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Chapter 15 Accounting for Costs

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Chapter 15 Accounting for Costs * * Accounting for Costs Cost = a measurement, in monetary terms, of amount of resources used for some purpose. Variable cost is a ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 15 Accounting for Costs


1
Chapter 15Accounting for Costs
2
Accounting for Costs
  • Cost a measurement, in monetary terms, of
    amount of resources used for some purpose.
  • Variable cost is a cost that varies in total in
    direct proportion to changes in activity.
  • Fixed cost is a cost that remains constant in
    total within the wide range of activity.
  • Mixed cost is a cost that has both variable and
    fixed components.

3
cost/volume
  • Average costs total cost/volume.
  • Average cost behaves differently than total cost.
  • As volume goes up ?
  • Total fixed cost remains constant, total variable
    costs goes up, per unit variable costs stays the
    same, per unit fixed cost goes down, per unit
    total cost goes down.
  • As volume increases without limit, unit cost
    approaches variable unit cost and fixed cost per
    unit approaches zero.

4
Fixed and Variable Costs
  • Fixed costs
  • Non-variable costs items of cost that, in
    total, do not vary with volume.
  • e.g. Building rent, property taxes, management
    salaries.
  • Fixed costs are fixed for a range of activity and
    a limited period of time.
  • Fixed costs may change for reasons such as a
    deliberate management decision to change them.
  • Variable costs
  • Items of cost that vary, in total, directly and
    proportionately with volume.
  • Volume refers to activity level.
  • e.g. Material costs varies with units sold.
  • Electricity costs varies with production hours.
  • Stationery and postage costs varies with number
    of letters written.

5
Direct and Indirect Costs
  • Direct costs
  • Costs that can beeasily and conveniently traced
    to a unit of product or other cost object.
  • Examples direct material and direct labor
  • E.g. Wood to make furniture, hours worked on
    project, flour to make cake.
  • Indirect costs
  • Costs that cannot be easily and conveniently
    traced to a unit of product or other cost object.
  • Example manufacturing overhead
  • E.g. rent of a factory that make cars/furniture,
    managers salary.
  • Terms direct and indirect are only meaningful in
    context of a specific cost object.

6
Can we control costs?
  • Item of cost assigned to a specific
    responsibility center that is significantly
    influenced by actions of manager.
  • Direct Costs may be controllable (e.g. supplies
    usage) or non-controllable (e.g. depreciation on
    equipment or buildings purchased in previous
    periods).
  • all indirect costs are non-controllable.

7
Manufacturing Costs (Product cost)
The Product
8
Non-manufacturing Costs (Period cost)
9
Activity-Based Costing
Direct Cost Materials labor
Indirect Cost Overhead Costs
First-Stage Allocation
Order Size
Customer Orders
Product Design
Customer Relations
Other
Second-Stage Allocations
/MH
/Order
/Design
/Customer
Cost Objects Products, Customer Orders, Customers
Unallocated
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