ACCA FIA - Management Accounting (MA) - Teaching Slides - 2019
ACCA FIA - Management Accounting (MA) - Teaching Slides - 2019
ACCA FIA - Management Accounting (MA) - Teaching Slides - 2019
ACCA
Management Accounting (FMA/MA)
For exams from 1 September 2019 to 31 August 2020
D Budgeting
E Standard costing
F Performance measurement
The syllabus for this exam is very broad, which means you need to ensure
that you have a good knowledge of all areas. You can do this by:
In addition to your Study Text and Practice & Revision Kit you should ensure
that you make use of the following resources:
Accounting for
management
Information for
decision making
Example
Question
• Setting prices
• Deciding on whether to purchase or lease machinery
• Deciding how many units to produce
• Clarity.
Information must be clear to the user.
• Confidence.
Information must be trusted by the managers who are expected to
use it.
• Communication.
Individuals given authority to do certain tasks must be given the
information they need to do them.
• Volume.
There are physical and mental limitations to what a person can
read, absorb and understand properly.
• Timing.
Information should be available when it is needed.
• Channel of communication.
Some information is best communicated informally by telephone or
word-of-mouth and some is better in a formal method, in writing.
• Cost.
Benefits of information must outweigh the cost of collecting it.
• Financial information
• Non-financial information
• A combination of financial and non-financial information
• Planning
• Control
• Decision making
Planning involves:
• Establishing objectives
• Selecting appropriate strategies to achieve those objectives
• •
• •
• •
• •
THE
CORPORATE Agree a corporate
PLAN plan
• Strategic planning;
• Management control; and
• Operational control.
Examples include:
Sales territory specifies the weekly sales targets for each sales
representative
─ Operational plan
Users
Level of precision
Rules
Reporting
Scope
Frequency
Format
Concerned with:
All decision making is concerned with the future and so there will
always be some degree of uncertainty.
Sources of data
Data Sampling
Quota Cluster
Example
Question
• Primary data are data collected especially for a specific purpose. Raw
data are primary data which have not been processed at all.
• Discrete data are data which can only take on a finite or countable
number of values within a given range.
• Continuous data are data which can take on any value. They are
measured rather than counted.
DATA
QUANTITATIVE QUALITATIVE
(variables that can (attributes that
be measured) cannot be
measured)
DISCRETE CONTINUOUS
(countable number) (any value) PRIMARY SECONDARY
PRIMARY OR SECONDARY
• Sales ledger
• Purchase ledger
• General ledger
• Invoices
• Letters and emails
• Advertisements
• Other items received from from customers and suppliers
You will remember that primary data are data collected especially for a
specific purpose.
The advantage of such data is that the investigator knows where the
data came from and is aware of any inadequacies or limitations in the
data.
Its disadvantage is that it can be very expensive to collect primary data.
Management accountants often collect primary data when they carry out
investigations. Eg analysing invoices to establish the direct cost of a
product.
• Governments
• Banks
• Newspapers
• Trade journals
Government statistics
Banks
Financial newspapers
Trade journals
Internet
Internet (continued)
The forecast state of the economy will influence the planning process
for organisations which operate within it. In times of boom and increased
demand and consumption, the overall planning problem will be to
identify the demand. Conversely, in times of recession, the emphasis will
be on cost-effectiveness, continuing profitability, survival and competition.
Change Impact
Decline in GDP Less money in the economy meaning less
disposable income may create fall in
demand for courses.
The firm operate in a city which has a A higher proportion of students coming
high promotion of financial service firms from an area less affected by the
which seem to be bucking the overall recession may stave off the expected fall
recession well (eg of a local economic in demand due to the national recession.
trend)
Change Impact
Low interest rates Will make it easier for the business to
raise debt finance to finance its business.
From the point of view of the students low
interest rates should keep down mortgage
repayments and thus combat the high
price inflation to help maintain disposable
income levels.
Disadvantages of a census
• The high cost of a census may exceed the value of the results
obtained.
• It might be out of date by the time you complete it.
Advantages of a sample
• It can be shown mathematically that once a certain sample size has
been reached, very little accuracy is gained by examining more items.
The larger the size of the sample, however, the more accurate the
results.
• It is possible to ask more questions with a sample.
1. Data
▪ Data is term for facts, figures, information and measurements. If
collected for a specific purpose it is known as primary data and if
collected for another purpose it is known as secondary.
2. Sources of data
▪ Data can be internal (accounting records, payroll information, product
information, published accounts or historic records) or external (market
research, interviews, questionnaires, data from government, banks,
newspapers or the internet).
4. Sampling
▪ A sample is where data is only collected from a sample of the
population whereas a census collects information from the whole
population.
5. Random sampling
▪ The sample is selected in such a way that each item has an equal
chance of being selected. Often done using random numbers. Quasi
random sampling can also be used.
6. Non-random sampling
▪ Where a random sample cannot be used non-random sampling can be
a solution. Both quota and cluster sampling can be used.
Presenting
information
Presenting and
Report interpreting data
The purpose of reports, their subject matter, contents, and style vary
widely, but there are certain generally accepted principles.
The purpose of a report must be clear and it is important that thought is
put into planning and giving structure to a report.
Stylistic qualities of reports include objectivity and balance and ease of
understanding.
In a full report there is a generally accepted way of laying it out.
The purpose of reports and their subject matter vary widely, but there are
certain generally accepted principles of report writing that can be applied
to most types of report.
Discuss the desired features of a report.
(a) Title
(b) Identification
(c) Sources of information
(d) Sections
(e) Appendices
(f) Summary of recommendations
(a) Title. The report should have a title, and the title should be explicit
and brief.
(b) Identification of report writer, report user and date.
(c) Sources of information. If the report draws on the other sources for
its information, these sources should be acknowledged in the report.
(d) Sections. The main body of the report should be divided into
sections.
(e) Appendices. To keep the main body of the report short enough to
hold the reader's interest, detailed explanations, charts and tables of
figures should be put into appendices. The main body of the report
should make cross-references to the appendices in appropriate
places.
(f) Summary of recommendations. A report will usually contain
conclusions or recommendations about the course of action to be
taken by the report user.
A simple bar chart is one in which the height of each bar indicates the
size of the corresponding information.
• By comparing the heights of bars on the chart the size of each piece of
information can be compared.
• Example:
Year Sales
$'000
1 20,000
2 21,000
3 23,500
4 22,750
5 20,000
25000
20000
Sales 15000
$'000 Year
Sales $'000
10000
5000
0
1 2 3 4 5
Year
80,000
70,000
60,000
Sales 50,000
$'000 West
40,000 East
South
30,000 North
20,000
10,000
0
Year 1 Year 2 Year 3
Year
100%
90%
Sales 80%
% 70%
60% West
50% East
South
40%
North
30%
20%
10%
0%
Year 1 Year 2 Year 3
Year
BPP LEARNING MEDIA
Tables and diagrams 10
A multiple bar chart is one in which two or more separate bars are used
to present sub divisions of information.
• These are also known as compound bar charts.
• Multiple bar charts do not show a grand total whereas component bar
charts do.
• Multiple bar charts illustrate the comparative sizes of the components
more clearly than component bar charts.
35,000
30,000
Sales 25,000
North
$'000 20,000 South
East
15,000
West
10,000
5,000
0
Year 1 Year 2 Year 3
Year
Pie chart
Company sales by region for Year 1
North
South
East
West
Scatter diagrams are graphs which are used to exhibit data (rather than
equations) in order to compare the way in which two variables vary with
each other.
• The x axis of a scatter diagram is used to represent the independent
variable and the y axis represents the dependent variable.
Scatter diagram
Cost $
50,000
45,000
40,000
35,000
Cost $
30,000
25,000
Cost $
20,000
15,000
10,000
5,000
0
0 2,000 4,000 6,000 8,000 10,000 12,000 14,000 16,000
Output (units)
Make sure that you read the following article on presenting information
from the ACCA website:
www.accaglobal.com/uk/en/student/exam-support-resources/foundation-
level-study-resources/ma1/technical-articles1/effective-presentation.html
1. Reports
▪ Types of report
— Short formal report
— Short informal report
— Memorandum report
Materials Materials
Further
Labour classification by Labour
nature
Overheads Overheads
However, before the accountant can plan, control or make decisions, all
costs must be accurately classified.
Cost classification is one of the key areas of the syllabus and you can
therefore expect to see it in the exam that you will be facing.
If you continue to progress through the ACCA exams you will come
across cost classification frequently in your studies.
• Cost of materials
• Cost of the wages and salaries (labour costs)
• Cost of other expenses
─ Rent and rates
─ Electricity and gas bills
─ Depreciation
A direct cost is a cost that can be traced in full to the product, service
or department that is being costed.
Direct costs are made up of:
• Direct materials;
• Direct labour; and
• Direct expenses.
Total direct costs are known as prime cost.
Direct material costs are the costs of materials that are known to have
been used in making and selling a product (or even providing a service).
Direct labour costs are the specific costs of the workforce used to make
a product or provide a service.
Examples of groups of labour receiving payment as direct wages are as
follows:
Other direct expenses are those expenses that have been incurred in
full as a direct consequence of making a product, or providing a service,
or running a department.
Examples of direct expenses are as follows:
Identify and group the costs involved in the production of a music CD.
Direct Indirect
• Rent of a building
• Business rates
• Salary of a director
A variable cost is a cost which tends to vary with the level of activity.
For example:
• Direct materials
• Direct labour
• Sales commission
• Costs may also be semi-fixed or semi-variable, such as a telephone
bill which has a fixed standing charge and a variable cost per calls
made
Product costs are costs identified with a finished product and are part of
the inventory value.
• When the goods are sold these costs become expenses (cost of
goods sold).
Classified costs are coded so that each cost is identifiable by its code.
Advantages of a coding system:
1. Introduction
▪ Cost classification is the arrangement of cost items into logical groups
by their function or by their nature.
▪ The eventual aim of costing is to determine the cost of producing a
product/service.
5. Codes
▪ A coding system can save time and reduce ambiguity when recording
items of expenditure.
Cost behaviour
Mixed cost
Cost estimation
High/low method
Example
Question
• What should the planned activity level be for the next period?
• Should the selling price be reduced in order to sell more units?
• Should a particular component be manufactured internally or
bought in?
• Should a contract be undertaken?
The most important factor in determining the costs is the level of activity
or volume of output.
As the level of activity rises many costs will also rise.
Level of activity can refer to value/number of items sold, number of
units produced or number of invoices issued.
Basic principle of cost behaviour is that as the level of activity rises,
costs will usually rise.
Knowledge of cost behaviour is essential for the tasks of budgeting,
decision making and control accounting.
A step cost is a cost which is fixed in nature but only within certain levels
of activity.
• Examples might include supervisors' salary costs or factory rent if new
space has to be rented.
A variable cost is a cost which varies directly with the level of activity.
• Examples might be cost of raw materials, direct labour costs, sales
commission.
What do you think the graphs would look like for the following?
(Assume the x axis is the volume of output and the y axis is the total cost.)
(a) Fixed cost
(b) Stepped fixed cost
(c) Variable cost (VC)
(d) Mixed cost (semi-variable cost)
Total
cost
Volume of output
eg rent, rates, insurance
Total
cost
Volume of output
eg rent if further production space is required
Total
cost
Volume of output
eg material, labour
Total
cost
Volume of output
eg telephone bill, labour on minimum wage
or total cost
When shown on a graph fixed costs and variable costs are straight lines.
This is known as a linear cost.
However some variable costs show as a curve on a graph and these are
known as non-linear or curvilinear variable costs.
$
Cost
Volume of output
$
Cost
Volume of output
• Step 1 – find highest and lowest activity levels over the past few
periods (usually months)
• Step 2 – adjust related costs for inflation if necessary
• Step 3 – find total cost and total units of activity at highest and
lowest levels
• Step 4 – calculate variable cost per unit – this is the increase in total
cost divided by the increase in units
• Step 5 – substitute variable cost per unit into either highest or lowest
activity level to find total fixed cost
Example:
• Estimate the variable and fixed cost using the high-low method
Example:
• Highest activity level = 10,000 units at a cost of $4,000
• Lowest activity level = 2,000 units at a cost of $1,600
• Variable cost per unit = $(4,000 – 1,600) = $2,400 = $0.30
(10,000 – 2,000) 8,000
The total costs of a business for differing levels of output are as follows:
Required
What are the fixed and variable elements of the total cost using the
High/Low method?
A Y = $30,000 + $100x
B Y = $30,000 + $110x
C Y = $10,000 + $110x
D Y = $10,000 + $100x
Units Costs
$
Highest 1,000 110,000
Lowest 200 30,000
800 80,000
TC = FC + VC/unit × output
∴ Y = $10,000 + $100x
y = 10,000 + 100x
y = 10,000 + 100 × 780
TC = $88,000
Total costs are made up of two elements, a stepped fixed cost that
changes when the units exceed 7,000 and some variable costs, which
remain constant.
Required
What are the total fixed cost at production levels below and above 7,000
units? What is the VC per unit?
VC/unit = $13,500
2,500
= $5.40/unit
TC = FC + VC/unit × output
So at 5,000 units
TC = FC + VC/unit × output
$54,500 = FC + $5.40 × 5,000
FC = $27,500 below output of 7,000 units
Make sure that you are comfortable with the high/low method.
It is a very important tool for answering exam questions!
What would be the variable overhead cost per unit (to the nearest $0.01)
using the high-low technique?
The high-low technique estimates variable cost per unit by looking at the
change in costs between the highest and lowest levels of output. The
correct answer is A. This can be calculated by finding the change in cost
between the highest and lowest output levels not explained by the step in
fixed costs ($9,500 – $4,000 – $500 = $5,000), and dividing by the
change in output between the highest and lowest output levels ($5,000 /
(4,000 units – 1,000 units) = $1.67 per unit).
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
a = 50 = fixed cost
Example:
x y x y
0 5 0 10
2 13 2 8
4 21 4 6
6 29 6 4
8 37 8 2
10 45 10 0
Graph of y = 4x + 5
Graph of y = 10 – x
2. Cost estimation
▪ The fixed and variable element of a mixed cost can be determined by
the high/low method.
3. Linear equations
▪ A linear equation is a straight line and has the general form
y = a + bx
▪ Where y is the dependent variable whose value depends on the value
of x
▪ x is the independent variable
▪ a is a constant (fixed cost)
▪ b is a constant (variable cost)
Forecasting
Example
Question
Correlation
Correlation
Weight
Height
Demand
Price
Curvilinear correlation
Rate of
marriage
Age
No correlation
Be aware that other influences can complicate how costs vary with
output.
We could plot the cost against the output on a scattergraph and then joint
up the points to form a 'line of best fit'.
The trouble is that because the points do not lie on a perfect straight line,
different people will draw different lines.
This will imply different values for a and b in the equation y = a + bx
Remember a is the intercept – the fixed cost.
And b is the gradient – the variable cost per unit.
We can instead use a method called the method of least squares to find
a line of best fit which misses the points by the least amount.
n xy − ( x)( y)
• b=
n x2 − ( x)2
• a= y − bx
• Where x and y are the arithmetic means of x and y
x, y March
April
9,000
10,000
12,000
9,000
May 11,000 10,000
June 12,000 12,000
July 18,000 16,000
August 17,000 13,000
September 13,000 12,000
October 25,000 20,000
November 12,000 11,000
December 14,000 14,000
x = 172,000 y = 156,000
BPP LEARNING MEDIA
Answer (cont'd)
Units made (x) $ xy
January 11,000 10,000 110,000,000
February 20,000 17,000 340,000,000
March 9,000 12,000 108,000,000
April 10,000 9,000 90,000,000
May 11,000 10,000 110,000,000
June 12,000 12,000 144,000,000
July 18,000 16,000 288,000,000
August 17,000 13,000 221,000,000
September 13,000 12,000 156,000,000
October 25,000 20,000 500,000,000
November 12,000 11,000 132,000,000
December 14,000 14,000 196,000,000
x = 172,000 y = 156,000 xy = 2,395,000,000
BPP LEARNING MEDIA
Answer (cont'd)
Units made (x) $ x2
January 11,000 10,000 121,000,000
February 20,000 17,000 400,000,000
March 9,000 12,000 81,000,000
April 10,000 9,000 100,000,000
May 11,000 10,000 121,000,000
June 12,000 12,000 144,000,000
July 18,000 16,000 324,000,000
August 17,000 13,000 289,000,000
September 13,000 12,000 169,000,000
October 25,000 20,000 625,000,000
November 12,000 11,000 144,000,000
December 14,000 14,000 196,000,000
x = 172,000 y = 156,000 x2 = 2,714,000,000
BPP LEARNING MEDIA
Answer (cont'd)
y = 3,827 + 0.64x
(n XY ) − ( X Y )
r=
nX 2 − (X )2 nY 2 − (Y ) 2
The correlation coefficient, r must always fall between –1 and +1. If you
get a value outside this range you have made a mistake.
• Select the periods with the highest and lowest activity levels
• High activity level cost – low activity level cost = the variable cost of
the difference in activity levels
• Calculate the variable cost per unit (difference in variable costs ÷
difference in activity levels)
• Calculate fixed cost (total cost at either output level – variable cost for
output level chosen)
Once the trend has been determined using moving averages then the
trend can be compared to actual figures for the period.
The difference between trend and actual is known as the seasonal
variation.
This can be calculated by using either the additive model or the
multiplicative model.
Additive model (Y = T + S)
• S = actual – trend (S = Y – T)
Multiplicative/proportional model
• (Y = T × S)
• S = actual ÷ trend (S = Y/T)
Once the individual seasonal variations have been calculated for each
period then they must be averaged to find an overall figure.
Additive model
M T
Wk 1 –12.70 +10.88
Wk 2 –12.80 +14.78
Total –25.50 +25.66
Average –12.75 +12.83
Proportional model
M T
Wk 1 0.863 1.117
Wk 2 0.865 1.155
Total 1.728 2.272
Average 0.864 1.136
Finally, adjust the total variations to ensure that they equal zero:
Additive model: to zero
Example 1
Example 2
• Suppose Y for weeks 1 to 4 is 120, 90, 110, 150 and S for weeks 1 to
4 is 20, 20, 10, 20 (with a four-week cycle)
• Calculate T (deseasonalised or seasonally-adjusted data) for weeks 1
to 4
• Wk 1: 120 – 20 = 100
• Wk 2: 90 – (20) = 110
• Wk 3: 110 – (10) = 120
• Wk 4: 150 – 20 = 130
Example 2 (continued)
Proportional/multiplicative model
• (Y = T × S)
• Deseasonalised or seasonally — adjusted value = trend (T) = Y/S
• Forecast value (Y) = (forecast T) × S
Example 1
Example 2
Example 3
• Calculate T for weeks 1 to 4 (say 100 units, 110 units, 121 units, 133
units) using moving averages
• Determine increase/decrease in T (increasing by 10% per week eg
((121 – 110)/110) × 100%)
• Forecast T for week 5 (133 units × 110% = 146 units)
• Adjust T by appropriate seasonal variations (say – 20% of T) to get
forecast Y (146 × 80%)
Example 4
Potential issues:
• Ignores factors other than time that could also cause change
• Is all data equally variable? Give recent data more importance than
older data?
• If using time series analysis for forecasting: Is past a reliable guide to
the future? Is data itself reliable?
Pn 100
• A price index measures the Price index =
P0
change in the money value of
a group of items over time.
The Retail Prices Index (RPI) in Where Pn is the price for the
the UK measures changes in period under consideration and
the costs of items of P0 is the price for the base
expenditure of the average period.
household.
Qn 100
• A quantity index (or volume Quantity index =
Q0
index) measures the change
in the non-monetary values of
a group of items over time eg Where Qn is the quantity for the
productivity index, measuring period under consideration and
changes in the productivity of Q0 is the quantity for the base
various departments or groups period.
of workers.
X1 X2
Cola $2.00 $2.10
Pizza $3.50 $3.55
Chocolate $0.55 $0.60
What is the cost of living index for X2, assuming X1 as a base year?
6.25 100
Price index =
6.05
= 103.3
Using the high-low technique, what is the variable cost per unit (to the
nearest $0.01) expressed in current year prices?
A $3.22
B $4.13
C $4.65
D $5.06 (2 marks)
An additive time series has the following trend and seasonal variations:
• Trend
• Y = 4,000 + 6X
• Where
• Y = sales in units
• X is the number of quarters, with the first quarter of 2014 being 1, the
second quarter of 2014 being 2 etc.
• Seasonal variation
• Quarter 1 2 3 4
• Quarterly variation (units) −4 −2 +1 +5
What is the forecast sales volume for the fourth quarter of 2015?
A 4,029
B 4,043
C 4,048
D 4,053 (2 marks)
1. Correlation
▪ Two variables are correlated if a change in the value of one variable is
accompanied by a change in the value of another variable.
▪ Observations of the behaviour of two variables can be plotted on a
scattergraph.
2. Linear regression
▪ Linear regression is a mathematical technique that finds the line of
best fit that defines the relationship between two variables.
4. Coefficient of determination
▪ The coefficient of determination, r2, measures the proportion of the
total variation in the value of one variable that appears to be explained
by variations in the value of the other variable.
6. Time series
▪ There are four components of a time series: trend, seasonal
variations, cyclical variations and random variations.
▪ Additive model
TS = T + SV + RV + CV
▪ Multiplicative model
TS = T SV RV CV
▪ Moving averages
One method of finding a trend is by the use of moving averages.
7. Index numbers
▪ An index is a measure, over time, of the average changes in value
(price or quantity) of a group of items relative to the situation at some
point in the past.
• Calculate the mean, mode and median for ungrouped data and the
mean for grouped data.
• Calculate measures of dispersion including the variance, standard
deviation and coefficient of variation for both grouped and ungrouped
data.
• Calculate expected values for use in decision making.
• Explain the properties of a normal distribution.
• Interpret normal distribution graphs and tables.
Summarising and
analysing data
Expected Normal
Averages Dispersion
values distribution
Standard Coefficient
Variance
deviation of variation
Averages
Written as:
> 6 ≤ 10 7
> 10 ≤ 15 6
> 15 ≤ 20 3
20
4 12
> 5 ≤ 10 8 7 56
> 10 ≤ 15 13 6 78
> 15 ≤ 20 18 3 54
Ʃ𝑓 =20 Ʃ𝑓𝑥 = 200
𝑥ҧ = 200/20 = 10 units
BPP LEARNING MEDIA
Averages 6
Mode = 5
Standard deviation (σ) measures the spread of data around the mean.
Expected value
• Long term, weighted average of outcomes
EV = x × p
50% 50%
1. Averages
▪ Mean (sum of values/number of items)
▪ Mode (most)
▪ Median (middle)
2. Dispersion
▪ Standard deviation σ (on formula sheet)
▪ Variance σ2
▪ Coefficient of variation (on formula sheet)
4. Normal distribution
• Symmetrical and bell shaped
• Mean = μ
• Area under the curve = 1
• Area to the left of μ = area to the right of μ = 0.5.
Monitoring
Ordering, receipt Value inventory
of
and issue of raw using FIFO,
inventory
material LIFO and
levels
average
methods
Recording purchases Inventory
in accounts control
levels
Discounts
Example
Question
• Ordering
• Purchasing
• Receiving goods into store
• Storing
• Issuing inventory
• Controlling levels of inventory
• Step 1 – Inventory levels reach reorder level (the level set when
inventory must be ordered)
• Step 2 – Stores department issues purchase requisition (a
document stating that inventory is required)
• Step 3 – Purchase department draws up a purchase order
• Step 4 – Copies of purchase order sent to Accounts department
and Stores/Receiving department
• Cost of procurement
• Holding costs
• Purchase costs
• Shortage costs (such as stockouts)
Procurement costs:
Holding costs:
Stockout costs:
• Reorder level
• Minimum level
• Maximum level
Place the order when inventory = 1,500 and just as the last item is
used, a delivery should be received.
Note. 1,500 tells you nothing about how much to order: that is
determined by the economic order quantity.
Generally both lead time and usage per day vary. To avoid having
stock-outs (ie demand but no inventory), the reorder level is set
higher and a buffer or safety inventory is maintained:
Inventory
level x = order
placed
x x x x x
x
Safety inventory
Time
Generally both lead time and usage per day vary. To avoid having
stock-outs (ie demand but no inventory).
This will mean that inventory will rarely fall to zero and there will be
buffer or safety inventory:
A company has set its reorder level at 5,000 units. Average lead time
= 4 days and average daily usage = 1,000.
A company has set its reorder level at 5,000 units. Average lead
time = 4 days and average daily usage = 1,000.
The holding cost = $6 per unit per year
These amounts are independent: how much you order tells you
nothing about when to place the order.
Inventory
Maximum inventory
Reorder Average
quantity, inventory
Q
Time
Delivery received
Annual demand = 5,000 units. Cost of holding 1 unit for 1 year = $5.
Ordering cost = $500/order
The table showed that, of the reorder quantities tried, 1,000 was the
most economical.
√
Economic order quantity = 2Co D
Ch
(The formula is provided in the exam, but you are not told what the symbols
mean!)
√
Economic order quantity = 2Co D
Ch
Using the lecture example data (annual demand = 5,000 units, cost
of holding 1 unit for 1 year = $5, ordering cost = $500/order)
A company sells 1,000 units/month and each item costs $400 to buy.
Placing an order costs $640. The company's cost of holding one unit
for one year is 6% of item cost. What is the economic order quantity?
√
Economic order quantity = 2Co D
Ch
Where: Co = cost of placing an order
D = annual demand
Ch = cost of holding one unit for one year
√
Economic order quantity = 2Co D
Ch
√
Economic order quantity = 2 × 640 × 12,000
24
= 800 units
A company sells 1,000 units/month and each item costs $400 to buy.
Placing an order costs $640. The holding cost is 6% pa. Economic
order quantity = 800 units.
A company sells 1,000 units/month and each item costs $400 to buy.
Placing an order costs $640. The holding cost is 6% pa. Economic
order quantity = 800 units.
Cost element $
Ordering: (1,000 × 12/800) × $640 9,600
Purchasing: 1,000 × 12 × $400 4,800,000
Holding: 6% × 800 × $400/2 9,600
Total cost 4,819,200
Technique:
A company sells 1,000 units/month and each item costs $400 to buy.
Placing an order costs $640. The holding cost is 6% pa. The supplier
offers a 1% discount for purchases of at least 6,000 units.
Should the reorder quantity be moved from its current 800 units to
6,000 units?
If the reorder quantity were kept at 800 units, total annual costs =
$4,819,200, so the discount offer is not worthwhile
2C D
O
EBQ =
C (1−D / R )
H
Required
FIFO assumes that materials are issued out of inventory in the order
in which they were delivered into inventory.
• Logical, represents what is physically happening
• Easy to understand and explain
• Inventory valuation based on replacement cost
• Cumbersome to operate
• Cost comparison and decision making difficult due to price
variations
• Issue prices can lag behind market value if inflation is high
March 1 10 100
March 10 30 450
March 12 25
March 20 20 320
March 23 15
FIFO
LIFO
AVCO
1 March
(Opening inventory) : 100 units bought at $2 each
2 March : bought 300 units at $2.10 each
5 March : sold 50 units for $5 each
17 March : bought 100 units at $2.30 each
20 March : sold 150 units for $5 each
Required
(a) FIFO
Units Cost Value
1 March 100 2 200
2 March 300 2.10 630
5 March (50) (2) (100)
17 March 100 2.30 230
20 March (50) (2) (100)
(100) (2.10) (210)
300 650
LIFO
Units Cost Value
1 March 100 2 200
2 March 300 2.10 630
5 March (50) (2.10) (105)
17 March 100 2.30 230
20 March (100) (2.30) (230)
(50) (2.10) (105)
300 620
AVCO
Units Cost Value
1 March 100 200
2 March 300 630
5 March 400 2.075 830
(50) (2.075) (103.75)
17 March 100 230
450 (2.125) 956.25
20 March 150 (2.125) (318.75)
300 637.50
(b)
FIFO LIFO AVCO
Sales (50 × 5) 250 250 250
(150 × 5) 750 750 750
1,000 1,000 1,000
Less cost of sales (410) (440) (422.50)
FIFO: 100 + 100 + 210
LIFO: 105 + 230 + 105
AVCO: 103.75 + 318.75
590 560 577.50
Make sure that you read the following article on inventory control
from the ACCA website:
www.accaglobal.com/uk/en/student/exam-support-
resources/fundamentals-exams-study-resources/f2/technical-
articles/stock-control.html
1. Introduction
▪ Inventory control includes the functions of inventory ordering and
purchasing, receiving goods into store, storing and issuing
inventory and controlling the level of inventories.
Labour costs
Methods of Labour
remuneration turnover
Measuring
labour activity
Accounting for
labour costs
Example
Question
Management will wish to plan and control both production levels and
labour productivity.
Production levels can be raised as follows:
• Working overtime
• Hiring extra staff
• Sub-contracting some work to an outside firm
• Managing the work force so as to achieve more output
• Cancelling overtime
• Laying off staff
Required
What are the standard hours produced by the employee (in hours)?
• Capacity ratio =
Actual hours worked
Hours budgeted
• Efficiency ratio =
Expected hours to make output
Actual hours taken
Required
(a) What is the efficiency ratio?
(b) What is the capacity ratio?
(c) What is the production volume ratio?
Give your answers to one decimal place
Time work
Piecework schemes
Bonus/incentive scheme
Advantages
Disadvantages
• Employees cannot earn more than the fixed hourly rate for their extra
effort.
• There is no guarantee that the scheme will work consistently.
• Employees may prefer to work at a normal rate of output, even if this
entails accepting the lower wage paid by comparable employers.
Required
What is the cost of producing 340 units in one day?
A company pays its employees using a piecework scheme. The rates are
as follows:
0–100 units per week $4 per unit
101–150 units per week $4.50 per unit
151–200 units per week $5 per unit
201+ units per week $5.50 per unit
Required
If an employee produces 163 units in week 48, what would their pay be
for that week?
Idle time occurs when employees cannot get on with their work, through
no fault of their own.
Examples are as follows:
• Machine breakdowns
• Shortage of work
• Idle time has a cost because employees will still be paid their basic
wage or salary for these unproductive hours and so there should be a
record of idle time.
• Idle time ratio = Idle hours 100%
Total hours
• Illness/accident
• Moving
• Marriage/pregnancy
• Better pay or career prospects elsewhere
Replacement costs
Preventative costs
A company has 1,000 staff at the start of 20X3 and at the end this had
reduced to 920 due to redundancies being made.
100 staff took voluntary redundancy which was 20 more than the
company had anticipated and these 20 employees were replaced.
Required
What is the labour turnover rate per year?
Required
(a) What are the total direct labour costs for the week?
(b) What are the total indirect labour cost for the week?
(c) Complete the following account assuming the wages paid were cash
of $3,580 after deductions of $895.
Wages control account
$ $
4. Labour turnover
▪ High labour turnover will cause increased cost to a business.
Types of Predetermined
overhead OAR
Example
Question
• Profitability analysis
• Selling price determination
• Inventory valuation
For example, look at this list of costs (called a cost card) for the
manufacture of a door.
However, these are not all of the costs that you would incur if you were
making doors on a commercial basis.
There are the following costs:
• Renting the factory
• Heating and cooling the factory
• Cleaning and maintenance
• Production administration
These costs are known as production overheads and unless some
account is taken of them, the cost of items produced will be
underestimated.
To do this, we use absorption costing.
• Going back to our example of the doors, say that the overhead
production costs are expected to be $500 for the period. Ten doors are
expected to be produced.
• The overhead absorption rate (OAR) per unit =
In the example with the doors we calculated an OAR per unit. However,
this is not always appropriate.
Imagine that a business makes both doors and windows.
Obviously doors and windows will take different amounts of material and
labour.
They probably also benefit from overheads to different extents.
Therefore it would be inappropriate to work out an OAR per unit.
The most common solution is to work out an OAR per labour hour and
then 'charge' each unit according to the amount of labour needed for
each unit.
Say that each door took 1.5 hours to make and each window took 2
hours.
(a) How many hours' work in total would four doors and two windows
take?
(b) What is the overhead absorption rate per hour? (Remember that
overheads were estimated to be $500 for the period.)
(c) How much overhead will be included in the total absorption cost of
each door?
(d) How much overhead will be included in the total absorption cost of
each window?
Many factories use a direct labour hour rate or machine hour rate.
1. Allocation
2. Apportionment
3. Absorption
The types of cost centres that indirect costs may be allocated to are:
Each part of the factory will have costs that relate solely to their
respective activities.
For example, they will have dedicated employees, equipments and
supplies.
The first step in collecting overheads is to allocate such costs to the
appropriate area.
Some of the invoices received by the business, for example for rent,
cannot be allocated to just one area.
Some of this will relate to production areas, some will relate to non-
production areas.
The invoice will have to be apportioned, or split, over the different
departments to estimate how much relates to each.
Apportionment will have to be carried out for many overhead costs.
After estimating how much of each cost relates to the production areas,
the overhead absorption rate can be calculated.
Finished
Total goods Machining Assembly
cost warehouse Offices Canteen dept dept
$
Rent 36,000
Heating 12,000
Insurance 2,000
Cleaning 6,000
Factory 8,000
manager
Finished
Total goods Machining Assembly
cost warehouse Offices Canteen dept dept
$
Rent 36,000 10,000 2,000 3,000 12,000 9,000
Heating 12,000 3,333 667 1,000 4,000 3,000
Insurance 2,000 400 160 100 800 540
Cleaning 6,000 1,667 333 500 2,000 1,500
Factory 8,000 1,200 1,200 600 2,500 2,500
manager
Total 16,600 4,360 5,200 21,300 16,540
Workings – Rent
$
Warehouse 36,000 × (10,000 / 36,000) = 10,000
Offices 36,000 × (2,000 / 36,000) = 2,000
Canteen 36,000 × (3,000 / 36,000) = 3,000
Machining 36,000 × (12,000 / 36,000) = 12,000
Assembly 36,000 × (9,000 / 36,000) = 9,000
Workings – Heating
$
Warehouse 12,000 × (10,000 / 36,000) = 3,333
Offices 12,000 × (2,000 / 36,000) = 667
Canteen 12,000 × (3,000 / 36,000) = 1,000
Machining 12,000 × (12,000 / 36,000) = 4,000
Assembly 12,000 × (9,000 / 36,000) = 3,000
Workings – Insurance
$
Warehouse 2,000 × (20,000 / 100,000) = 400
Offices 2,000 × (8,000 / 100,000) = 160
Canteen 2,000 × (5,000 / 100,000) = 100
Machining 2,000 × (40,000 / 100,000) = 800
Assembly 2,000 × (27,000 / 100,000) = 540
Workings – Cleaning
$
Warehouse 6,000 × (10,000 / 36,000) = 1,667
Offices 6,000 × (2,000 / 36,000) = 333
Canteen 6,000 × (3,000 / 36,000) = 500
Machining 6,000 × (12,000 / 36,000) = 2,000
Assembly 6,000 × (9,000 / 36,000) = 1,500
$
Warehouse 8,000 × (12 / 80) = 1,200
Offices 8,000 × (12 / 80) = 1,200
Canteen 8,000 × (6 / 80) = 600
Machining 8,000 × (25 / 80) = 2,500
Assembly 8,000 × (25 / 80) = 2,500
Staff numbers
Warehouse 12 12
So, the canteen costs will be
Offices 12 12
reapportioned using fractions
Canteen 6 X 12/74, 12/74, 25/74, 25/74.
Machining 25 25
Assembly 25 25
Total 80 74
Finished
Total goods Machining Assembly
cost warehouse Offices Canteen dept dept
$
Rent 36,000 10,000 2,000 3,000 12,000 9,000
Heating 12,000 3,333 667 1,000 4,000 3,000
Insurance 2,000 400 160 100 800 540
Cleaning 6,000 1,667 333 500 2,000 1,500
Factory 8,000 1,200 1,200 600 2,500 2,500
manager
Total 16,600 4,360 5,200 21,300 16,540
Reapportion 843 843 (5,200) 1,757 1,757
17,443 5,203 - 23,057 18,297
The machining department uses 40,000 labour hours for the period.
The assembly department uses 42,000 labour hours for the period.
(a) What is the overhead absorption rate (in $) in the machine
department?
(b) What is the overhead absorption rate (in $) in the assembly
department?
Now we'll look at a factory with two service departments, canteen and
maintenance.
• Say the overheads have already been apportioned.
Now we want to reapportion the canteen costs on the basis of employee
numbers.
• Say 50% to machining, 40% to assembly and 10% to maintenance.
Similarly we want to reapportion maintenance on the basis of time spent
in each department.
• Say 45% to machining, 50% to assembly and 5% to canteen.
Here we have reciprocal apportionment.
• The direct method, where the service centre costs are apportioned to
production departments only.
• The step-down method, where each service centre's costs are not
only apportioned to production departments but to some (but not all) of
the other service centres that make use of the services provided.
Direct method
• Say the canteen gives benefit to the other departments in the ratio
10:40:50, but we will ignore the 10% as it goes to maintenance.
• Instead we will apportion the canteen costs in the ratio 40:50 or 40/90
to 50/90.
• Similarly, where the maintenance department benefits the other
departments in the ratio 50:45:5 we will apportion costs in the ratio
50:45 or 50/95 to 45/95.
If one service cost centre, compared with the other(s), has higher
overhead costs and carries out a bigger proportion of work for the
other service cost centre(s), then the overheads of this service centre
should be reapportioned first.
Based on the data above, what is the machine hour absorption rate as
conventionally calculated?
• A $12 B $14 C $16 D $18
D
Budgeted overheads
Overhead absorption rate =
Budgeted machine hours
Remember that overhead rates are set in advance using estimated costs
and output.
Once set, the OAR is not varied in the light of actual production or costs.
From our cost card we can see that Product A makes a profit of
$50 – $35 = $15.
Assuming 15,000 units have been made and sold (as per budget):
$
Sales (15,000 × $50) 750,000
Absorption cost of sales (525,000)
(15,000 × $35)
Profit 225,000
But what would happen if budget and actual production volumes were
different? Say, 20,000 units were made and sold.
Marginal $ Absorption $
costing costing
Sales (20,000 × $50) 1,000,000 Sales 1,000,000
Cost of sales (600,000) Cost of sales (700,000)
(20,000 × $30) (20,000 × $35)
Contribution 400,000 –
Less fixed costs (75,000) –
Profit 325,000 300,000
$
20,000 × $30 (marginal cost) 600,000
20,000 × $5 (prod o/h per unit) 100,000
Total absorption cost 700,000
Too much fixed cost has been accounted for – this should
only amount to $75,000. Actual output applied to the absorption rate
accounts for 5,000 units too much of fixed costs – ie $25,000.
What would happen if budget and actual production volumes were the
same but actual overheads were $80,000?
Marginal $ Absorption $
costing costing
Sales (15,000 × $50) 750,000 Sales 750,000
Cost of sales (450,000) Cost of sales (525,000)
(15,000 × $30) (15,000 × $35)
Contribution 300,000 –
Less fixed costs (80,000) –
Profit 220,000 225,000
$
15,000 × $30 (marginal cost) 450,000
15,000 × $5 (prod o/h per unit) 75,000
Total absorption cost 525,000
Not enough fixed cost has been accounted for – this should
amount to $80,000.
$
Actual overheads 510,000
Under-recovery 30,000
Overheads recovered for 480,000
32,000 hours at budgeted OAR
32,000 x = 480,000
x = 480,000 / 32,000 = $15
Make sure that you read the following article on fixed overhead
absorption from the ACCA website:
www.accaglobal.com/uk/en/student/exam-support-
resources/fundamentals-exams-study-resources/f2/technical-
articles/overhead-absorption.html
Reconciliations
Advantages/disadvantages
of AC and MC
Example
Question
Remember the cost card from Chapter 7a for the manufacture of a door.
$
Sales X
Less variable cost of sales (X)
Less variable selling, distribution and admin costs (X)
CONTRIBUTION X
Less fixed costs (X)
Net profit X
Year 1 Year 2
Units Units
Normal/budgeted production 12,000 12,000
Actual production 14,000 11,500
Actual sales 13,000 12,500
Actual fixed prodn overheads $11,000 $11,000
Actual fixed selling costs $5,000 $5,000
There is no opening inventory. All variable costs were as per budget
for the two years.
Set out a statement of profit or loss under marginal costing for both
years 1 and 2.
Year 1 Year 2
$ $
Gross profit 54,900 50,600
RECONCILIATION
To summarise these are the reasons for the difference in profits and the
reconciliation:
Going back to the example above the opening and closing inventories
were as follows.
Year 1 Year 2
Opening inventory Zero 1,000
Closing inventory 1,000 Zero
Year 1 Year 2
Change in inventory +1,000 –1,000
OAR = $0.90
Year 1 Year 2
Marginal profit 42,500 40,250
Difference in profit (1,000 $0.90) 900 (900)
(Increase in (Decrease in
inventory so add inventory so
difference) deduct difference)
Absorption profit 43,400 39,350
• Fixed production costs are incurred making the output and so it is only
'fair' to charge all output with a share of these costs.
• Closing inventory will be valued in accordance with IAS 2.
• Appraising products in terms of contribution gives no indication of
whether fixed costs are being covered.
What profit would have been earned under a standard marginal costing
system?
A $368,000
B $440,000
C $344,000
D $560,000
(2 marks)
In the most recent period, 2,000 units were produced and 1,000 units
were sold. Actual sales price, variable production cost per unit and total
fixed production costs were all as budgeted. Fixed production costs were
over-absorbed by $4,000. There was no opening inventory for the period.
What would be the reduction in profit for the period if the company has
used marginal costing rather than absorption costing?
A 4,000
B 6,000
C 10,000
D 14,000
(2 marks)
1. Overview
▪ The marginal cost is the variable production cost of one unit.
2. Contribution
▪ Contribution is the amount that a unit contributes towards fixed costs
when it is sold. It is calculated as selling price less all variable costs.
Process costing
Work in progress
General principles of Abnormal loss or
(WIP)
process costing with no gain
losses
Normal losses
Closing WIP Opening WIP
Subsequent/previous
processes
Example
Question
Losses can be accounted for in two ways, depending on whether the loss
was expected or not.
Normal loss
• Where the level of spoilage, scrap or weight loss is as expected
• As suffering these losses is an unavoidable part of production, the
cost of normal losses is added to the cost of good production
Abnormal loss
• Where the level of spoilage, scrap or weight loss is over and above the
normal loss
• The cost of abnormal losses appears as a separate expense in
the statement of profit or loss
Abnormal gain
• Where the level of spoilage, scrap or weight loss is below the normal
loss
Example
The vital point to remember when dealing with a process that has losses
is that the cost per unit is worked out on the basis of expected output.
In our example, the expected output = input – normal loss = 2,000 – 200
= 1,800 tons.
The initial costs are $15,000 but we expect to be able to sell 200 tons for
$3 per ton.
The net cost of the expected output is therefore:
• $15,000 – ($3 200) = $14,400
So cost per unit = $14,400 / 1,800 = $8 per ton.
Process account
Tons $ Tons $
Materials 2,000 15,000 Normal loss 200 600
Actual output 1,700 13,600
Abnormal loss 100 800
2,000 15,000 2,000 15,000
Loss account
Tons $ Tons $
Process – normal 200 600 Cash (waste 300 900
sold at $3)
Process – 100 800 St of profit or 500
abnormal loss
Example
Tons $ Tons $
Process – normal 200 600 Abnormal gain 100 900
St of profit or loss 600 Cash (waste 100 300
sold at $3)
This means that some of the costs incurred in the period will relate to
completed production, and some to the uncompleted work in progress.
Example
(b) $2,000 / 200 = $10 per equivalent unit and costs are
allocated as
The opening WIP costs plus the additional cost introduced in this period
are enough to make whole units (the units completed in the period) plus
the first 50% of another bike.
Equivalent units
4 bikes have been completed 4
1 bike has been 50% completed 0.5
4.5
Once the equivalent units have been worked out, you can begin to value
the output.
$
4 bikes completed (4 $1,140) 4,560
1 bike 50% completed (50% $1,140) 570
5,130
1 Fabric is cut out. 60% of material cost and 25% of labour cost are
incurred
2 Bears are stitched and stuffed incurring the rest of the costs
$
Materials 10
Labour 8
18
There are two methods of dealing with opening work in progress – the
FIFO method and the weighted average method.
Under the FIFO method the assumption is that the first units completed
in any period are the units of opening inventory.
Note. Exam questions will not contain both WIP and losses.
Opening WIP
Goods started and
finished
Good output
Closing WIP
Good output
Closing WIP
Required
(a) FIFO
Op WIP + Input units = Good output + Normal loss +/– Ab loss/gain + CI WIP
50 + 2,050 = 2,020 + 0 + 0 + 80
Process I
Units $ Units $
Opening WIP 50 610 To Process II 2,020 46,220
Raw materials 2,050 22,550
Labour 16,304
Overheads 8,212 Closing WIP 80 1,456
Valuations $
Good output
Costs b/f in opening WIP 610
Materials (1,970 $11.00) 21,670
Labour (1,990 $8.00) 15,920
Overheads (2,005 $4.00) 8,020
46,220
$
Closing WIP
Materials (80 $11.00) 880
Labour (48 $8.00) 384
Overheads (48 $4.00) 192
1,456
Valuations $
Good output
(2,020 $22.89) 46,238
Closing WIP $
– materials (80 $10.93) 874.40
– labour (48 $7.97) 382.56
– overheads (48 $3.99) 191.52
1,448.48
Make sure that you read the following article on process costing from the
ACCA website:
www.accaglobal.com/uk/en/student/exam-support-
resources/fundamentals-exams-study-resources/f2/technical-
articles/process-costing.html
1. Process costing
▪ Process costing is used in businesses where identical items are
produced continuously and therefore costs cannot be traced to
individual units of production or batches.
▪ Normal losses are an unavoidable part of production, the cost of
normal losses is added to the cost of good production.
▪ Abnormal losses are where the level of spoilage, scrap or weight loss
is over and above the normal loss.
▪ Abnormal gain is where the level of spoilage, scrap or weight loss is
below the normal loss.
▪ There are two methods of dealing with opening work in progress – the
FIFO method and the weighted average method.
by-products
Processing costing,
joint and by-products
Physical Relative
units sales value
Joint products are two or more products which are output from the
same processing operation.
They will be indistinguishable from each other up to their point of
separation (split-off point).
Costs incurred up to this point are called common costs or joint costs.
They possess substantial sales value before or after further processing.
Joint costs must be apportioned between the joint products.
Joint products
Oil refinery (diesel, petrol, paraffin)
Chicken farm (legs, wings)
Saw mill (timber, shavings)
By-product
Saw mill (sawdust)
Input
materials Joint product A
Process Joint product B
By-product X
• Suppose that the joint costs of a process at split off point are $3,000
with 2 joint products:
Joint product 1 500 tonnes
Joint product 2 1,000 tonnes
1,500 tonnes
• Apportioned costs
JP1 500 / 1,500 $3,000 = $1,000
JP2 1,000 / 1,500 $3,000 = $2,000
The output of the process is two joint products: 600 units P1, 1,200 units
P2; and 200 units of by-product. The by-product will be able to be sold for
$50 in total.
Required
Allocate the joint costs on a physical units basis.
Process Account
Units $ Units $
Material 2,000 2,000 Output P1 600 1,650
Labour 2,000 P2 1,200 3,300
Overheads 1,000 By-product 200 50
2,000 5,000 2,000 5,000
The relative sales value method is the most widely used method of
apportioning joint costs.
Make sure you split the joint costs according to sales value of
production rather than individual selling prices or sales value of sales.
Two products (P and Q) are created from a joint process. Both products
can be sold immediately after split-off. There are no opening inventories
or work in progress. The following information is available for last period.
Total joint production costs $850,000
Product Production
per unit units Sales units Selling price
P 15,000 10,000 $15
Q 11,000 8,000 $25
Amount apportioned
Amount apportioned to X:
(12,000/40,000) $750,000 = $225,000
1. Introduction
▪ Joint products are two or more products separated after a process,
each of which has a significant value.
▪ A by-product is an incidental product from a process which has an
insignificant value compared to the main product.
2. Treatment
▪ By-products are not allocated any of the joint costs.
▪ Joint products need to be apportioned a fair share of the joint costs at
the split off point.
Cost card
Composite cost
units
Service
department
costing
• Job costing
• Batch costing
• Service costing
• Plumbers
• Builders
• Engineering company
Procedure:
Pricing:
• Cost plus pricing means that a desired profit margin is added to total
costs to arrive at the selling price.
• Selling price based on a 20% margin means that profit is 20% of
selling price.
%
Cost of job 80
+ profit 20
= selling price 100
Selling price based on a 20% mark-up means that profit is 20% of cost.
%
Cost of job 100
+ profit 20
= selling price 120
$ %
Cost 240 80
Profit ? 20
Selling price ? 100
$ %
Cost 425 100
Profit ? 30
Selling price ? 130
Advantages Comment
Realistic The identification of expenses with jobs and the subsequent
apportionment charging of these to the department(s) responsible means
that costs are borne by those who incurred them.
Increased User departments will be aware that they are charged for the
responsibility specific services used and may be more careful to use the
and facility more efficiently. They will also appreciate the true cost
awareness of the facilities that they are using and can take decisions
accordingly.
Advantages Comment
Control of The service department may be restricted to charging a
service standard cost to user departments for specific jobs carried out
department or time spent. It will then be possible to measure the efficiency
costs or inefficiency of the service department by recording the
difference between the standard charges and the actual
expenditure.
Planning This information will ease the planning process, as the
information purpose and cost of service department expenditure can be
separately identified.
A company is preparing for job X112. The job requires materials worth
$1,350 and 150 hours of labour.
Labour is paid at $6 per hour, variable overheads are absorbed at a rate
of $2 per labour hour and fixed overheads at a rate of $3 per labour hour.
Required
What is the total cost of job X112?
(a)
Job X112
$
Direct materials 1,350
Direct labour (150 × $6) 900
Variable overheads (150 × $2) 300
Prime cost 2,550
Fixed overheads (150 × $3) 450
Total cost 3,000
X 500 200
Y 180 1,200
680 1,400
The truck cost $3,060 to operate in the week. Each customer delivery
was carried out separately, and the truck made no other deliveries in the
week.
What is the cost per kilogram/kilometre of sand delivered in the week (to
the nearest $0.001)?
A $0.003
B $0.010
C $2.186
D $4.500
(2 marks)
www.accaglobal.com/uk/en/student/exam-support-
resources/fundamentals-exams-study-resources/f2/technical-articles/re-
apportionment-of-service-cost-centre-costs.html
Example
Question
Cost drivers
Merits of ABC
Criticisms of ABC
Cost of quality is
Note.
• Concern for quality saves money
• Poor quality costs money
• Cost of conformance
─ Cost of prevention
─ Cost of appraisal
• Cost of non-conformance
─ Cost of internal failure
─ Cost of external failure
Cost of conformance
Cost of non-conformance
• Prevention costs
• Appraisal costs
• Internal failure costs
• External failure costs
• Quality engineering
• Design/development of quality control/inspection equipment
• Maintenance of quality control/inspection equipment
• Administration of quality control
• Training in quality control
• Acceptance testing
• Inspection of goods inwards
• Inspection costs of in-house processing
• Performance testing
• Failure analysis
• Re-inspection costs
• Losses from failure of purchased items
• Losses due to lower selling prices for sub-quality goods
• Costs of reviewing product specifications after failures
Also:
Employees
• Encouraged to become multi-skilled
• Encouraged to take responsibility for their work
Discussion activity:
Discuss the importance of product development, product life cycle and
product portfolio in Apple's competitive position.
Sales
+
Time
– Introduction Growth Maturity Decline Senility
Profit
Introduction
• Slow growth in sales as not yet accepted by would-be purchasers. Unit
cost highs because of low output (eg few economies of scale)
• High marketing costs to try to get product recognised by customers
• Few competitors yet
• Product is a loss maker
Growth
• Sales rise more sharply as product gains market acceptance; product
will start to make profits.
• Capital investment needed to fulfil the level of demand, meaning cash
flow remains lower than profit. Cash flow likely to remain negative.
• As sales and production rise, unit costs fall.
Growth (continued)
• Competitors are attracted to market. Need to add additional features to
differentiate from competitors, so product complexity likely to rise.
• Continued marketing expenditure required to differentiate products
from competitors' offerings.
• Growth is sustained by attracting new types of customers.
Maturity
• Probably the longest period of a successful product's life. Most
products on the market will be at a mature stage.
• The market is no longer growing. Purchases based on repeat business
rather than new customers.
• Rate of sales growth slows down.
Maturity (continued)
• Profits remain good, and levels of investment are low meaning cash
flow is also positive.
• Prices start to decline, as firms compete to try to increase their share
of the market.
• Firms try to capitalise on a brand name by launching spin off products
under the same name.
• The number of firms in industry reduces, due to consolidation in the
industry.
Decline
• Sales decline, and there is over-capacity of production in the industry
• Severe competition and falling profits
• Some producers leave the market (as a result of falling profits)
• Remaining producers seeks ways to modify product or to find new
market segments to prolong product life
Discuss the stage of their life cycles the following products have reached:
• Cameras
• Cars
• Newspapers
• Smartphones
Suggested solutions:
• Recognition: how can you tell where a product stands in its life cycle?
(eg what will its future sales be?)
• Not all products follow a consistent patterns of stages as suggested by
the model (eg some go straight from 'growth' to 'decline')
• Nature of competition varies in different industries
• Length of stages can vary; strategic decisions can change or extend a
product's life cycle
• Develop a product
• Determine the expected standard production cost
• Set a selling price (probably based on cost)
• Resulting profit
• Costs are controlled through variance analysis at monthly intervals
Target cost
4. Target costing
▪ A target cost is derived by setting a selling price for a product and
deducting a desired profit margin to arrive at the target cost.
▪ Costs are then designed out of the product to ensure the target cost is
achieved.
Planning and
Spreadsheet
control systems
Cost/ Controllable
Types profit/ vs
investment uncontrollable
Variances
Example
Question
• Identify objectives
• Identify courses of action (strategies) to achieve objectives
• Evaluate each strategy
• Choose course of action
• Implement long-term plan in annual budget
• Measure actual results and compare with plan
• Respond to divergences from plan
Most people, in their private lives, have prepared budgets for themselves.
Typically you estimate your income and your outgoings (food, rent, fuel
etc).
You can then see if income will cover expenditure.
And you can work out whether you can afford a holiday and how much
you need to save for it!
• Objectives are set for the organisation as a whole, and for individual
departments and operations within the organisation. Quantified
expressions of these objectives are then drawn up as targets to be
achieved within the timescale of the budget plan.
Compel planning
Co-ordinate activities
• Once the budget has been agreed by the directors and senior
managers it acts as an authorisation for each budget holder to incur
the costs included in the budget centre's budget. As long as the
expenditure is included in the formalised budget the budget holder
can carry out day to day operations without needing to seek separate
authorisation for each item of expenditure.
Responsibility centres
Flexible budgets are very useful at the planning stage to explore the
effect of different activity levels.
• Eg what are the knock on effects on distribution costs if sales are very
high?
• Eg what are the effects on employment if we have low sales?
Chateau Larnaque has a bottling plant for its cola and has prepared
flexible budgets:
Flexible budgets
Bottles: 10,000 12,000 14,000
Production costs: $ $ $
Materials 30,000 36,000 42,000
Labour 27,000 31,000 35,000
Overhead 20,000 20,000 20,000
77,000 87,000 97,000
Required
If actual production was 12,350 what is the flexed budget production
cost?
Uses of spreadsheets
• Management accounts
• Revenue analysis and comparison
• Cash flow analysis and forecasting
• Cost analysis and comparison
• Reconciliations
• Budgets and forecasts
Contents of cell
Advantages
Disadvantages
A B C
1 Sales Value
2 January 150
3 February 120
4 March 100
5 Total
6 VAT
7 Gross Sales
A B C D
2 VAT 0.175
5 12 = B5 + C5
6 15.5 = B6 + C6
7 35 = B7 + C7
2. Budgetary planning
▪ A budget is a quantified plan of action for a forthcoming period.
3. Forecast
▪ A forecast is an estimate of what is likely to occur in the future.
Budget committee
The budget period is the time period to which the budget relates.
The budget manual is a collection of instructions governing the
responsibilities of persons and the procedures, forms and records
relating to the preparation and use of budgetary data.
Managers responsible for preparing budgets should ideally be the
managers who are responsible for carrying out the budget.
The co-ordination and administration of budgets is usually the
responsibility of a budget committee.
Budget manual
Content Detail
Explanation of The purpose of budgetary planning and control
the objectives of The objectives of the various stages of the budgeting
the budgeting process
process The importance of budgets in the long-term planning and
administration of the enterprise
Organisational An organisation chart
structures A list of individuals holding budget responsibilities
Outline of the Relationship between them
principal budgets
Budget manual
Content Detail
Administrative Membership, and terms of reference, of the budget
details committee
The sequence in which budgets are to be prepared
A timetable
Procedural Specimen forms and instructions for completing them
matters Specimen reports
Account codes (or a chart of accounts)
The name of the budget officer to whom enquiries must be
sent
1 Communication of objectives
─ Budgets should be prepared in line with the overall objectives of the
organisation.
2 Identification of the principal budget factor
─ This is the limiting factor on the whole organisation and is typically
sales demand (although it could be materials or time or labour and
public sector is usually government funds).
3 Preparation of sales budget
Sales budget
Production
Sales budget
budget
Once you know the sales budget, you can plan your production.
The units to be made will not necessarily equal the units that are sold.
The business may plan to make extra units to build up levels of inventory
or it might make fewer units to use up inventory.
Materials
Sales budget Production budget
usage budget
Labour budget
Materials Materials
Sales Production
usage purchases
budget budget
budget budget
Once material usage has been calculated, the business can decide what
it will have to purchase.
Purchases need not equal usage as the business may decide to increase
or decrease its raw material inventory.
Labour budget
Materials Materials
Sales Production
usage purchases
budget budget
budget budget
Once these functional budgets have been worked out, the business will
usually have completed its most complex budgets
There are still many items that have to be calculated such as research
and development, fixed cost budgets and advertising.
Once all functional budgets have been completed they will be reviewed
and co-ordinated and the master budget can be produced.
We will look at the master budget later.
You need some more detail on the functional budgets.
Units made = units sold + closing inventory units – opening inventory units
Think about this and you will get the inventory the right way around.
You have to make enough to account for the sales and the closing
inventory but you get a 'head start' from the opening inventory units.
= 65,500
Labour budget
Materials
Sales budget Production budget
usage budget
Remember that material used will not normally be the same as material
purchased as inventory levels can change.
To connect usage to purchases use:
Cash budgets (or cash flow forecasts) are very important for
organisations.
When employees, suppliers or lenders cannot be paid, failure is usually
imminent.
A business which runs out of cash, even for a couple of months, will fail,
even if it is profitable.
The reasons why net profit and net cash flow differ are mainly due to
timing.
• If goods are sold on credit, the cash receipts will be the same as the
value of the sales (ignoring early settlement discounts and bad debts).
However, receipts may occur in a different period as a result of the
timing of payments.
Take the cash balance at the start of a period and add the receipts and
deduct the payments you expect for that period. The result is the
estimated balance at the end of that period.
For example, if your bank balance at the end of August was $500 and
you expect to receive $1,000 and to pay out $900 in September, your
cash flow budget for September would be:
September
$
Cash balance as at 1 Sep 500
Add expected receipts 1,000
Less expected payments (900)
Projected balance at month end 600
Say that in October you expect to receive $1,100 and to spend $1,500,
then the cash flow budget for October can be added:
September October
$ $
Cash balance as at 1st 500
Add expected receipts 1,000 1,100
Less expected payments (900) (1,500)
Projected balance at month end 600
The opening balance for October is the closing balance for September:
September October
$ $
Cash balance as at 1st 500 600
Add expected receipts 1,000 1,100
Less expected payments (900) (1,500)
Projected balance at month end 600 200
Example
A company discovered that its receipts from receivables are as
follows:
20% received in month of sale
50% received one month after sale
30% received two months after sale
Sales for November were $50,000 and were expected to increase by
$4,000 per month.
Example (continued)
November sales: 50,000
Received in month of sale 50,000 20% = 10,000
Received after 1 month 50,000 50% = 25,000
Received after 2 months 50,000 30% = 15,000
Actual cash receipts:
Nov $ Dec $ Jan $ Feb $ Mar $
Nov sales 10,000 25,000 15,000
Example (continued)
December sales: 54,000
Received in month of sale 54,000 20% = 10,800
Received after 1 month 54,000 50% = 27,000
Received after 2 months 54,000 30% = 16,200
Actual cash receipts:
Example (continued)
January sales: 58,000
Received in month of sale 58,000 20% = 11,600
Received after 1 month 58,000 50% = 29,000
Received after 2 months 58,000 30% = 17,400
Actual cash receipts:
Nov $ Dec $ Jan $ Feb $ Mar $
Nov sales 10,000 25,000 15,000
Dec sales 10,800 27,000 16,200
Jan sales 11,600 29,000 17,400
Example (continued)
February sales: 62,000
Received in month of sale 62,000 20% = 12,400
Received after 1 month 62,000 50% = 31,000
The rest will be received in April.
Actual cash receipts:
Nov $ Dec $ Jan $ Feb $ Mar $
Nov sales 10,000 25,000 15,000
Dec sales 10,800 27,000 16,200
Jan sales 11,600 29,000 17,400
Feb sales 12,400 31,000
10% of sales are expected to be cash. Of the credit sales, 80% are
expected to pay in the month after sale, and take a 2% discount. The
remaining 20% are expected to pay in the second month after the sale.
What is the value of sales receipts to be shown in the cash budget for
March?
$
10% March sales for cash (10% 55,000) 5,500
80% February credit sales (80% 90% 98% 70,000)
49,392
20% January credit sales (20% 90% 60,000) 10,800
65,692
Make sure that you read the following article on cash budgets from the
ACCA website:
www.accaglobal.com/gb/en/student/exam-support-
resources/fundamentals-exams-study-resources/f2/technical-
articles/cash-budgets.html
Once sales and functional budgets have been prepared, the master
budget can be drafted.
The master budget comprises the budgeted statement of profit or loss,
budgeted statement of financial position and the cash flow forecast.
1. Preparation of budgets
▪ The budget committee co-ordinates the preparation and administration
of budgets.
5. Master budget
▪ This pulls together all the individual budgets and is usually comprised
of a budget income statement, statement of financial position and cash
budget.
Behavioural Performance
Participation
implications evaluation
Budget purposes
• A forecast
• A means of allocating resources
• A yardstick
• A target
• The managers who set the budget or standards are often not the
managers who are then made responsible for achieving budget
targets.
• The goals of the organisation as a whole, as expressed in a budget,
may not coincide with the personal aspirations of individual
managers.
• Control is applied at different stages by different people. Different
managers can get in each others' way, and resent the interference
from others.
Motivation
• Motivation is what makes people behave in the way that they do.
• It comes from individual attitudes, or group attitudes.
• Individuals will be motivated by personal desires and interests.
Motivation
Participation
• In newly-formed organisations
• In very small businesses
• During periods of economic hardship
• When operational managers lack budgeting skills
• When the organisation's different units require precise coordination
• 'A budget in which budget allowances are set largely on the basis of
negotiations between budget holders and those to whom they report'.
(CIMA Official Terminology)
Features of feedback
Budgetary slack
• The difference between the minimum necessary costs and the costs
built into the budget or actually incurred.
• Managers might deliberately overestimate costs and underestimate
sales so that they will not be blamed for overspending and poor
results.
A share option scheme is a scheme which gives its members the right
to buy shares in the company for which they work at a set date in the
future and at a price usually determined when the scheme is set up.
Disadvantages
• The benefits are not certain, as the market value of shares at a future
date cannot realistically be predicted in advance.
• The benefits are not immediate, as a scheme must be in existence for
a number of years before members can exercise their rights.
1. Behavioural implications
▪ Motivation
▪ Goal congruence
▪ Behaviour problems
▪ Budgetary slack
2. Participation
▪ Top down vs bottom up
▪ Negotiated budgets
3. Performance evaluation
▪ Essential to inform employees how actual results are progressing.
Capital expenditure
Revenue expenditure
Simple Discounted
Example
Question
Example
The payback period is the time taken for the initial investment to be
recovered in the cash inflows from the project.
It's particularly relevant if there are liquidity problems, or if distant
forecasts are very uncertain.
It gives greater weight to cash flows generated in earlier years.
Eg, if a machine cost $40,000 and cash inflows generated from its use
were $8,000 each year, the payback would be:
$40,000 / $8,000 = 5 years
Target paybacks vary widely from business to business.
If inflows are irregular you need to keep track of cumulative cash inflows.
Eg:
$ Cash flow $ Cumulative cash flow
Year 5 10,000
You can see that the initial outlay has been recouped by the end of Year
3 – a payback of 3 years.
Example
P Q
$'000 $'000
Investment 60 60
Year 1 profits 20 50
Year 2 profits 30 20
Year 3 profits 50 5
Q pays back first, but ultimately P's profits are higher on the
same amount of investment.
A machine was bought for $18,000 and can be sold for $3,000 at the end
of its life.
Pre-depreciation earnings for each of the next 8 years are expected to be
$300, $5,700, $4,200, $1,800, $3,900, $2,800, $4,200, $1,800.
What is the payback period in years and months?
1 (18,000)
1 300 (17,700)
2 5,700 (12,000)
3 4,200 (7,800)
4 1,800 (6,000)
5 3,900 (2,100)
6 2,800 700
Payback in year 6.
2,100 / 2,800 = 0.75 0.75 12 months = 9 months
BPP LEARNING MEDIA
Payback period 5
Advantages
Disadvantages
Would you rather have $1,000 now or $1,000 in one year's time?
Most people would say now.
It can be invested for future enjoyment.
There is less risk if it is taken now – despite hopes and promises it may
not appear in a year!
S = P(1 + r)n
Where S = future value of investment
P = amount invested now
r = rate of interest
n = number of years of investment
12
n
(1+r) – 1
Or
(1+r)365/x – 1
Where
r is the rate for each time period
n is the number of months in the time period
x is the number of days in the time period
P = S / (1 + r)n
Where S = future value of investment
P = amount invested now
r = rate of interest
n = number of years of investment
P = S / (1 + r)n
Where S = future value of investment
P = amount invested now
r = rate of interest
n = number of years of investment
What is the present value of $1,000 received at the end of three years
using a 10% interest rate?
The net present value method calculates the present value of all cash
flows, and sums them to give the net present value.
If this is positive, then the project is acceptable.
Eg:
• A machine costs $20,000 and will yield net cash inflows of $8,000,
$9,000 and $7,000 at the end of each of the next three years.
• Is the machine a worthwhile investment?
• Cost = $20,000
12
• Cash inflows = $24,000 n
However we know that it is not valid to compare the cash flows without
adjusting for different timings.
NPV: (30)
1 0.990 0.980 0.971 0.962 0.952 0.943 0.935 0.926 0.917 0.909
2 0.980 0.961 0.943 0.925 0.907 0.890 0.873 0.857 0.842 0.826
3 0.971 0.942 0.915 0.889 0.864 0.840 0.816 0.794 0.772 0.751
NPV: (37)
Or, we could use the annuity tables and look up the annuity factor for
three years at 10%.
The table gives us 2.487.
Notice that this is slightly different from adding up the discount factors
individually.
• Eg what is the present value of $10,000 costs incurred each year from
years 3 to 6 when the cost of capital is 10%?
• We need to take the annuity factor for years 1 to 6 and deduct the
annuity factor for years 1 to 2. This will give us a factor for years 3 to 6
only.
What is the present value of $10,000 costs incurred each year from years
3 to 6 when the cost of capital is 10%?
The internal rate of return (IRR) technique uses a trial and error
method to discover the discount rate which produces the NPV of zero.
12
n
The internal rate of return method of DCF involves two steps.
• For conventional cash flows both methods give the same decision
12
n
NPV
• Simpler to calculate
• Better for ranking mutually exclusive projects
• Easy to incorporate different discount rates
IRR
For example:
Time Cash flow (A) Discount Present value Cumulative
factor (B)
12 (AB) PV
n
0 (20,000) 1 (20,000) (20,000)
NPV: 714
Note
The discounted payback fails to take account of positive cash flows
occurring after the end of the payback period.
Relevant costs
Non-relevant costs
3. Compounding
▪ Earning interest on interest already received. Considered non annual
rates of interest – equivalent rates (EAR).
6. Annuities
▪ A constant sum of money for a fixed period of time, the present value
is calculated using the cumulative discount tables.
▪ Loan repayments, which included the annuities and the interest.
▪ Perpetuities – annuity paid or received forever.
Standard costing
Advantages/disadvantages
Examples
Types of standard
Ideal standard
Attainable standards
Current standards
Basic standards
• These are kept unaltered over a long period of time, and may be
out of date.
• They are used to show changes in efficiency or performance over a
long period of time.
• Basic standards are perhaps the least useful and least common type
of standard in use.
• Inflation
• Choice of an efficiency standard
• Materials quality versus wastage
• Accounting for price variations/discounts
• Behavioural problems/motivation
• Cost of setting up
• Time to set up
Direct labour rates per hour will be set by discussion with the
personnel department and by reference to the payroll and to any
agreements on pay rises with trade union representatives of the
employees.
• A separate hourly rate or weekly wage will be set for each different
labour grade/type of employee.
• An average hourly rate will be applied for each grade (even though
individual rates of pay may vary according to age and experience).
An exam question may give you actual costs and variances and require
you to calculate the standard cost.
1. Standards
▪ A standard is prepared by management in advance, and details their
expectations of the future.
▪ A standard cost is a predetermined estimated unit cost used for
inventory valuation and control.
▪ A standard cost card shows full details of the standard cost of each
product.
2. Standard setting
▪ Standards can be set at different overall levels – ideal, current, basic,
expected.
3. Uses of standards
▪ Standards can be used to assess and control actual performance
through the analysis of variances.
Calculation
• Materials – Price Calculation
– Usage • Fixed o/h – Expenditure
• Labour – Rate – Volume
– Efficiency
• Variable o/h – Expenditure efficiency capacity
– Efficiency
Interpretation/
interdependence
Example
Question
Example
Example
• Idle time variance = idle hours × standard rate per hour = 100 × $5
= $500 (A)
• Direct labour total variance = labour rate variance + labour efficiency
variance + idle time variance
Example
Expenditure variance
$
760 hours of var prod o/h should cost
(× $1.50) 1,140
but did cost
1,230
Variable production overhead expenditure 90 (A)
variance
Efficiency variance
Method of calculating cost variances for variable cost items is essentially same
for materials, labour and overheads.
VOLUME
EXPENDITURE VOLUME CAPACITY
VARIANCE VARIANCE VARIANCE
Example
$
Fixed overhead incurred 20,450
Fixed overhead absorbed (1,100 × $20) 22,000
Fixed overhead total variance 1,550 (F)
$
Budgeted fixed overhead expenditure 20,000
Actual fixed overhead expenditure 20,450
Fixed overhead expenditure variance 450 (A)
$
Actual production at std rate (1,100 × $20) 22,000
Budgeted production at std rate (1,000 × $20) 20,000
Fixed overhead volume variance 2,000 (F)
53 461,100
Closing inventory (700 units @ $53/unit)) (37,100)
424,000
Budgeted 176,000
contribution
Budgeted fixed
overheads 130,500
Required
Fixed overheads
Total variances are the difference between flexed budget figures and
actual figures.
Eg
Material price
Favourable
• Unforeseen discounts
• Change in material
Adverse
• Price increase
• Careless purchasing
Materials usage
Favourable
Adverse
• Defective material
• Excessive waste
Labour rate
Favourable
Adverse
Labour efficiency
Favourable
• Motivated staff
• Quality materials
Adverse
• Lack of training
• Sub-standard material
Favourable
• Cost savings
Adverse
• Excessive use
Interdependence of variances
Examples
When to investigate
Considerations
• Size of variance
• Controllability of variance
• Cost of investigation
• Interrelationships with other variances
• Level of standard
• Trend emerging
ABC Co has found that it has had an increasing adverse labour efficiency
variance for the last three months.
You learn that the company is using lots of temporary workers in a bid to
keep up with increased demand for its single product, the Z.
Which of the following control actions could be implemented by the
company to try to eliminate this?
A There is no evidence that increasing their salary will make them worker
faster and D reducing the amount of supervision is likely to have the
opposite effect, ie increasing the time taken to make each unit rather
than decreasing it.
Make sure that you read the following article on fixed overhead
absorption from the ACCA website:
www.accaglobal.com/uk/en/student/exam-support-
resources/fundamentals-exams-study-resources/f2/technical-
articles/overhead-absorption.html
1. Variances
▪ Variances show the differences between actual results and expected
results and provide information for performance evaluation and control
purposes.
2. Cost variances
▪ Cost variances can be calculated for materials, labour and overheads.
3. Fixed overheads
▪ In absorption costing, further analysis can be done on the fixed
overhead variances to better understand the reason for any under or
over absorption.
4. Interpretation of variances
▪ The interpretation of variances is a crucial element of the control
process. Variances are often interdependent and this must be taken
into account when deciding on the control action to implement.
5. When to investigate
▪ Before deciding whether to investigate a variance, factors such as
size, trend and controllability should be considered.
▪ The interdependencies between variances should also be considered.
Calculate
• Sales – price variance AC MC
– sales volume
variance
Interpretation
Backward variances
Sales volume profit variance is the difference between actual units sold
and the budgeted quantity, valued at the standard profit per unit.
Example
53 461,100
Closing inventory (700 units @ $53/unit)) (37,100)
424,000
Budgeted 176,000
contribution
Budgeted fixed
overheads 130,500
Required
Sales
Variances
Sales price X
Materials X
Labour X
Variable overheads X
Fixed overhead expenditure X
Fixed overhead volume X
X X X
Actual profit X
Variances
Sales price X
Materials X
Labour X
Variable overheads X
X X X
Actual contribution X
Remember:
The direct labour cost data relating to last month was as follows:
Required
To the nearest thousand (in hours), what are the total standard
labour hours last month?
$
(1) Labour rate variance β109,200
Actual hours should cost
28,000 x standard cost 117,600
Actual hours did cost $8,400 A
$
Standard contribution on actual sales (flexed contribution) 23,000
Sales price variance 4,000 Favourable
Total variable costs variance 3,250 Adverse
Actual contribution 23,750
The sales volume variance reconciles from the budget contribution to the
flexed contribution and therefore is not required in this calculation.
A (i) only
B (ii) only
C (i) and (ii) only
D (i), (ii) and (iii) (2 marks)
$
Sales volume profit variance 6,000 adverse
Sales price variance 5,000 favourable
Total variable cost variance 7,000 adverse
Fixed cost expenditure variance 3,000 favourable
Fixed cost volume variance 2,000 adverse
What was the standard profit for actual sales in the last accounting
period?
A $101,000
B $107,000
C $109,000
D $115,000 (2 marks)
1. Sales variances
▪ Sales price variance and sales volume variance measure the effect on
profit of different selling prices and volumes to the standard.
2. Operating statements
▪ Operating statements show how the combination of variances
reconcile budgeted profit and actual profit. Be prepared to produce
part of the operating statement only, for example budgeted materials
cost to actual materials cost.
4. Backwards variances
▪ Sometimes an exam question may be set which requires you to work
from a set of variances back to actual or budgeted data.
Target setting
Market conditions
Goals and objectives Benchmarking
Economic conditions
Government
CSFs
Example
Question
• A machine
• A factory/division
• An organisation as a whole
• An individual
• A group of people
A good mission statement should state what is unique about the cafe.
Here are some suggestions:
• Specific
• Measurable
• Attainable
• Results-orientated
• Time bounded
• Profitability
• Productivity
• Personnel development
• Public responsibility
• Market share
• Product leadership
• Employee attitudes
• Balance between short-range and long-range goals
Advantages
• Comparisons carried out by the managers who have to live with any
changes implemented as a result
• Focuses on improvement in key areas and sets targets which are
challenging but achievable
• Can provide early warning signs of competitive disadvantage
• Should lead to greater instances of teamworking and cross-functional
learning
• Market conditions
Eg new competitor
• General economic conditions
Eg raising and lowering overall supply and demand
• Taxation
• Encouraging new investments
• Encouraging a wider spread of ownership
• Legislation
• Economic policy
1. Mission
▪ Top management's vision
4. Benchmarking
▪ Internal (within the same company)
▪ Competitive (reverse engineering)
▪ Functional
▪ Strategic
5. External influences
▪ Market conditions
▪ General economic conditions
▪ Government
Financial performance
measurement
Financial Non-financial
Example
Question
Financial measures
• Profit
• Revenue
• Cost
• Share price
• Cash flow
And non-financial measures – see Chapter 17
• Amount left after all direct costs and overheads have been deducted
from sales revenue
• Therefore concerned with profit over which operational management
can exercise day to day control
• May be an interdependency with the asset turnover ratio
Limitations
Asset turnover
Limitation
Liquidity ratios
Current ratio
X : 1, where X = current assets
current liabilities
• Should be > 1 otherwise business may not be able to pay its debts on
time.
The correct answer is D, both ratios will decrease. The opening current
ratio (current assets/current liabilities) is $1.8m / $1.0m = 1.8, and the
opening acid test (current assets less stock/ current liabilities) is $1.3m /
$1.0m = 1.3. Purchasing (say) $1.0m of inventory on short term credit will
decrease the current ratio to ($1.8m + $1m) / ($1.0m + $1.0m) = 1.4. The
acid test would also decrease to $1.8m / ($1.0m + $1.0m) = 0.9. Only
23% of candidates selected this alternative. The most frequently chosen
alternative was C (41% of candidates). On this type of question if the
answer is not immediately clear candidates should substitute in some
simple numbers to test out the effects of a transaction.
Make sure that you read the following article on ratio analysis from the
ACCA website:
www.accaglobal.com/uk/en/student/exam-support-
resources/fundamentals-exams-study-resources/f2/technical-
articles/ratio-analysis.html
• Subjective measures
• Judgement of outsiders
• Upward appraisal
• Accounting measures
Subjective measures
Judgement of outsiders
Upward appraisal
Accounting measures
Rationalisation
Benefits
• Lower costs
• Better products
• Higher profits
• Cost elimination/prevention
• Cost reduction
• Improving product quality and so selling more at the same price
• Improving product quality and so increasing selling price
Typical consideration in VA
Steps in a VA study
• Make a recommendation.
• If accepted, implement the recommendation.
• After a period, evaluate the outcome and measure the cost savings.
Value engineering
3. Management measures
▪ Subjective
▪ Judgement of outsiders
▪ Upward appraisal
▪ Accounting measures
5. Value analysis
▪ Planned scientific approach to cost reduction. There are four aspects
of value:
Cost value, Exchange value, Use value, Esteem value
▪ The value of the product may therefore be kept the same or else
improved at a reduced cost
Objectives
• Welfare of employees
• Welfare of society
• Responsibilities towards customers and suppliers
Non-financial measures
• Quantitative
• Qualitative
• Non-financial indicators
• Ratios
• Percentages
Capacity ratio
Efficiency ratio
Required
Calculate the efficiency, capacity and production volume ratios to one
decimal place.
The production volume ratio of 117% (more output than budgeted and
more standard hours produced than budgeted), is explained by the 111%
capacity working, and by good efficiency of 105%.
Balanced scorecard
Customer perspective
Examples
• Customer complaints
• On-time deliveries
Examples
Examples
Financial perspective
Examples
• ROCE
• RI
• Inputs
─ Money
─ Resources
• Process
─ Usually some ratio of economy and effectiveness measure
Economy
• Value for money in sourcing lecture staff of appropriate quality
Competitive tendering for computers, security, cleaning
Efficiency
• Cost of books per student
• Staff hours per student
• Teaching cost per student
• Total cost of producing a graduate
Effectiveness
• Achieving target pass rates of grade
• Proportion of graduates employed within a year
• Qualitative measures
• Quantitative measures
• Resource utilisation measures
• Simultaneous
• Heterogeneous
• Intangible
• Perishable
• Competitive performance
• Financial performance
• Quality of service
• Flexibility
• Resource utilisation (productivity)
• Innovation
4. 3 Es
▪ Performance is often evaluated using the 3 Es
▪ Economy, Effectiveness and Efficiency