Cost Accounting Exam #1 (Ch. 1-3, 5, 6, 16)

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Cost Accounting Information System

a cost management subsystem designed to assign costs to individual products & services & other objects as specified by management

FIFO Costing Method

a unit-costing method that excludes prior-period work & costs in computing current-period unit work & costs

Weighted Average Costing Method

a unit-costing method that merges prior-period work & costs with current-period work & costs

Traceability

the ability to assign a cost directly to a cost object in an economically feasible way using a causal relationship

Activity Capacity

the ability to perform activities or the number of times an activity can be performed

Practical Capacity

the efficient level of activity performance

Break-even (Units)

Fixed Costs/(Price - Unit Variable Cost)

Break-even (Sales)

Fixed Costs/Contribution Margin Ratio

Variable Cost

-changes in TOTAL -stays the same per unit

Predetermined Overhead Rates

-estimated overhead divided by the estimated level of production activity -used to assign overhead to production

Mixed Cost

-has both fixed & variable components -if total varies, divide by activity level & find if they're equal or different if different, they're mixed (fixed changes per unit) if same, they're variable (var. stays the same per unit)

Cost Management System

-identifies, collects, measures, classifies, & reports information that is useful to managers in costing (determining what something costs), planning, controlling, & decision making -not bound by externally imposed criteria; but bound by standards set by the company -requires deep understanding of a firm's cost structure

Fixed Cost

-stays the same in TOTAL -changes per unit

Financial Accounting Information System

-the branch of the accounting system that is concerned with the preparation of financial reports for users external to the organization -inputs/rules/conventions are specified by the SEC & FASB -outputs are balance sheets, income statements, & statement of cash flows for external users

Characteristics of an Activity-Based Cost Management System

-unit & non-unit based drivers -tracing intensive -broad, flexible product costing -focus on managing activities -detailed activity info -systemwide performance maximization -uses both financial & non-financial measures of performance

Characteristics of a Traditional Cost Management System

-unit based drivers -allocative intensive -narrow & rigid product costing -focus on managing costs -sparse activity info -maximization of individual unit performance -uses financial measures of performance

Basic Features of a Process-Costing System

1. homogeneous units pass through a series of similar processes 2. each unit in each process receives a similar dose of manufacturing costs 3. manufacturing costs are accumulated by a process for a given period of time 4. there is a work in process account for each process 5. manufacturing cost flows & the associated journal entries are generally similar to job-order costing 6. the departmental production report is the key document for tracking manufacturing activity & costs 7. unit costs are computed by dividing the departmental costs of the period by the output of the period

Job-Order Costing System

a cost accumulation method that accumulates manufacturing costs by job

Operational Control Information System

a cost management subsystem designed to provide accurate & timely feedback concerning the performance of managers & others relative to their planning & control of activities

Actual Cost System

a cost measurement system in which actual manufacturing costs are assigned to products

Normal Costing System

a cost measurement system in which the actual costs of direct materials & direct labor are assigned to production & a predetermined rate is used to assign overhead costs to production

Operation Costing

a costing system that uses job-order costing to assign materials costs & process costing to assign conversion costs

Accounting Information System

a system consisting of interrelated manual & computer parts that uses processes such as collecting, recording, summarizing, analyzing (using decision models), & managing data to provide output information to users

Inseparability

an attribute of services that means that production & consumption are inseparabale

Perishability

an attribute of services that means that they cannot be inventoried but must be consumed when performed

Cost Objects

any items such as products, departments, projects, activities, and so on, for which costs are measured & assigned

Allocation

assignment of indirect costs to cost objects (least accurate)

Contribution Margin Ratio

contribution margin divided by sales revenue

What is a disadvantage of assigning costs evenly over all cost objects?

costs may be distorted by consumption patterns of other cost objects

Unit-level Drivers

explain changes in cost as units produced change

Non-unit-level Drivers

explain the changes in cost as factors other than units change

Cost Drivers

factors that cause changes in resource usage, activity usage, costs, & revenues

Tangible Products

goods produced by converting raw materials through the use of labor & capital inputs such as plant, land, & machinery

Indirect Costs vs. Direct Costs

indirect - costs that cannot be traced to a cost object direct - costs that can be easily & accurately traced to a cost object

Relevant Costs vs. Irrelevant Costs

irrelevant - a cost that will not change the result of a management decision relevant - affect management decisions

Manufacturing vs. Non-Manufacturing Costs

manufacturing - DM, DL, mfg OVH non-manufacturing - "period" costs (selling + admin expenses)

Prime Costs vs. Conversion Costs

prime - DM + DL conversion - DL + OVH

Product Costs vs. Period Costs

product - costs associated with the manufacture of goods or the provision of services (MFG cost) period - costs such as marketing, & administrative costs that are expensed in the period in which they are incurred (non-MFG costs)

Heterogeneity

refers to the greater chances for variation in the performance of services than in the production of products

Intangibility

refers to the nonphysical nature of services as opposed to products

Contribution Margin

sales revenue minus total variable costs

Abnormal Spoilage

spoilage that exceeds the amount expected under normal efficient operating conditions

Normal Spoilage

spoilage that is expected with an efficient production process & that may require extra work to make the units saleable, or may result in the units being discarded

Just-in-Time Manufacturing

supplying a product that is needed, when it is needed, & in the quantity that is needed

Unused Capacity

the difference between the acquired activity capacity & the actual activity usage

Break-Even Point

the point where total sales revenue equals total costs (i.e., the point of zero profits)

Direct Tracing

the process of identifying costs that are specifically or physically associated with a cost object (most precise)

Cost Accounting

the recording of all the costs incurred in a business in a way that can be used to improve its management

Value Chain

the set of activities required to design, develop, produce, market, distribute, & service a product (the product can be a service)

Driver Tracing

the use of drivers to assign costs to cost objects (precision depends on the strength of the causal relationship described by the driver)

Cost Behavior

the way in which a cost changes in relation to changes in activity usage


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