Cost Analysis
Cost Analysis
Cost Analysis
Submitted to:
Dr. G. L. Sharma
Abhay Verma(53/08)
Amit Saxena(28/08)
Aditi Khurana(19/08)
Ankit Katarya(04/08)
Varun Jain(52/08)
S S Gupta(77/08)
Tameesh Sud(75/08)
LETTER OF TRANSMITTAL
This is regarding the project done by our group for Cost Accounting And
Control. In this project study we have tried to go through and take
reference from various books, articles and websites.
The project study has been done to critically analyze cost accounting of
Bharat Auto Machine Instruments - Rohtak and also for the purpose
of evaluation of our group for internal assessment, by the authorization of
our faculty members Dr. G. L. Sharma. We are indebted to him for
helping us with our report preparation and in future also we will be
privileged to take assistance from him.
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Acknowledgement
Table of Contents
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1. Company Profile
2. Management Accounting
– Objectives
– Advantages
– Limitations
3. Activity Based Cost Accounting
4. Bharat Auto Machine Instruments – Rohtak, Costing Procedure
5. Suggestions
COMPANY PROFILE
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Bharat Auto Machine Instruments(BAMT) is a reputed Gear
manufacture & supplier in India. It is a specialist in printing & pouch
packing machine parts. They have a large number of valued
customers of printing and packaging machine manufacturer. They
manufacturer gears, shaft, roller, bracket, slides, sprocket, timing
pulley, worms, worm wheels, fabricated jobs etc. The Unit is situated
in the heart of Rohtak city and is easily accessible. The unit follows
a dynamic approach & continuous improvement upon its operation
through technology up-gradation, innovating approach through
TPM. In this global competitive market, BAMT has sustained
because of more customer focus and energy management for
reducing the operational & energy cost.
Core Values:
• Customer Satisfaction
• Concern for environment
• Commitment to quality and excellence
• Innovation
Strengths:
• Robust and differentiated product pipeline of state of the art two-
wheelers
• Rich insight into consumer and market behaviour
• R&D capability driving new product development
• Extensive vender supply chain
• In-house instrumenting and industrialisation capability.
MANAGEMENT ACCOUNTING
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Focusing on internal customers, measures and reports financial and
other information that assists managers in fulfilling goals of the
organization. Financial accounting focuses on external reporting
through financial statements to investors, govt., authorities and other
parties.
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The objectives of cost accounting are:
• To ascertain and analyze costs: the primary objective of cost accounting
is to ascertain and analyze costs incurred on the production of various
products, jobs and services, etc.
• To control costs: cost accounting has developed various techniques such
as standard costing and budgetary control for controlling costs.
• To fix the selling price: cost accounting provides reliable data on the basis
of which selling price can be fixed.
• To reduce costs: of late, the objectives of cost accounting have been
extended to reducing costs. Value analysis, time and motion study,
standardization, simplification, etc. are important techniques of cost
reduction.
• To prepare monthly or quarterly cost statements for periodic review of
operating results.
• To provide useful information for planning and control and for taking
various decisions regarding increase in production, installation or
replacement of machine, the making or buying of a component,
continuing or closing down of business, etc.
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• It helps the management to initiate action to rectify delays, inefficiencies
and wastage.
• Centralization of purchasing is facilitated by the use of cost accounting.
• Maintenance of time and jobs records for workers reveals losses incurred
due to idle time. Such records assist in taking steps to minimize these
losses.
• A cost accounting system provides information about availability of
materials, labor, and machine capacity. In the absence of such
information, proper production plans cannot be drawn up.
• Cost accounting entails identifying normal and abnormal losses and
gains. This task becomes simpler when standards are set up.
• Cost accounting lays the basis for the system of standard costing and
budgetary control. These two are instrumental in the control of
expenditure. Variance analyses and comparison of actual performance
with budgets pinpoint areas where economies can be affected.
• Cost accounting data are very useful for the management for planning
carious activities. A wise manager takes a decision only after he has
carefully studied the cost implications of carious alternatives.
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of overheads into fixed and variable, division of costs into normal and
abnormaln, controllable and uncontrollable, etc., are based on
conventions, estimation and arbitrariness. The information provided by a
cost accountant, therefore, may not be necessarily being absolutely true.
It may be noted that such limitations are also found in any other system of
accounting. Principles and practice of cost accounting are based on sound
reasoning and keen common sense.
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Step 1: Identify and classify the activity related to the company’s
products.
The first step for the organization is to identify the set of activities being
performed by its indirect and support resources. Activities are associated
with purchase items, inspect items, move material, respond to customer,
etc. The list of activities defines all the activities being performed in
production facility.
• Unit level activities are those performed each time unit is produced or
sold.
• Batch level activities are those that are performed when it makes a group
of units in a batch.
• Product sustaining activities arises because the company does particular
types of business or maintain a particular product or service.
• Facility or general operations sustaining activities relate to an entire plant,
office or company as a whole.
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Activity cost drivers links activity cost to objects. An activity cost driver
is a quantitative measure of the output of an activity. Their cost driver
measure the average demand placed on each activity by the various
products. Then activity costs are assigned to products in promotion to
demand that the product place on average on the activities.
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accounting instrument to show the relationship between these
ingredients of profit planning. The entire gamut of profit planning is
associated with CVP interrelationship. A widely used technique to
study CVP relationship is break- even analysis.
Break-even analysis is concern with the study of revenues and cost
in relation to sales volume and particularly the determination of that
volume sales at which the firm’s revenues and total cost will be
exactly equal. Thus, the break-even point may be defined as a point
at which the firm’s total revenues are exactly equal to total cost
yielding zero income. No profit no loss point is a break even point or
a point at which losses ceases and profit begins.
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ANALYSIS OF THE DATA
Cycle Time
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AVERAGE INSTRUMENTING LIFE
Product Machine Hours
Gears 3750
Bracket 1850
Sprocket 2290
Shaft 695
Timing pulley 1910
Product AVERAGE INSTRUMENTING
LIFE(No of PIECES)
Gears 8000
Bracket 3000
Sprocket 4000
Shaft 1600
Timing pulley 4200
INSTRUMENTING
Product Instrumenting Unit Cost Total
Required (Rs) cost(Rs)
Gears 575 275 158125
Bracket 525 425 223125
TOTAL=Rs8,00,000
Gears =RS 331035
Bracket =Rs110345
Sprocket =RS165515
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Shaft =Rs55175
Timing pulley =Rs137930
TOTAL = Rs800000
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Sprocket =Rs2.1
Shaft =Rs3.4
Timing pulley =Rs2.5
LABOUR
LABOUR RATE= Rs 25 /Hr
THIS CALCULATED BY MULTIPLYING MACHIE HOUR AND LABOUR
RATE. FOR ALL PRODUCTS EXCEPT PRODUCT D REQUIRES ONE
PERSON PER MACHINE . PRODUCT D REQUIRES TWO PERSONS
PER MACHINE
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Bracket =Rs 46250
Sprocket =Rs 57250
Shaft =Rs 17375
Timing pulley =Rs 47750
Sprocke Timing
PARTICULRS Gears Bracket t Shaft pulley TOTAL
12,00,00 4,00,00 6,00,00 2,00,00 5,00,00 29,00,00
UNITS SOLD 0 0 0 0 0 0
DIRECT 55,60,00
MATERIAL Rs1.4 Rs1.7 Rs2.1 Rs3.4 Rs2.5 0
DIRECT
LABOUR Rs 0.08 Rs. 0.12 Rs. 0.10 Rs. 0.09 Rs. 0.10 2,62,000
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0 0
OVERHEADS
INSTRUMENTIN
G COST 158125 223125 172500 300000 120000 973750
OFFICE
SALARY 331035 110345 165515 55175 137930 800000
109397
OVERHEADS 1850820 894595 5 594435 888195 5323750
Timing
PARTICULARS Gears Bracket Sprocket Shaft pulley TOTAL
TOTAL COST 3626820 1622595 2413975 1292435 2188195 11145750
PERUNIT TOTAL
COST 3.02 4.056 4.023 6.46 4.38
SELLING PRICE 3.4 4.5 4.5 7 5
PROFIT 456000 177600 286200 108000 310000 1337800
CVP ANALYSIS
Gears =
1.4+.08+(0.75*158125+62070+82760+214390*0.7+178655*0.3)
/1200000
=Rs1.87
Bracket =Rs2.6
Sprocket =Rs2.79
Shaft =Rs4.923
Timing pulley =Rs3.25
FOR BEP
REVENUE-FC-VC=0
S.P*NO. OF UNITS PRODUCED-FC-NO. OF UNIS PRODUCED *VC=0
CONTN*NO.OF UNITS PRODUC-FC=0
.38*12X+.444*4X+.477*6X+0.62*2X+.54*5X-2873440=0
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4.56X + 1.776X + 2.862X + 1.24X + 2.7X – 2873440 = 0
13.138 X = 2873440
X = 218712 UNITS
TO BREAK EVEN FIRM IT HAS TO PRODUCE
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SUGGESTIONS
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LIMITATIONS
Being a “LALA” company most of the people were not aware of the
accounting system they are following. We had to guess it ourselves
only that which system of accounting they are following.
As the company is small and the accountants are not well qualified
so they were not aware of the ways of the activity based accounting
system. They were not able to carry the system very effectively
As they were very closed they were really hesitant of sharing any of
their accounting. Even after explaining our purpose and motive even
some of them tried to explain us the system they were following,
but it was really difficult to understand their complex system.
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