Costing Techniques New
Costing Techniques New
Costing Techniques New
B TECHNIQUES
ACTIVITY BASED COSTING (ABC)
Activity based costing is an extension of absorption costing specifically
considering what causes each type of overhead category to occur, i.e., what
the ‘cost drivers’ are. Each type of overhead is absorbed using a different
basis depending on the cost driver.
Absorption Costing
Traditional absorption costing uses a single basis for absorbing all
overheads into cost units. Traditional absorption costing systems:
Steps
1. Identify major activities within each department which create costs.
2. Create a cost pool for each activity.
3. Determine what causes the cause of each activity (Cost driver).
4. Calculate the absorption rate for each cost driver.
5. Calculate the total overhead cost for manufacturing each product.
6. Calculate the overhead cost per unit.
Cost Driver
Any factor, reason or base which generates overheads cost.
Reason which increases or decreases overheads.
Cost Pool
Total costs that accumulate for each activity for the company as a whole.
Required:
A. Calculate the total cost for each product on the assumption that the
company continues to absorb overheads on a machine hour basis.
B. Calculate the cost per unit using the ABC system.
C. Compare the cost per unit of each product using ABC with the cost
per unit using absorption costing, and identify the main reasons for
the difference.
Advantages of Activity Based Costing
Accurate cost calculation (fair distribution of overheads).
Accurate selling price.
ABC recognises the complexity of modern manufacturing by the use
of multiple cost drivers.
ABC can be applied to both production and non-production overheads.
Better cost control.
5 MCQ
TARGET COSTING
Illustration 1
Exclusive Motors is designing a new version of its luxury car, the Z series. The
vehicle will be launched next year. It is expected to have a lifecycle of 10
years.
The marketing department believes that the car could be sold for a price of
$40,000 each. 100,000 cars would be manufactured and sold each year.
A risk with target costing is that cost reductions may affect the perceived
value of the product.
Illustration 2
A car manufacturer wants to calculate a target cost for a new car, the price
of which will be set at $17,950. The company requires an 8% profit margin on
sales.
1. Simultaneity
2. Variability/Heterogeneity
3. Intangibility
4. Perishability
5. No transfer of ownership
Note: From the above ‘Intangibility and Variability/Heterogeneity’ make it
difficult to use target costing in service industry.
5 MCQ
LIFECYCLE COSTING
Target costing emphasises cost control through good product design and
production planning. There might also be costs incurred after a product is
sold, such as warranty costs and plant decommissioning.
Therefore, to profit from a product, its total revenue must exceed its total
cost, whether these costs are incurred before, during or after the product is
produced. This is the concept of life-cycle costing.
Illustration 1
5 MCQ
THROUGHPUT ACCOUNTING
Background
There are two aspects of modern manufacturing that you need to be
familiar with;
Throughput Accounting
Throughput accounting aims to maximise the best use of scarce resource
in a JIT environment.
Illustration 1
Throughput per
Return per factory hour = unit
Production time on bottleneck resource
(The total factory cost is the operational expense [labour plus overhead] of
the organisation.)
Interpretation of TPAR
Criticisms of TPAR
It concentrates on the short-term.
It is more difficult to apply throughput accounting concepts to the
longer-term, when all costs are variable, and vary with the volume of
production and sales or another cost driver.
In the longer-term an ABC approach might be more appropriate for
measuring and controlling performance.
Illustration 2
Required: Calculate the Throughput Accounting Ratio for all the products?
5 MCQ
ENVIRONMENTAL ACCOUNTING
Introduction
Traditional management accounting systems do not provide any analysis
of environmental costs. Management is often unaware of them. The
implication of this is that:
Management cannot do enough to manage environmental activities.
Management accounts underestimate the costs of poor environmental
behaviour and underestimate the benefits of good environmental
behaviour.
The values and costs of each of these three flows are then calculated.
4. Lifecycle Costing
Within the context of environmental accounting, lifecycle costing is a
technique which requires the full environmental costs, arising from
production of a product to be taken account across its whole lifecycle.
Under this method of environmental cost accounting, environmental
costs for a product are considered from the design stage of the product
right up to the end-of-life costs, such as decommissioning and removal.
Advantages of Environmental Costing
Better environmental cost control.
Facilitates the quantification of cost savings from "environmentally-
friendly" measures.
Reduces the potential for cross-subsidisation of environmentally
damaging products.
Better/fairer product costs.
Improved pricing so that products that have the biggest environmental
impact reflect this by having higher selling prices.
5 MCQ