (commonly used by manu, merchandise, and service sectors)
1) identify the job that is the chosen cost object 2) identify the direct costs of the job 3) select the cost-allocation bases to uses for allocating indirect costs to the job 4) identify the indirect costs associated with each cost-allocation base 5) compute the rate per unit of each cost-allocation base used to allocate indirect costs to the job 6) compute the indirect costs allocated to the job 7) compute total cost of job by adding all direct and indirect costs assigned to the job
Actual indirect cost rate
= actual annual indirect costs/ actual annual quantity of the cost-allocation base
actual manufacturing overhead rate
=actual annual manu overhead costs/ actual annual quantity of the cost-allocation base
actual indirect-cost rate
=actual total indirect costs in the pool/ actual total quantity of the cost-allocation base
budgeted indirect-cost rate
=budgeted annual indirect cost/ budgeted annual quantity of the cost allocation base gives rise to normal costing
budgeted manufacturing overhead rate
=budgeted manu overhead costs/ budgeted total quantity of cost-allocation base
Ability to bear
Cost object's "ability to bear" the cost
Management accountants use two basic types of costing systems to assign costs to products or services
Job-costing system Process-costing system
Actual costing
a form of job-costing system. a costing system that traces direct costs to a cost object based on actual direct-cost rates times the actual quantities of the direct-cost inputs used. Indirect costs are allocated based on the actual indirect-cost rates times the actual quantities of cost-allocation bases.
Cost-allocation base
a systematic way to link an indirect cost or group of indirect costs to cost objects. Can be financial or nonfinancial
Actual costing vs normal costing
actual costing uses actual indirect-cost rates calculated annually at the end of the year. normal costing uses budgeted indirect-costs
cost object
anything for which a measurement of costs is desired
Actual costing systems
calculate actual costs of jobs. not commonly used because actual costs cannot be computed in a timely manner. Can only calculate actual indirect-cost rates at end of fiscal year. Need to have this cost information to monitor and manage the cost of jobs while they are in process. Ongoing cost information about jobs also helps managers bid on new jobs while old jobs are still in progress.
predetermined or budgeted indirect cost rate
calculated for each cost pool at the beginning of the fiscal year and overhead costs are allocated to jobs as work progresses
materials-requisition request
contains info about the cost of direct materials used on a specific job and in a specific department. source doc for direct materials.
5 building blocks of job-costing
cost objects the direct costs of a cost object the indirect (overhead) costs of a cost object the indirect cost pool the cost allocation base
indirect costs of a cost object
cost related to a particular cost object that cannot be traced to that cost object in an economically feasible way
normal costing
costing system that 1) traces direct costs to a cost object by using the actual direct-cost rates times the actual quantities of the direct -cost inputs and 2) allocates indirect costs based on the budgeted indirect-cost rates times the actual quantities of the cost-allocation bases
nonseasonal erratic costs
costs incurred in a particular month that benefit operations during future months
direct costs of a cost object
costs related to a particular cost object that can be traced to that cost object in an economically feasible (cost-effective) way
cost assignment
general term for assigning costs to a cost object
cost pool
grouping of individual indirect cost items. can range from broad to narrow. Often organized in conjunction with cost-allocation bases.
Generally, managers should chose the allocation approach that
increases the company's value and best represents its performance, while consistently applying the same method year after year
cost allocation method
indirect costs allocated to cost object
numerator reason
indirect-cost pool. actual overhead > budgeted
Cost application base
is the cost-allocation base when the cost object is a job, product, or customer
job-cost record
job-cost sheet. used to record and accumulate all the costs assigned to a specific job, starting when the work begins
Many companies have costing systems that have elements of both
job-costing and process-costing systems that are tailored to the underlying operations
Advantages of normal costing
manufacturing costs of a job are available much earlier. provides managers with information earlier (while there is still time to take corrective actions)
There are two indirect-cost accounts that have to do with manufacturing overhead:
manufacturing overhead control, manufacturing overhead allocated
overallocated indirect costs
occur when the allocated amount of indirect costs in an accounting period is greater than actual (incurred) amount
underallocated indirect costs
occur when the allocated amount of the indirect costs in an accounting period is less than the actual (incurred) amount
source documents
original record that supports journal entries in the accounting system
cost tracing
process of assigning direct costs
cost allocation
process of assigning indirect costs
denominator reason
quantity of allocation base. actual direct manu labor hours < budgeted hours
info technology gives managers
quick and accurate job-costing info, making it easier for them to manage and control jobs. instant feedback to help them control manu overhead costs, jobs in process, jobs completed, and jobs shipped and installed at customer sites
manufacturing overhead control
record of the actual costs in all the individual over head categories (such as indirect materials, indirect manu labor, supervision, engineering, utilities, and plant depreciation)
manufacturing overhead allocated
record of the manu overhead allocated to the individual jobs on the basis of the budgeted rate multiplied by the actual direct manu labor-hours
adjusted allocation-rate approach
restates all overhead entries in the general ledger and subsidiary ledgers using actual cost rates rather than budgeted cost rates. yields the benefits of both the timeliness and convenience of normal costing during the year and the allocation of actual manufacturing over-head costs at year end
labor-time sheet
source doc for direct manu labor. contains info about the amount of labor time used for a specific job in a specific department
Proration approach
spreads underallocated (overallocated) overhead or among ending work-in-process, finished goods inventory, and cost of goods sold
Job-costing system
the cost object is a unit or multiple units of a distinct product or service called a job. Each job generally uses different amounts of resources. The product of service is often a single unit. Also used by companies to cost multiple identical units of distinct products. Because products and services are distinct, job-costing systems are used to accumulated costs separately for each product or service
Process-costing system
the cost object is masses of identical or similar units of a product or service. Divide total costs of producing an identical or similar product or service by the total number of units produced to obtain a per-unit cost. The per-unit cost is the average unit cost that applies to each of the identical or similar units produced in that period.
Allocating costs based on benefits received
the higher a division's revenue, the higher the business's allocated cost
Two reasons for using longer periods to calculate indirect costs
the numerator reason the denominator reason
Write off Cost of Goods Sold Approach
the total under (over) allocated manu overhead is included in this year's COGS
The ideal cost-allocation base is the cost driver of the indirect costs because
there is a cause-and-effect relationship between the cost-allocation base and the indirect costs
underallocated (overallocated) indirect costs
under(over)applied, under(over)absorbed indirect costs =actual indirect costs - indirect costs applied