Chapter 17: Activity-Based Costing and Analysis
activity-based costing bases overhead allocation rates on
activities that drive costs, such as number of batched of product produced
important disadvantage of plantwide and departmental
overhead costs are frequently too complex to be explained by only one factor like direct labor hours or machine hours
cost pool activity rate equation
overhead costs assigned to pool / expected activity level
overhead allocated to each product using plantwide rate method equation
plantwide overhead rate x DLH per unit
costs of good quality
prevention costs and appraisal costs
cost object
product, process, department, or customer to which costs are assigned
departmental overhead rate equation
total budgeted departmental overhead cost / total amount of departmental allocation base
plantwide overhead rate equation
total budgeted overhead cost / total budgeted direct labor hours
overhead cost per unit
total overhead cost allocation / units produced
activity cost driver
variable that causes an activity's cost to go up or down; a casual factory
plantwide and departmental base overhead allocation rates on
volume-based measures such as direct labor hours or machine hours
overhead from cost pool allocated to product equation
activities consumed x activity rate
steps to departmental overhead rate method
1. assign overhead costs to departmental cost pools 2. select an allocation base for each department 3. compute overhead allocation rates for each department 4. use departmental overhead rates to assign overhead costs to cost objects (products)
three key advantages to plantwide and departmental
1. based on readily available info, like direct labor hours 2. easy to implement 3. consistent with GAAP and can be used for external reporting
four steps to ABC method
1. identify activities and the overhead costs they cause 2. trace overhead costs to activity cost pools 3. compute overhead allocation rates for each activity 4. use the activity overhead rates to assign overhead costs to cost objects (products)
proper determination of activity rates depends on
1. proper identification of the factor that drives the cost in each activity cost pool 2. proper measures of activities
three methods of overhead allocation
1. single plantwide overhead rate method 2. departmental overhead rate method 3. activity-based costing method
four activities causing overhead costs
1. unit-level activities 2. batch-level activities 3. product-level activities 4. facility-level activities
Activity-based costing (ABC)
attempts to more accurately assign overhead costs by focusing on activities
examples of batch level
calibrating machines, receiving shipments, sampling product quality, recycling hazardous waste
examples of facility level
cleaning workplace, providing electricity, providing personnel support, reducing greenhouse gas emissions
activity cost pool
collection of costs that are related to the same activity
to assign costs to activity cost pools, management looks for
costs that are caused by similar activities ex. craftsmanship, setup, design modification, plant services
examples of unit level
cutting parts, assembling components, printing checks
overhead allocated (departmental)
departmental overhead rate x hours per unit
examples of product level
designing modifications, organizing production, controlling inventory
product cost per unit equation
direct materials + direct labor + overhead
costs of poor quality
internal failure costs and external failure costs
departmental allocation base equation
number of units x hours per unit