Absorption Costing - Overview



Similar documents
Standard Costs Overview

Chapter 4 Job Order Costing. Job Costing vs. Process Costing Procedure of Job Costing Actual vs. normal Costs

What is a cost? What is an expense?

Accounting for Manufacturing

REVIEW FOR EXAM NO. 1, ACCT-2302 (SAC) (Chapters 16-18)

Introduction To Cost Accounting

Pool Canvas. Question 1 Multiple Choice 0 points Modify Remove. Question 2 Multiple Choice 0 points Modify Remove

AGENDA: JOB-ORDER COSTING

1. Managerial accounting: A. is governed by generally accepted accounting principles. B. places emphasis on special-purpose information.

Lesson-13. Elements of Cost and Cost Sheet

Chapter 4. Systems Design: Process Costing. Types of Costing Systems Used to Determine Product Costs

There are two basic types of cost accounting systems:

Chapter 3 Notes Page 1

n System Design Job Order Costing n What is Product Costing n Types of Product Costing n When and how to use Job-Order Costing McGraw-Hill /Irwin

Quiz Chapter 3 - Solutions. 1. The manufacturing operation that would be most likely to use a job-order costing system is:

CHAPTER 12. Cost Sheet ( or) Statement of Cost ELEMENTS OF COST

COST CLASSIFICATION AND COST BEHAVIOR INTRODUCTION

Dutchess Community College ACC 204 Managerial Accounting Quiz Prep Chapter 2

CHAPTER 9. Cost accounting systems CONTENTS

Lesson 5: Inventory. 5.1 Introduction. 5.2 Manufacturer or Retailer?

McGraw-Hill /Irwin 2-2 A company produces many units of a single product. One unit of product is indistinguishable from other units of product.

Copyright 2015 Pearson Canada Inc. 1

OM and Finance Interface Chapter 5

Account Numbering. By separating each account by several numbers, many new accounts can be added between any two while maintaining the logical order.

House Published on

Cash Flow Forecasting & Break-Even Analysis

SECTION IX. ACCOUNTING FOR INVENTORY

Job-order Costing; T-Accounts; Income Statement

Marginal and. this chapter covers...

Chapter 6 Statement of Cash Flows

QUESTIONS. Investors, creditors, and other users external to the organization. Assist external users in making investment, credit, and other decisions

Lesson FA a. Job Cost Accounting System Part 1a

B. Division of Costs The purpose of a Manufacturing Account is to ascertain Cost of Production ( ).

Introduction to Cost Accounting

Society of Certified Management Accountants of Sri Lanka

UG802: COST MEASUREMENT AND COST ANALYSIS

Lanen 3e, Chapter 7: Job Costing Practice Quiz

JOB ORDER COST 10 SYSTEMS AND OVERHEAD ALLOCATIONS

INTERNATIONAL ACCOUNTING STANDARDS. CIE Guidance for teachers of Principles of Accounts and Accounting

NON-INTEGRAL OR COST LEDGER ACCOUNTING SYSTEM

Financial Statements for Manufacturing Businesses

29.1 COST SHEET : MEANING AND ITS IMPORTANCE

Accounting Building Business Skills. Learning Objectives: Learning Objectives: Paul D. Kimmel. Chapter Thirteen: Cost Accounting Systems

how to prepare a profit and loss (income) statement

The Basic Framework of Budgeting

How To Balance Sheet

BUSINESS BUILDER 3 HOW TO PREPARE A PROFIT AND LOSS (INCOME) STATEMENT

SOLUTIONS TO EXERCISES

ACC 561 Week 3 Assignment Practice Quiz

6.3 PROFIT AND LOSS AND BALANCE SHEETS. Simple Financial Calculations. Analysing Performance - The Balance Sheet. Analysing Performance

Chapter 9 Managing Inventory in the Supply Chain

COST AND MANAGEMENT ACCOUNTING

Export Business Plan Guide

JOHNSON GRADUATE SCHOOL OF MANAGEMENT Cornell University

CHAPTER19. Acct202. Managerial Accounting 19-1

CHAPTER 20. Job Order Cost Accounting ASSIGNMENT CLASSIFICATION TABLE. Brief. A Problems. B Problems

Job, Batch and Process Costing

y = a + bx Chapter 10: Horngren 13e The Dependent Variable: The cost that is being predicted The Independent Variable: The cost driver

CHAPTER 19. Managerial Accounting. Brief 1, 2, , 5, 6, 7 2, 3 10, 11 4, 5, 7 2, 3, 4, 5, , 4, 5, 7, 13 14, 15, 16, 17

CASH FLOW STATEMENT. MODULE - 6A Analysis of Financial Statements. Cash Flow Statement. Notes

$20,000 invoice price 1,500 sales tax 500 freight 200 set-up (contractor) $22,200 total cost

Comprehensive Business Budgeting

CHAPTER 23 WORKING CAPITAL FINANCING

Classification of Manufacturing Costs and Expenses

SETTING UP YOUR BUSINESS ACCOUNTING SYSTEM

This is How Is Job Costing Used to Track Production Costs?, chapter 2 from the book Accounting for Managers (index.html) (v. 1.0).

1. The cost of a hard-drive installed in a computer: direct materials cost.

Dr. Baldwin AC 314 Chapter 2

Understanding Financial Statements. For Your Business

Exercise 17-1 (15 minutes)

Cost Concepts and Behavior

Multiple Choice Questions (45%)

Ratio Analysis. A) Liquidity Ratio : - 1) Current ratio = Current asset Current Liability

Chapter 9: Inventories. Raw materials and consumables Finished goods Work in Progress Variants of valuation at historical cost other valuation rules

Financial Accounting and Reporting Exam Review. Fixed Assets. Chapter Five. Black CPA Review Chapter 5

- 1 - Cost Drivers. Product Diversity - Difference in product size, product complexity, size of batches and set-up times cause product diversity.

Finance by Boundless

MGT402 - Cost & Management Accounting Glossary For Final Term Exam Preparation

Guide to Financial Ratios Analysis A Step by Step Guide to Balance Sheet and Profit and Loss Statement Analysis

Suggested layouts for financial statements in Accounting Courses National 5 and Higher

UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT NORTHERN & EASTERN DISTRICTS OF TEXAS REGION 6 MONTHLY OPERATING REPORT

ACCOUNTING COMPETENCY EXAM SAMPLE EXAM. 2. The financial statement or statements that pertain to a stated period of time is (are) the:

1. A set of procedures for controlling cash payments by preparing and approving vouchers before payments are made is known as a voucher system.

INTERMEDIATE GROUP - II PAPER 8 COST MANAGEMENT ACCOUNTING. The Institute of Cost Accountants of India 12, SUDDER STREET, KOLKATA

B Exercises 4-1. (d) Intangible assets. (i) Paid-in capital in excess of par.

Instructions for E-PLAN Financial Planning Template

FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT

Principles of Managerial Accounting ACC-102-TE. TECEP Test Description

ERP Course: Production and Materials Management Reading: Chapter 6 from Mary Sumner

Financial Statements

Understanding, Allocating, and Controlling Overhead Costs

Accounting 2910, Summer 2002 Practice Exam The cost of materials entering directly into the manufacturing process is classified as:

General Certificate of Education Advanced Level Examination June 2013

Dutchess Community College ACC 204 Managerial Accounting Quiz Prep Chapter 9

Vol. 1, Chapter 3 - Accounting Adjustments

Concepts in Enterprise Resource Planning. Chapter 5 Accounting in ERP Systems

CHAPTER 10 Financial Statements NOTE

CHAPTER 1. Managerial Accounting ASSIGNMENT CLASSIFICATION TABLE. B Problems. A Problems. Brief Exercises Do It! Exercises

Identifying Relevant Costs

Transcription:

Absorption Costing - Overview 1. Overview of Absorption costing and Variable Costing 2. Review how costs for Manufacturing are transferred to the product 3. Job Order Vs. Process Costing 4. Overhead Application - Under applied Overhead - Over applied overhead 5. Problems with Absorption Costing 6. Concluding Comments

Absorption Costing The focus of this class is on how to allocate manufacturing costs to the product. - Direct Materials - Direct Labor - Overhead Absorption costing is a process of tracing the variable costs of production and the fixed costs of production to the product. Variable Costing traces only the variable costs of production to the product and the fixed costs of production are treated as period expenses.

Absorption Costing There are three different types of Absorption Costing Systems: - Job Order Costing - Process Costing - ABC Costing In Job Order Costing costs are assigned to the product in Batches or lots. - Printing - Furniture manufacturing - Bicycle Manufacturing In Process Costing, costs are systematically assigned to the product, since there are no discreet batches to assign costs. - Oil Distilling - Soda Manufacturing ABC Costing assigns cost from cost centers to the product - Best in a multi product firm, where there are different volumes

Absorption Costing A simplified view of Production: Introduce Raw Materials Manufacture Product Store finished goods Sell Finished Goods 1. Direct materials 1. Direct labor 1. Production process are purchased applied to completed 2. Direct materials product 2. Goods are shipped are placed into 2. Overhead costs for sale production are incurred

Absorption Costing How do we account for the production process? 1. Direct materials are purchased and recorded as an asset. 2. As direct materials are placed into production, their cost is transferred from the raw materials account to the Workin-Process account (an asset) 3. As direct labor costs are incurred they are recorded in a labor expense account. Throughout the year they are transferred from the labor expense account to Work-inprocess account (an asset).

Absorption Costing 4. Overhead costs are initially accumulated in expense accounts (electricity, depreciation, etc..). Throughout the year they are transferred to Work-in-process. 5. When goods are completed, their costs (direct materials, direct labor and overhead) are transferred out of Work-inprocess, and into Finished Goods. 6. When foods are sold, their costs are transferred out of finished goods inventory (an asset) and into Cost of goods sold (an expense).

Absorption Costing Important points to take away from how we account for manufacturing costs: 1. Initial expenditures on raw materials, direct labor, and overhead are CAPITALIZED (recorded as assets) in Work in process and finished goods inventory. 2. They are transferred to expense accounts when the finished goods are sold (they go to cost of goods sold). 3. Generally the cost of goods manufactured, (the costs incurred in manufacturing the product) will not equal the cost of goods sold. - This means that in any year some of the costs associated with manufacturing the product will not flow through the income statement as an expense, they will remain in the inventory accounts as assets!

Absorption Costing Consider the following example: A company is formed to manufacture computers. It starts the year with $2000 in cash and equity. During the year the company incurs $500 in payroll costs, $500 in rent for the plant, and $500 in raw materials. During the year he makes 100 computers. What will his profits (or loss) be if he sells no computers? What will his profits be if he sells all 100 computers at $20 per computer?

Job Order Costing Job Order Costing is one method of allocating the costs of manufacturing to the product. In Job order costing the manufacturing costs are allocated to the product by batch. Job order costing is appropriate when the firm makes products in small batches, and each batch consumes different amounts of direct labor, direct materials, and processing time/energy. A survey in Cost and Management Accounting Practices.. in the Management Accounting Research Centre indicate that job order costing is the primary method of costing in the following industries: - Electorics - Machinery - Computers - Furniture and fixtures

Job Order Costing Consider a computer manufacturing company. They have a plant that receives an order for 50 computers. They need to determine how much it costs to manufacture these computers. The batch of 50 computers starts with the introduction of direct materials: - 50 Computer Cases - 50 Motherboards - 50 CD drives, and floppy drives Individuals mount equipment, add additional memory etc, to meet the specifications of the job. Special machines are also used to attach the disk drives.

Job Order Costing In Job order costing the manufacturing costs are allocated to the product by batch. Thus the company allocates manufacturing costs to the 50 Computers ordered. The Job is assigned a Lot #. Lets call this Lot # 1118. When the Parts warehouse provides 50 motherboards, cd roms etc to the manufacturing group, they allocate the costs of these raw Materials to LOT #1118. The individuals that assemble these computers record the time spent assembling Lot 1118 on their time sheets. The accounting system will allocate the payroll costs at the hourly wage rate to the job. Finally, the cost of the plant, the cost of the specialized machines, the utilities, the accounting system that tracks costs within the plant, the accountant running the system etc must be allocated to the product. This is known as overhead allocation.

Job Order Costing Lot # 1118 Direct Materials: 50 Motherboards @ $200 per board $10,000 50 Floppy Disk Drives @ $50 per drive $ 2,500 50 CD Rom drives @ $20 per dirve $ 1,000 50 Cases @ $20 per case $ 1,000 Total Direct Materials $14,500 Direct Labor and Overhead Employee #4323 40 hours @ $25 per hour $1,000 Overhead Allocation $100 per direct Labor hour $4,000 Total Direct Labor and Overhead $5,000 Total Cost $19,500

Job Order Costing A natural question to ask with this example, is how do we determine the overhead allocation rate? 1. Estimate total Overhead for the plant for the year. 2. Select an activity base to allocate overhead costs to the product. 3. Estimate expected usage of the activity base. 4. Overhead allocation Rate = Estimated Overhead Costs Estimated Activity Base

Job Order Costing Suppose the company estimates overhead costs for the plant to be to be $1,000,000 and direct labor hours to be 1000 hours. What is the overhead application rate? What happens if the employees only work 900 hours? What happens if the employees work 1100 hours? What happens if the price of heating oil is greater than expected?

Job Order Costing What happens to the under or over applied overhead? 1. Write-off directly to cost of goods sold. 2. Write off proportionately to WIP, Finished goods and Cost of goods sold. 3. Re-allocate costs to all products to correctly allocate overhead to WIP, Finished goods, and Cost of goods sold.

Rosen Corp (Problem 9-4) See the exercise Rosen Corp. : Problem 9-4 in Zimmerman, Jerold L. Accounting for Decision Making and Control (4 th Edition). McGraw-Hill/Irwin, 2002, pp 478-9.

Process Costing A process cost system is used when a manufacturing company makes large volumes of identical products. (pharmaceuticals, bottles of Pepsi, gallons of oil) Each unit consumes the same amount of direct materials, direct labor and indirect costs (overhead) Instead of assigning costs to jobs, then averaged across the job to get a per unit cost, process costing assigns costs to the product through each process the product goes through.

Process Costing Consider a Cola Manufacturer Mixing Bottling Distribution Direct materials (sugar, water, coloring)are mixed. They are poured into a bottle. Carbonation is added. They are capped.

Process Costing How does process costing differ from job costing? Survey indicates that Process costing is most often used in the following industries: 1. Oil refining (100%) 2. Chemicals 3. Pharmaceuticals 4. Food and Beverage

Absorption Costing - Problems 1. In an absorption cost system such as Job order costing, what happens to plant profitability if additional output is produced and not sold? 2. Suppose you allocate overhead using direct labor hours, and a special order comes in that requires the factory be completely recalibrated, to process the job. Will this cost be traced back to the job?

Variable Costing Variable costing tries to reduce the incentive to over produce by charging fixed overhead costs to expense in the period they are incurred, and allocating only variable costs. Increasing production does not allow a firm to move fixed costs out of COGS and into inventory.

First Eastern Bank (problem 9-13) See the exercise First Eastern Bank : Problem 9-13 in Zimmerman, Jerold L. Accounting for Decision Making and Control (4 th Edition). McGraw-Hill/Irwin, 2002, pp 483-4.

Frames Inc (problem 9-23) See the exercise Frames Inc. : Problem 9-23 in Zimmerman, Jerold L. Accounting for Decision Making and Control (4 th Edition). McGraw-Hill/Irwin, 2002, pp 491-2.

Summary 1. Discussion of Absorption costing - Strengths and weaknesses - How is it done. - Potential Solutions to some of the problems. 2. Reviewed how we account for manufacturing costs Highlighted how manufacturing costs are transferred to the product 3. In depth coverage of Job Order Costing and Overhead application 4. Set up discussion of ABC costing