important
Process Costing
A system for assigning costs to a large number of identical units that typically pass through a series of uniform production steps. Costs are averaged over the units produced such that each unit bears the same unit cost.
facility level cost
Cost required to sustain the organization.
conversion costs
Direct Labor + Manufacturing Overhead
prime costs
Direct Materials + Direct Labor
Batch-level activities
Tasks that are performed each time a batch is processed
traditional system
based on volume; over costs high volume products, under costs low volume products
costs of unit-level activities
be proportional to the number of units produces
use process when a company produces a
continuous flow of units that are indistinguishable from one another
step 1 of 2 prong application
cost to activity pool
process costing accumulates costs by
department
unit costs in process costing are computed by
department
example of compute equivalent units of materials
dept A has 500 units in its ending work in process inventory that are 60% complete with respect to processing in the department these 500 partially complete units are equivalent to 300 fully complete units (500 x 60% = 300) ; 300 equivalent units in the output
product-level activity: testing new products, administering parts inventories, designing products
direct labor-hours, direct labor-hours
compute the number of units transferred to the next processing department
ending inventory of the last department
Cost of ending work in process inventory
equivalent units x cost per equivalent unit (total cost/ equivalent units)
facility level costs include
factory management salaries, insurance, property taxes, building depreciation
Activity based costing system
fixed traditional by lowering high volume costs, raising low volume costs
facility-level activity cost pools
general factory pool
accounts like work in process are maintained for each processing department
in a process costing flow
process costing system is most commonly used in
industries that convert raw materials into uniform products on a continuous basis ex: bricks, soda, paper
cost accumulation in a process cost system
instead of assigning costs to hundreds of different jobs, costs are assigned to only a few processing departments
product level activities include maintaining
inventories of parts for a product
example of product level activities
issuing engineer change notices to modify a product to meet a customer's specifications
unit-level activity cost pools
labor related pool, machine related pool
Batch-level activity cost pools
machine setup pool, production order pool
compute the equivalent units for conversion costs
number of partially complete units x percentage completion
compute the number or equivalent units for material costs
number of partially complete units x percentage completion
formula for equivalent units
number of partially complete units x percentage completion
traditional system effect on high volume products
over costs
product-level activity cost pools
parts administration pool
unit level activity
performed each time a unit is produces
step 2 of 2 prong application
pool to products
batch level activity example
processing purchase orders
activity cost pool equation example
$1,600,000 machine setups/4,000 setups= $400.00 per setup
compute the cost per equivalent units for conversion costs
(cost of beginning work in process inventory + cost added during period)/ equivalent units of production
costs at the batch level depend on
the number of batches processed rather than the number of units produced
equivalent units
the number of complete units that could have obtained from the materials and effort that went into the partially complete units
completed production of the A first department in processing is transferred to
the work in process department in B; then completed units to finished goods
cost per equivalent unit for conversion costs
total conversion cost/ equivalent units
compute the cost per equivalent units for material costs
total cost/ equivalent units
t or f utilities is process costing
true
acronym for 4 activity levels
u better pass fail
traditional system effect on low volume products
under costs
4 activity levels
unit, batch, product, facility
compute the units in ending work in process inventory
units in beginning work in process inventory + units started into production or transferred in = units in ending inventory + units completed and transferred out
compute the total cost transferred to the next department
units transferred out x cost per equivalent unit
ex of processing departments
valley's potato chip factory has 3 processing departments- preparing potatoes, cooking, inspecting and packaging
each department in process costing has a sepearate
work in process account
2 essential features of processing departments
1) activity in the dept. is performed uniformly on all of the units passing through 2) all units produced are identical
2 prong application of allocation of overhead costs (ABC)
1) overhead costs are assigned to activity cost pools 2) costs in the activity cost pools are allocated to products using activity rates and activity measures.
activity cost pool
A "bucket" in which costs are accumulated that relate to a single activity measure in an activity-based costing system.
volume-based costing system
A product-costing system in which costs are assigned to products on the basis of a single activity base related to volume
Unit-level activity: processing units on machines, processing units by hand, consuming factory supplies
activity measures: machine-hours, direct labor-hours, units produced
batch-level activity: processing purchase orders, setting up equipment, processing production orders, and handling material
activity measures: purchase orders processed, production orders processed, number of setups, setup hours, pounds of material handled; number of times material moved
compute the activity rate for a given activity pool
activity rate= estimated overhead cost/total expected activity
process costing assigns costs uniformly to
all identical units
processing department
an organizational unit where work is performed on a product and where materials, labor, or overhead costs are added to the product
materials, labor, and overhead costs can be added to which processing department?
any