Fundamentals of Cost and Management Accounting (Study Text)
Fundamentals of Cost and Management Accounting (Study Text)
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2 SOURCES OF DATA 18
INDEX
16 343
Self-Test question. The test of how well you have learned the material is your
ability to tackle standard questions. Make a serious attempt at producing your
own answers, but at this stage don’t be too concerned about attempting the
questions in exam conditions. In particular, it is more important to absorb the
material thoroughly by completing a full solution than to observe the time
limits that would apply in the actual exam.
To begin with, formal planning is essential to get the best return from the time
you spend studying. Estimate how much time in total you are going to need
for each subject you are studying for the Managerial Level. Remember that
you need to allow time for revision as well as for initial study of the material.
This book will provide you with proven study techniques. Chapter by chapter it
covers the building blocks of successful learning and examination techniques.
This is the ultimate guide to passing your ICMA Pakistan written by a team of
developers and shows you how to earn all the marks you deserve, and
explains how to avoid the most common pitfalls.
With your study material before you, decide which chapters you are going to
study in each week, and which weeks you will devote revision and final
question practice.
It is essential to know your syllabus. As your studies progress you will become
more familiar with how long it takes to cover topics in sufficient depth. Your
timetable may need to be adapted to allocate enough time for the whole
syllabus.
(1) Aim to find a quiet and undisturbed location for your study, and plan as
far as possible to use the same period of time each day. Getting into a
routine helps to avoid wasting time. Make sure that you have all the
materials you need before you begin so as to minimize interruptions.
(2) Store all your materials in one place, so that you do not waste time
searching for items around your accommodation. If you have to pack
everything away after each study period, keep them in a box or even a
suitcase, which will not be disturbed until the next time.
(3) Limit distractions. To make the most effective use of your study periods
you should be able to apply total concentration, so turn off all
entertainment equipment, set your phones to message mode and put
up your ‘do not disturb’ sign.
(5) Work carefully through a chapter, note imported points as you go.
When you have covered a suitable amount of material, very the
pattern by attempting a practice question. When you have finished
your attempt, make notes of any mistakes you make, or any areas that
you failed to cover or covered more briefly.
Financial accounting
Financial accounting involves recording the financial transactions of an
organisation and summarising them in periodic financial statements for external
users who wish to analyse and interpret the financial position of the organisation.
The main duties of the financial accountant include: maintaining the book
keeping system of the nominal ledger, payables control account,receivables
control account and so on and to prepare financial statements as required by
law and accounting standards.
In order to obtain this information, details are needed for each cost, profit,
investment and revenue centre.Such information is provided by cost
accounting and management accounting systems.
Cost accounting
Cost accounting is a system for recording data and producing information about
costs for the products produced by an organisation and/or the services it
provides. It is also used to establish costs for particular activities or
responsibility centres.
The terms ‘cost accounting’ and ‘management accounting’ are often used to
mean the same thing.
Management accounting
Management accounting has cost accounting at its essential foundation.
Non-financial information
At a tactical level, they might want to know about issues such as product or
service quality, speed of handling customer complaints,customer satisfaction
levels, employee skills levels and employee morale.
At an operational level, they may want to know about the number of rejects
per machine, the lead time for delivering materials and the number of labour
and machine hours available.
(i) The main purpose of financial information is to provide a true and fair view of
the financial position of an organisation at the end of an accounting period.
A Operational Planning
B Tactical Planning
C Strategic Planning
Organisations over the years have turned increasingly complex and the
Management Accountants have enhanced their knowledge and sharpened their
skills to meet the challenge of change, becoming more important players in the
management decision-making. Their training, during this period, has been
modified gradually to cover the best financial and business practices with
information management skills.
It is clear that the breadth of the work carried out by management accountants,
and their remit continues to grow. Accountants within business can be part of
an internal finance function, or may be part of a business partnering role. When
deciding on their structure, it is therefore important for organisations to
consider where best to position the management accountant within the
organisation. There are several options available:
5 Management information
Planning
Control
Decision making
Planning
Planning involves establishing the objectives of an organisation and
formulating relevant strategies that can be used to achieve those objectives.
In order to make plans (budgets), it helps to know what has happened in the
past so that decisions about what is achievable in the future can be made. For
example, if a manager is planning future sales volumes, they need to know
what sales volumes have been in the past.
Decision making
Decision making involves considering information that has been provided and
making informed decisions. In most situations, decision making involves
making a choice between two or more alternatives. Managers need reliable
information to compare the different courses of action available and
understand what the consequences might be of choosing each of them.
You can see from the above that managers require information at various
levels and for various purposes. It is the role of the management accountant to
provide that information.
Required:
Complete the table shown above, identifying each activity as either a planning,
a decision making or a control function.
C. Complete: Managers should be given all the information they need, but
information should not be excessive, for example a complete control report
on variances should include all standard and actual costs necessary to
understand the variance calculations.
C. Cost beneficial: The value of information should not exceed the cost of
producing it. Management information is valuable, because it assists
decision making. If a decision backed by information is different from what it
would have been without the information, the value of information equates
the amount of money saved as a result.
E. Easy to use: We must always think about the person using the information
we provide and make sure the information meets their needs.
Managerial level: Management at this level might want to know about issues
such as product or service quality, speed of handling customer complaints,
customer satisfaction levels, employee skills levels and employee morale.
Decisions made at this level:
Operational level: At this level, management may want to know about the
number of rejects per machine, the lead time for delivering materials and the
number of labour and machine hours available. Decisions made at this level:
You can see from the above that the information requirements change at the
different levels within the organisation. The nature of the information also
changes:
Non-financial information
Information provided by management accountants needs to be both financial
and nonfinancial. Financial information is important for management because
many objectives of an organisation are financial in nature, such as making
profits and avoiding insolvency.
Cost beneficial
Detailed
Understandable
Accurate
Complete
Regular
Timely
Accountable
Commercial organizations
The main objective of commercial organisations is usually to maximise the
wealth of its shareholders (although it can have many other, sometimes
conflicting objectives). The sort of financial information required by this type of
business would include:
A mission statement should describe the overall long term purpose of the
organisation. The different planning levels; Strategic, operational and tactical;
will contain shorter term objectives created in order to achieve the mission of
the business. The shorter term objectives will enable the businesses
progression towards the ultimate long term goal to be monitored and to enable
performance of employees to be measured along the way. Suitable
Public bodies
The main objective of public bodies is to provide services to the public in line
with government requirements. The information requirement of public bodies
will differ from commercial organisations. There will be no profit measurements
as these are non-profit-making organisations, therefore the focus will be more
on cost management. As these bodies must be run in the public interest, the
level of information must be detailed and accurate and allow assessment of the
efficiency and effectiveness of the organisation to be assessed by central
government and by the public.
Society
Society also has a need for financial information relating to the organisations it
deals with. Members of the public may be shareholders, employees or
customers of these organisations and they will have an interest in how these
organisations are run and are performing. Society will also be interested in the
impact organisations have on the local and wider community. Environmental
reporting, where organisations measure and report on their impact on the
environment, can be of great use to the public.
7 Environmental costing
Internal costs
These are costs that directly impact on the income statement of a company.
There are many different types, for example:
External costs
These are costs that are imposed on society at large but not borne by the
company that generates the cost in the first instance. For example,
carbon emissions
usage of energy and water
forest degradation
health care costs
social welfare costs
Cost beneficial X
Detailed
Understandable X
Accurate X
Complete X
Regular
Timely X
Accountable
True
Data means facts. Data consists of numbers, letters, symbols, raw facts,
events and transactions which have been recorded but not yet processed into
a form suitable for use. Information is data which has been processed in such
a way that it is meaningful to the person who receives it (for making
decisions).
The main sources of external information which we shall consider here are:
government sources
business contacts – customers and suppliers
trade associations and trade journals
the financial and business press and other media.
There follows a very brief list of just a small selection of trade associations
operating in the Pakistan
Many of these organisations publish their own industry or trade journals which
will contain useful news and other information for organisations operating in
that industry. Trade journals are also published by many publishing
organisations.
– the KSE 100 Index, the stock market index of the 100 leading shares
– the KSE 30 Index, the stock market index of the 30 leading shares
4 Sampling techniques
The purpose of sampling is to gain as much information as possible about the
population by observing only a small proportion of that population i.e. by
observing a sample.The term population is used to mean all the items under
consideration in a particular enquiry. A sample is a group of items drawn from
that population. The population may consist of items such as metal bars,
invoices, packets of tea, etc; it need not be people.
(2) Even if the population is known the process of testing every item can
be extremely costly in time and money, for example, gaining
information about the popularity of TV programs by interviewing every
viewer.
(3) The items being tested may be completely destroyed in the process,
for example in order to check the lifetime of an electric light bulb it is
necessary to leave the bulb burning until it breaks and is of no further
use.
(1) The sample must be of a certain size. In general terms the larger the
sample the more reliable will be the results.
There are several methods of obtaining a sample and these are considered in
turn.
Random Sampling
A simple random sample is defined as a sample taken in such a way that
every member of the population has an equal chance of being selected. The
normal way of achieving this is by numbering each itemm in the population.
Systematic sampling
If the population is known to contain 50,000 items and a sample of size 500 is
required, then 1 in every 100 items is selected. The first item is determined by
choosing randomly a number between 1 and 100 e.g. 67, then the second
item will be the 167th, the third will be the 267th... up to the 49,967th
item.Strictly speaking, systematic sampling (also called quasi-random) is not
truly random as only the first item is selected randomly. However, it gives a
very close approximation to random sampling and it is very widely used e.g. in
selecting a sample of bags of sugar coming off a conveyor belt.
Stratified sampling
If the population under consideration contains several well defined groups
(called strata or layers), e.g. men and women, smokers and non-smokers,
different sizes of metal bars, etc, then a random sample is taken from each
group. This is done in such a way that the number in each sample is
proportional to the size of that group in the population and is known as
sampling with probability proportional to size (pps).
Multi-stage sampling
This method is often applied if the population is particularly large, for example
all TV viewers in the Pakistan.The process involved here would be as follows:
Step 1: The country is divided into areas (counties) and a random sample of
areas is taken.
Step 2: Each area chosen in Step 1 is then subdivided into towns and cities or
boroughs and a random sample of these is taken.
Step 3: Each town or city chosen in Step 2 is further divided into roads and a
random sample of roads is then taken.
Step 4: From each road chosen in Step 3 a random sample of houses is taken
and the occupiers interviewed.
This method is used, for example, in selecting a sample for a national opinion
poll of the type carried out prior to a general election.
Cluster sampling
This method is similar to the previous one in that the country is split intoareas
and a random sample taken. Further sub-divisions can be made until the
required number of small areas have been determined.Then every house in
each area will be visited instead of just a random sample of houses. In many
ways this is a simpler and less costly procedure as no time is wasted finding
particular houses and the amoun of travelling by interviewers is much
reduced.
Ideally the sample would be chosen at random, and would be large enough so
as to be representative of the population. Unfortunately both of these aspects
introduce costs which are often unacceptably high.
Alternatives to the truly random sampling method have been outlined above.
They are all concerned with minimising costs whilst maintaining the
representative nature of the sample compared to the population.
Examples
P One city is chosen at random from all cities in the Pakistan, then the
electoral register is used to select a 1-per-1,000 sample.
Q Names picked from a hat.
R Every 10th person is chosen randomly from each ward in a hospital.
S One secondary school in a town is selected at random, then every pupil
in that school is surveyed.
T One person in ten is chosen from an alphabetical list of employees.
U People are stopped in the street according to instructions such as stop
equal numbers of men and women.
Answer C
In systematic sampling, population members are listed and members selected
at regular intervals along the list.
Answer B
In simple random sampling, there is no division of the population into groups.
In cluster sampling, only one group is selected and all its members are
surveyed. Quota sampling and stratified random sampling are both as
described in the question but quota sampling is not random.
Answer D
A is a stratified random sample, B is systematic and C is a quota sample.
Most organisations will have a costing system which is used to gather the cost
information for the organisation together. An organisation’s costing system is
the foundation of the internal financial information system for managers. It
provides the information that management needs to plan and control the
organisation’s activities and to make decisions about the future.
Actual unit costs for the latest period; could be used for cost control by
comparing with a predetermined unit cost. Could also be used as the basis
for decisions about pricing and production levels. For example, a manager
cannot make a decision about the price to be charged to a customer
without information which tells the manager how much it costs to produce
and distribute the product to the customer.
The word ‘cost’ can rarely stand alone and should always be qualified as to its
nature and limitations. You will see throughout this text that there are many
different types of cost and that each has its usefulness and limitations in
different circumstances.
Historical cost
Cost unit
Composite cost unit
Cost Centre
Cost object
The term historical cost is normally used when we consider the purchase of an
asset. This applies to both noncurrent assets, such as buildings or vehicles, or
current assets such as inventory. Historical cost is the original cost paid for the
asset at the time of acquisition.
By their nature, historical costs are out of date and might not reflect the
current value of the asset to the organisation.
The economic value of an asset is the value the organisation derives from
owning and using the asset. This value can be higher or lower than the
historical cost, depending on current circumstances. It can be affected by how
the asset is currently being used, the alternative uses for the asset or the
current inflation rate.
This means that a cost unit can be anything for which it is possible to
ascertain the cost. The cost unit selected in each situation will depend on a
number of factors, including the purpose of the cost ascertainment exercise
and the amount of information available.
The above list is not exhaustive. A cost unit can be anything which is
measurable and useful for cost control purposes. For example, with brick-
making, 1,000 bricks is suggested as a cost unit. It would be possible to
determine the cost per brick but perhaps in this case a larger measure is
considered more useful for control purposes.
Notice that this list of cost units contains both tangible and intangible items.
Tangible items are those which can be seen and touched, for example the
1,000 bricks. Intangible items cannot be seen and touched and do not have
A cost centre is used as a ‘collecting place’ for costs. The cost of operating the
cost centre is determined for the period, and then this total cost is related to
the cost units which have passed through the cost centre. For instance, an
example of a production cost centre could be the machine shop in a factory.
The production cost for the machine shop might be Rs 100,000 for the period.
If 1,000 cost units have passed through this cost centre we might say that the
production cost relating to the machine shop was Rs 100 for each unit.
A cost centre could also be a service location, a function, an activity or an item
of equipment. Examples of these might be as follows but you should try to
think of some others:
If you are finding it difficult to see how a sales representative could be used as
a cost centre, then work carefully through the following points:
Once we have determined this cost, the next thing we need to know is the
number of cost units that can be related to the sales representative.
The cost unit selected might be Rs 100 of sales achieved. If the representative
has achieved Rs 400,000 of sales, then we could say that the representative’s
costs amounted to Rs 10 per Rs 100 of sales. The representative has thus
been used as a cost centre or collecting place for the costs, which have then
been related to the cost units.
3 Classification of costs
Total product/service costs can be classified in a number of different ways.
The main cost elements that you need to know about are materials, labour
and expenses.
Material costs include the cost of obtaining the materials and receiving them
within the organisation. The cost of ingredients of any product is known as
material’s cost e.g. cost of wood, screws, glue, polish etc. The cost of having
the materials brought to the organisation is known as carriage inwards.
Labour costs are those costs incurred in the form of wages and salaries,
together with related employment costs.
Expense is any cost incurred other than materials and labour costs. These
costs are external costs such as rent, business rates, electricity, gas, postage,
telephones and similar items which will be documented by invoices from
suppliers.
Raw materials, that is, the basic raw material used in the manufacturing
process.
Components, that is, complete parts that are used in the manufacturing
process.
Consumables, that is, cleaning materials, etc.
Maintenance materials, that is, spare parts for machines, lubricating oils,
etc.
This list of subdivisions is not exhaustive, and there may even be further
subdivisions of each of these groups. For example, the raw materials may be
further divided according to the type of raw material, for example steel, plastic,
glass, etc.
Non-production overheads:
– Administration X
– Selling X
– Distribution X
—
TOTAL COST XX
Profit X_
Sales price XXX
When finished goods are transferred to the warehouse, this is where they
remain until they are sold to customers or held as inventory.
When costs are classified having regard to their nature, they are grouped
according to the reason for which they have been incurred. The broadest
classification of this type is to divide costs into direct costs and indirect costs.
The designer of the table may be entitled to a royalty payment for each table
made, and this would be classified as a direct expense. The total of direct
costs is known as the prime cost.
Cost behaviour means how cost reacts when activity level changes? Costs may be
classified according to the way that they behave. Cost behaviour is the way in which
input costs vary with different levels of activity. Cost behaviour tends to classify costs
as one of the following:
Variable costs are costs that tend to vary in total with the level of
activity in a direct relation and constant in per unit. As activity levels
increase then total variable costs will also increase.
Note that as total costs increase with activity levels, the cost per unit of
variable costs remains constant.
Examples of variable costs include direct costs such as raw materials
and direct labour.
Note that the total cost remains constant over a given level of activity
and the fixed cost per unit falls as the level of activity increases.
Examples of fixed costs:
rent
business rates (taxes on property)
executive salaries
Insurance premium
The cost of one supervisor is Rs 18,000 per annum and the cost of two
supervisors is therefore Rs 36,000.
(2) Council tax charge (5) Electricity bill (8) Depreciation of one,two
and three machines
(3) Bank loan interest (6) Telephone bill (9) Raw materials
Required:
(a) Find the variable cost per unit.
(b) Find the total fixed cost.
(c) Estimate the total cost if output is 350 units.
(d) Estimate the total cost if output is 600 units.
Solution
(a) Variable cost per unit = (Rs 9,000 – Rs 7,000)/(400 – 200) = Rs 2,000/200 =
Rs 10 per unit
Required:
Using the high/low method, analyse the total cost into fixed and variable
components.
Variable cost per unit is constant within this activity range and there is a step
up of 10% in the total fixed costs when the activity level exceeds 5,500 units.
For output volumes above 350 units the variable cost per unit falls by 10%.
(Note: this fall applies to all units – not just the excess above 350).
Required:
Estimate the cost of producing 450 units of Product LL in 20X9
Solution
Rs 8,000 – Rs 7,000 Rs 1,000
Variable cost per unit (<350) = ––––––––––––– = –––––– = Rs 10 per unit
300 – 200 100
(W1) Variable cost per unit in 20X9 (when output > 350 units) = Rs 10 x 0.9 =
Rs 9 per unit
When output is 80 units or more, another factory unit must be rented and fixed
costs therefore increase by 100%.
Required:
Calculate the estimated total costs of producing 100 units in 20X4.
Example - 4
Following is the data of six months output (number of units) and total cost
incurred by ABC Ltd.
Month Output Total Cost
Rs 000
1 80 730
2 60 610
3 120 880
4 90 750
5 70 650
6 30 430
Calculate the line of best fit using regression analysis.
Let: output = x
Total cost = y
y = a + bx
‘a’ is the intercept, i.e. the point at which the line y = a + bx cuts the y
axis (the value of y when x = 0).
‘b’ is the gradient/slope of the line y = a + bx (the change in y when x
increases by one unit).
‘x’ = independent variable.
‘y’ = dependent variable (its value depends on the value of ‘x’).
Suppose a cost has a cost equation of y = Rs5,000 + 10x, this can be shown
graphically as follows:
If y = 8,000 + 40x
(a) Fixed cost = Rs
(b) Variable cost per unit = Rs
(c) Total cost for 200 units = Rs
Solution
Working
Fixed cost = Rs 8,000
Variable cost = 200 x Rs 40 = Rs 8,000
Total cost = fixed cost + variable cost = Rs 8,000 + Rs 8,000 = Rs 16,000
Y = 4,800 + 8x
10 Responsibility accounting
Responsibility accounting is based on identifying individual parts of a business
which are the responsibility of a single manager.
A responsibility centre is an individual part of a business whose manager has
personal responsibility for its performance.The main responsibility centres are:
cost centre
profit centre
investment centre
revenue centre.
11 Cost coding
Cost accountants need to determine the costs that relate to each cost centre.
To make this simpler each expense is classified according to its cost centre
and type of expense. A cost code is then allocated to the expense to
represent this classification.
A code is a system of letters/numbers designed to be applied to a classified
set of item, to give a brief accurate reference, which helps entry to the
records, collation and analysis.
There are no set methods for designing a cost code, the organisation will
decide on the most appropriate coding system for their business.
Example
Suppose that the cost coding system for the JJ Ltd the shirt manufacturer is
as follows:
Cost code
15 Production labour
16 Production materials
17 Production expenses
18 Non-production labour
12 Chapter summary
Cost Classification
Overalls for machine workers 1
Cost of printer cartridges in general office 4
Salary of factory supervisor 1
Salary of payroll supervisor 4
Rent of warehouse for storing goods ready for sale 3
Loan interest 5
Salary of factory security guard 1
Early settlement discounts for customers who pay early 2
Salary of the Chairman’s PA 4
Road tax licence for delivery vehicles 3
Bank overdraft fee 5
Salesmen's commissions 2
(a) B Store assistants are not directly involved in producing the output
(goods or services) of an organisation.
(b) B This is a basic definition question. Direct costs are costs which can
be identified with a single cost unit, or cost centre.
Note that the depreciation charge for the factory machines (8) is as tepped
fixed cost because as activity increases to such a level that a second and
third machine are required, the fixed cost will double and then treble.
(a) The line would cross the y axis at the point 1,488
4,800
(a) The fixed cost is Rs
Working
Fixed cost = Rs 4,800
Variable cost = 100 x Rs 8 = Rs 800
Total cost = fixed cost + variable cost = Rs 4,800 + Rs 800 = Rs 5,600
(a) raw materials from which the product is made, e.g. sheet steel from which car
body sections are made
(c) materials used in operating the business as opposed to making the product, e.g.
machine parts and fuel for power generation.
Categories (b) and (c) are generally treated as indirect materials which form part of
overhead costs, so the remainder of this chapter will concentrate on the costing and
control procedures relating to direct materials.
PURCHASE REQUISITION
Date . . . . . . . . . . . 20 . . . . . . Serial No: . . . . . . . . . . .
Purpose*: stock/special production/consumables
capital equipment/ (budget reference)
*Delete as appropriate.
Your quotation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
To be delivered, carriage paid, to . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Terms
Please quote our Purchase Order number on all correspondence.
For ABC Ltd ...........................
When goods are received, the goods receiving department will determine what they
are, in terms of quantity, apparent quality, the supplier and purchase order number to
which they relate check the advice or delivery note accompanying the materials to see
that it agrees with the goods sent and then check the order copy to see that the goods
are as ordered. Full details of the goods are entered on a goods received note (GRN).
Accepted: . . . . . . . . . .
Inspector . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Date . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Date: . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Note:
(1) The opening balance of materials held in inventory at the beginning of a period is
shown as a debit in the material inventory account.
(2) Materials purchased on credit are debited to the material inventory account.
(3) Materials returned to stores cause inventory to increase and so are debited to the
material inventory account.
(5) Materials returned to suppliers cause inventory levels to fall and are therefore
‘credited out’ of the material inventory account.
(6) Indirect materials are not a direct cost of manufacture and are treated as
overheads. They are therefore transferred to the production overhead account by
way of a credit to the material inventory account.
(7) Any material writeoffs are ‘credited out’ of the material inventory account and
transferred to the income statement where they are written off.
(8) The balancing figure on the material inventory account is the closing balance of
material inventory at the end of a period. It is also the opening balance at the
beginning of the next period.
Date Ref. Quantity Date Ref. Quantity Physical Date Ref. Quantity
balance
In the above example values have been omitted. Materials are frequently valued at
standard or predetermined prices; this allows value columns to be dispensed with.
Various different methods may be used by the cost accountant in order to solve the
problem of allocating direct materials cost to production. The three that are required
for this syllabus are:
Example
In November 1,000 tonnes of 'Grotti' were purchased in three lots:
During the same period four materials requisitions were completed for 200 tonnes
each, on 5, 14, 22 and 27 November.
In order to calculate the actual material cost of each requisition the cost countant
would need to identify physically from which consignment(s) each issued batch of 200
was drawn. Such precision is uneconomic as well as impractical, so a conventional
method of pricing materials issues is adopted.
Using the data in the above example, we shall illustrate the three methods listed
above.
Grotti
Receipts (issues) Balance (quantity)
Date Quantity Price Rs Value Rs @ Rs 60 @ Rs 70 @ Rs 80
3 Nov 400 60 24,000 400
5 Nov (200) 60 (12,000) (200)
11 Nov 300 70 21,000 300
14 Nov (200) 60 (12,000) (200)
21 Nov 300 80 24,000 300
22 Nov (200) 70 (14,000) (200)
27 Nov (200) 75 (15,000) (100) (100)
Note that the value of the inventory at 30 November is at the latest price. Note also
that the balance at any time requires analysis by purchase price so that each
consignment is exhausted before charging issues at the next price.
Assuming that there are no further transactions in the month of May, what would be
the inventory valuation at that date, using a FIFO valuation method?
Under LIFO the closing inventory is now valued at Rs 60 per tonne, the earliest
price.The issue on 27 November exhausts the latest receipt (at Rs 80) so that the
previous latest is used to price the remaining 100 tonnes issued
The price so calculated is used to value subsequent issues until the next consignment
is received.
Grotti
Receipts (issues)
Date Quantity Price Value Weighted average
price
Rs Rs Rs
3 Nov 400 60 24,000
5 Nov (200) 60 (12,000)
11 Nov 300 70 21,000
A fresh calculation is required after each receipt but analysis of the balance is
unnecessary. Alternatively, in a computer system, where data is stored for, say, a
month and then processed all at once, an average price for the month could be
calculated and used to value all issues during the month, irrespective of sequence.
This average can be based on either of the following:
Periodic simple average – Average of all the prices of the period irrespective of
quantity delivered (only used where prices do not fluctuate significantly).
Periodic weighted average - Average of all the prices of the period weighted by
quantity delivered at each price.
For both alternatives, opening inventory is treated as the first delivery of the month.
Periodic weighted average= Rs ( 24, 000 + 21, 000 + 24, 000 )= Rs 69 per ton
(400 + 300 + 300)
Advantage:
produces realistic inventory values.
Disadvantages:
Produces out of date production costs and therefore potentially overstates profits.
Complicates inventory records as inventory must be analysed by delivery.
LIFO
Advantage:
Produces realistic production costs and therefore more realistic/prudent profit figures.
Disadvantages:
Produces unrealistically low inventory values.
Complicates inventory records as inventory must be analysed by delivery.
It is not acceptable under IAS 2 .
Advantage:
Simple to operate – calculations within the inventory records are minimised.
Disadvantage:
Produces both inventory values and production costs that are far from current values.
For example, if FIFO is in use and a business is tendering for a special order, it may
be dangerous to estimate onthe basis of past costs. Such costs probably include the
cost of materials purchased some time ago. Additionally, if selling prices are based on
ascertained costs, the use of FIFO or weighted average price could lead to under-
pricing, since costs may reflect out of date material prices.Note that these are only
methods of costing. In physical terms inventories should and would be used up on a
FIFO basis.
5.1 Stocktaking
The process of stocktaking involves checking the physical quantity of inventory held on
a certain date and then checking this balance against the balances on the stores ledger
(record) cards or bin cards. Stocktaking can be carried out on a periodic basis or a
continuous basis.
Periodic stocktaking involves checking the balance of every item of Inventory on the
same date, usually at the end of an accounting period.
Any differences (or discrepancies) which arise between ‘book’ inventory and
physical inventory must be investigated.
In theory any differences, as recorded in the stores ledger or the bin card, must have
arisen through faulty recording.
Once the discrepancy has been identified, the stores ledger card is adjusted in order
that it reflects the true physical inventory count.
Any items which are identified as being slow-moving or obsolete should be brought to
the attention of management as soon as possible.
Management will then decide whether these items should be disposed of and written off
to the income statement.
Slow-moving items are those inventory items which take a long time to be used up.
Obsolete items are those items of inventory which have become out of date and are
no longer required.
There are two categories of loss: those which occur because of theft, pilferage,
damage or similar means and those which occur because of the breaking of bulk
receipts into smaller quantities.
Inventory losses must be written off against profits as soon as they occur. If the value to
be written off is significant then an investigation should be made of the cause.
Issues continue to be made and priced without any adjustment and the difference at the
end of the period is written off.
Alternatively, the issue price is increased to compensate for the expected waste.
Suppose that a 100 metre length of copper is bought for Rs 99. The estimated loss
caused by cutting into shorter lengths as required is 1%.
The issue price could be based on the expected issues of 99 metres, i.e. Rs 1 per
metre rather than pricing the copper at:
Rs 99
Issue price = ––––– = Rs 0.99/metre
100
Packing materials – materials that do not form part of the product being sold but are
necessary to nable the product to be distributed to the customer.
Summary
Materials are likely to be a significant cost of most manufacturing organisations and
therefore it is essential that control is exercised over all aspects of materials from their
purchase through to their issue to production departments. This chapter has looked at
many of those aspects of control and most specifically the important area of valuation
of materials and closing inventory. This valuation and the comparison of the various
methods of valuation tend to be a popular examination topic.
By the time you have finished this chapter you should be able to:
2 Which document is used to record the return of excess materials to the stores?
4 Under the LIFO method of inventory valuation at what price is closing inventory
valued? (3.2)
5 What are the advantages and disadvantages of the weighted average price
method of inventory valuation? (3.3)
1. A firm has a high level of inventory turnover and uses the FIFO (first in first out)
issue pricing system. In a period of rising purchase prices, the closing inventory
valuation is:
2. The purchase and movements of a particular item of material are recorded using
the following documents.Indicate the order in which the documents would be raised by
writing 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 in the boxes as appropriate.
Goods received
note
Purchase requisition
Materials requisition
Purchase order
Materials returned
note
Answers to MCQs
1) A
2) 3,1,4,2,5
Units
Opening inventory 50
Purchases 130
Sales (100)
___
Closing stock 80
___
Rs
Comprising
1 April 70 x Rs 9 = 630
1 Feb 10 X Rs 8 = 80
710
(a) LIFO results in earlier purchases remaining in inventory. However, care must
be taken as some of the earliest priced inventory may have been used up
before the month end.
This leaves:
Rs
50 units from opening inventory @ Rs 7 350
20 units from Feb purchase @ Rs 8 160
10 units from April purchase @ Rs 9 90
600
Receipts (issues)
Weighted
Date Quantity Price Value average price
Rs Rs Rs
1 Jan 50 7.00 350
1 Feb 60 8.00 480
110 830 7.55
(b) FIFO reports the highest profit because this method charges the older, lower prices to
cost of sales. Conversely, LIFO charges the later prices to cost of sales and thus a
lower profit is reported in times of rising prices. The weighted average method
produces a profit figure which lies between the FIFO and LIFO result.
Purchasing cost
Holding costs / Carrying cost / storage Cost:
– Storage costs
– Stores administration cost
– Risk of theft/damage/obsolescence.
– Interest on funds from which inventory is bought.
– Opportunity cost i.e. earnings that can be earned from the funds if
inventory is not bought.
Purchase costs: once goods are purchased, capital is tied up in them and
until sold on (in their current state or converted into a finished product), the
capital earns no return. This lost return is an opportunity cost of holding the
inventory.
Other risks: once stored, the goods will need to be insured. Specialist
equipment may be needed to transport the inventory to where it is to be used.
Staff will be required to manage the warehouse and protect against theft and if
The longer inventory is held, the greater the risk that it will deteriorate or
become out of date. This is true of perishable goods, fashion items and high
technology products, for example.
If inventory levels are kept too low, the business faces alternative problems:
Stock outs: Stock out cost is a cost when an entity lost some earnings due
to not having sufficient level of stocks or inventory.
– lost contribution
– production stoppages
– emergency orders
Reorder/ setup costs: each time inventory runs out, new supplies must be
acquired. If the goods are bought in, the costs that arise are associated with
administration – completion of a purchase requisition, authorisation of the
order, placing the order with the supplier, taking and checking the delivery and
final settlement of the invoice. If the goods are to be manufactured, the costs
of setting up the machinery will be incurred each time a new batch is
produced.
Lost quantity discounts: purchasing items in bulk will often attract a discount
from the supplier. If only small amounts are bought at one time in order to
keep inventory levels low, the quantity discounts will not be available.
the optimum reorder level – how many items are left in inventory when the
next order is placed, and
the optimum reorder quantity – how many items should be ordered when
the order is placed for all material inventory items.
In practice, this means striking a balance between holding costs on the one
hand and stock out and reorders costs on the other.
The balancing act between liquidity and profitability, which might also be
considered to be a trade-off between holding costs and stock out/reorder
costs, is key to any discussion on inventory management.
1.4 Terminology
Lead time – the lag between when an order is placed and the item is
delivered
Ensure you can distinguish between the various terms used: reorder level,
reorder quantity, lead time and buffer inventory.
In considering the costs of inventory control, the actual costs of operating the
system must be recognised. The costs of a continual review as implied by the
two-bin system may be excessive, and it may be more economic to operate a
periodic review system.
The idea is to gear the quality of inventory control procedures to the value of
the inventory and therefore to help ensure that the inventory control methods
adopted are cost effective.
No of days' supply
held in inventory
Class A 2 days
Class B 5 days
Class C 10 days
Class D 20 days or more
inventory levels of high value category A items are kept low in order to save
on holding costs.
The priority with category D items is to avoid stockouts, hence much higher
inventories are held. The company could use the 'two bin system' for this
category of items.
Example
ABC Limited uses between 75 and 90 litres of oil per day. Delivery times vary
between 2–3 days. It has set its re-order level at 270 litres, and orders 500
litres each time.
Example
In the example of ABC Limited, the maximum level is:
Example
In the example of ABC Limited the re-order level can be calculated as: reorder
level = 90 × 3 = 270 litres
Example
In the example of ABC Limited, if we assume that the minimum inventory level
is the safety inventory, then the average inventory will be: average inventory =
63.75 + (0.5 × 500) = 313.75 litres
Example
K Limited has 3,400 units of material Y in stock. Of these units, 2,600 have
been requisitioned by a production cost centre for a job to commence in two
days. An order has been placed with the supplier for 1,500 units. Delivery is
expected in three days.
If this inventory level is at or below the re-order level then it will be necessary
to place another order with the supplier.
variability of demand
cost of holding inventory
cost of stock-outs.
Because of the assumption that demand per period is known and is constant
(see below), conclusions can be drawn over the average inventory level in
relationship to the order quantity.
If x is the quantity ordered, the annual holding cost would be calculated as:
If D is the annual expected sales demand, the annual order cost is calculated
as:
D
CO × ––
X
Because you are trying to balance these two costs (one which increases as
reorder quantity increases and one which falls), total costs will always be
minimised at the point where the total holding costs equals the total ordering
costs. This point will be the economic order quantity.
When the reorder quantity chosen minimises the total cost of holding and
ordering, it is known as the EOQ.
These assumptions are critical and should be discussed when considering the
validity of the model and its conclusions, e.g. in practice, demand and/or lead
time may vary.
EOQ =
Where:
CO = cost per order
D = annual demand
CH = cost of holding one unit for one year.
To work out the answer you should carry out the following steps:
Step 2: If the EOQ is below the quantity qualifying for a discount, calculate the
total annual inventory cost arising from using the EOQ.
Step 3: Recalculate total annual inventory costs using the order size required
to just obtain each discount.
Step 4: Compare the cost of Steps 2 and 3 with the saving from the discount,
and select the minimum cost alternative.
Example
D Co. uses component V22 in its construction process. The company has a
demand of 45,000 components pa. They cost Rs 4.50 each. There is no lead
time between order and delivery, and ordering costs amount to Rs 100 per
order. The annual cost of holding one component in inventory is estimated to
be Rs 0.65.
Solution
Step 1
CO = Rs 100 per order
D = 45,000 components per annum
CH = Rs 0.65 per component per annum
EOQ =
EOQ =
= 3,721 components
Step 2
Total annual costs for the company will comprise holding costs plus reordering
costs.
Rs
Extra costs of ordering in batches of 6,000 (2,700 – 2,419) (281)
Less: Saving on extra discount
(0.75% – 0.5%) × Rs 4.5 × 45,000 506.25
Step 4
Net cost saving 225.25
Summary
To keep inventory levels under control management will need a regular flow of
information on inventory levels to act upon. For economy the inventory control
system is frequently restricted to the most important items. It has been
estimated that in many businesses, about 20% of the items comprise about
80% of total materials cost.
Regular reports.
Investment in inventory
1 State two benefits and the costs associated with holding inventory. (1.1–1.2)
information is available:
1. Based on the data above, a replenishment order should be issued when the
inventory balance reaches at:
A) 2,500 tyres
B) 2,800 tyres
C) 3,000 tyres
D) 3,200 tyres
2. B
ased on the data above, the maximum inventory level is:
A) 4,500 tyres
B) 4,900 tyres
C) 5,000 tyres
D) 5,200 tyres
3. The objective of the EOQ as part of a inventory control policy is to ensure that
1) B
2) B
3) C
= 2 x Rs 150 x 5,000
Rs 2
= 866 units (to nearest unit).
Supervisor’s Gross
Signature: Wages
..........................................................................
1.6 Task related activity time records
Known variously as job sheets, operations charts or piece-work tickets. They
are generally more accurate and reliable than time-related activity time records
and are essential for use with incentive schemes. An example is given below.
Time Saved
Hours Rate Paid
Rs Rs
Time wages
Bonus
Total wages
2. Payroll
3.1 Introduction
There are two basic approaches to remuneration, time-related or output-
related.The two basic methods are time rate and piece rates.
3.3 Piece-work
The direct alternative to time rate is piece-work, whereby a fixed amount is
paid per unit of output achieved, irrespective of time spent. Rigid inspection
procedures are required to ensure work is of an adequate standard.
Example
A company operates a differential piece-rate system and the following weekly
rates have been set:
Employees are paid a guaranteed minimum wage of Rs 1,300 per week. How
much would be paid to the following employees for the week?
Solution
Employee A = (500 units × Rs 2.0) + (100 units × Rs 2.5) + (200 units ×
Rs 5.5) = Rs 2,350
Employee B = (500 units × Rs 2.0) + (70 units × Rs 2.5) = Rs 1175. This
is less than the guaranteed minimum therefore employee B would be paid Rs
1,300.
Example
A company operates a piecework system of remuneration, but also
guarantees its employees 75% of a time-based rate of pay which is based on
Rs 19 per hour for an eight hour working day. Three minutes is the standard
time allowed per unit of output. Piecework is paid at the rate of Rs 18 per
standard hour.
A Rs 114
B Rs 152
C Rs 180
D Rs 190
Solution
C
200 units x standard time of 3 minutes per unit = 600 minutes, or 10 hours.
Employee gross pay = 10 hours x Rs 18 = Rs 180
Guaranteed (Rs 19 x 8 hours) x 75% = Rs 152 x 75% = Rs 114
As gross pay exceeds the guaranteed amount, the answer is Rs 180.
4. Incentive schemes
(a) Halsey – The employee receives 50% of the time saving, i.e.
Rs
Bonus = 60 - 36 x Rs 48 9.6
2 60
(b) Rowan - The proportion paid to the employee is based on the ratio of time
taken to time allowed, i.e.
Example
Using the facts in (a) above
Rs
Bonus = 36 x Rs 48 x 24 11.5
60 60
Premium bonus schemes of the type described are really appropriate only
forskilled craftsmen. In continuous production the output of the individual
workeris largely governed by the speed of the flow line, although such
schemes may be suitable for special jobs, e.g. fitting radios in motorcar
assembly. As with straight piece-work, production under bonus for timesaving
requires strict inspection to prevent poor quality work.Many different schemes
exist in practice for calculating the bonus payable. In an examination you
should follow the instructions carefully to calculate the bonus from the data
supplied
Example
Allowed time – 1 hour.
Average time taken by employee over last three months – 50 minutes.
Normal rate – Rs4.80/hour.
Agreed incentive rate (say) – Rs 5.00/hour.
Note: the incentive rate will be a matter of negotiation. This incentive wage
rate will be reviewed periodically in the light of the employee's actual
performance.
Example
Rs
Sales 100,000
Less: bought in materials and services 55,000
Example
Ten employees work as a group. When production of the group exceeds the
standard – 200 pieces per hour – each employee in the group is paid a bonus
for the excess production in addition to wages at hourly rates. The bonus is
computed thus: the percentage of production in excess of the standard
quantity is found, and one half of the percentage is regarded as the
employees' share. Each employee in the group is paid as a bonus this
percentage of a wage rate of Rs 52 per hour. There is no relationship
between the individual worker's hourly rate and the bonus rate.The following
is one week's record:
Hours
Worked Production
Monday 90 24,500
Tuesday 88 20,600
Wednesday 90 24,200
Thursday 84 20,100
Friday 88 20,400
Saturday 40 10,200
_______ ______
480__ 120,000
Solution
(a) Standard production for the week = 480 hoursx 200 = 96,000 pieces
Actual production for the week = 120,000 pieces
Bonus rate =
= Rs 6.5 per hour
Rs Rs
Basic 42 x Rs 30 1.260 44 x Rs 37.5 1,650
Bonus 42 x Rs 6.5 273 44 x Rs 6.5 286
Total pay 1,533 1,936
The gross wages total provided from the payroll represents a control figure
forcost analysis and gross wages comprise basic pay, overtime, bonuses and
allowances. For cost ascertainment purposes, direct wages will be charged to
cost units and indirect wages will be charged to cost centres for later allotment
to cost units. Therefore it is important that the system should distinguish
between direct and indirect wages. One further point may require clarification.
The distinction between wages and salaries is meaningless for cost
accounting purposes. What is important is whether the payment can be
regarded as direct or indirect.
Direct labour costs are credited from the labour account and debited in
the work-in-progress (WIP) account. Remember, direct labour costs are
directly involved in production and are therefore transferred to WIP before
being transferred to finished goods and then cost of sales.
Indirect labour costs are also credited ‘out of’ the labour account and
debited to the production overheads account. It is important that total
labour costs are analysed into their direct and indirect elements.
Labour account
Rs 000 Rs 000
Bank (1) 80 WIP (2) 60
Production overheads (3)
Indirect labour 14
Overtime premium 2
Shift premium 2
Sick pay 1
Idle time 1
80 80
(1) Labour costs incurred are paid out of the bank before they are
analysed further in the labour account.
(3) Indirect labour costs include indirect labour (costs of indirect labour
workers), overtime premium (unless overtime is worked at the specific
request of a customer), shift premium, sick pay and idle time. All of
these indirect labour costs are collected in the production overheads
account. They are transferred there via a credit entry out of the labour
account and then debited in the production overheads account.
6.1 Productivity
One of the major responsibilities of production management is to improve
productivity. To assist in this, regular reports analysed by process, machine
group or department are required, showing:
training reduced efficiency until the new employee reaches the required
skill.Furthermore, a high rate of turnover tends to lower the performance of
continuing employees, who may become restless and resentful of the extra
burden of training new members and of additional temporary duties imposed
upon them. Labour turnover can be calculated as:
Replacement Costs:
advertising costs
cost of selection (time spent interviewing etc.)
training new employees
reduced efficiency until the new employee reaches the required skill.
Prevantion Costs:
Preventive costs include the costs associated with escaping the avoidable causes of
labour turnover:
– pay competitive wages and salaries if remuneration is poor
– improve poor working conditions
– offer good training opportunities
– make sure promotion prospects arise as necessary
– stamp out bullying in the workplace
– investigate high labour turnover rates objectively.
Labour documentation
1 What is a clock card? (1.3)
2 What is a time sheet? (1.5)
3 What is a job sheet? (1.6)
Payroll
4. What does payroll preparation involve? (2.1)
Remuneration methods
5. What are the two main approaches to calculating the remuneration paid to
employees? (3.1)
Incentive schemes
6. What is measured day work? (4.2)
7. What is value added? (4.3)
8. What is a group incentive scheme? (4.4)
2. The following graph shows the wages earned by an employee during a single
day.
1) B
2) D
Halsey
Bonus = 60 – 80 Rs 48 = Rs 16.8
2 60
Rowan
Bonus = 18 x 42 Rs 48 = Rs 10
16 60
87,700 87,700
Overheads
Overhead allocation
Overhead apportionment
Overhead absorption
Blanket absorption rates and departmental absorption rates
Over and under absorption of overheads
Ledger entries relating to overheads
1.1 Introduction
Direct expenses are expenses that can be directly identified with a specific cost
unit or cost centre.
There are few examples of direct expenses but royalties paid to a designer or fees
paid to a subcontractor for a specific job could be classed as direct expenses.
Indirect expenses cannot be directly identified with a specific cost unit or cost
centre. Indirect expenses are part of factory overheads.
For example, the cost of renting a factory where shirts are manufactured is
classified as an indirect cost because it would be impossible to relate such
costs to shirts only, if other clothes, such as dresses and suits were also made
in the same factory.
Other cost centres in the production department are not directly involved with the
production process but provide support services for the production cost centres.
These are called service cost centres, and examples include the maintenance
department and the stores.
In this chapter you will learn how this “sharing out” is accomplished for production
overheads, using a costing method known as absorption costing.
2.1 Introduction
To attribute overhead costs to cost units, a sequence of procedures is
undertaken:
Key:
direct cost allocation
apportionment of service centre costs to production
absorption of production
overhead costs into units of output
Some items can be allocated immediately, e.g. the salary of a cost centre
supervisor or indirect materials issued to a cost centre.
3.1 Example
The ABC Washing Machine Company produces a standard washing machine in
three production departments (Machining, Assembling and Finishing) and two
service departments (Materials handling and Production control)
Materials:
Machining Rs 240,000
Assembly Rs 160,000
Finishing Rs 40,000
Materials handling Rs 3,742
Wages:
Machining Rs 65,000
Assembly Rs 27,500
Finishing Rs 15,000
Materials handling Rs 8,000
Production control Rs 11,200
Other costs:
Machining Rs 21,922
Assembly Rs 12,960
Finishing Rs 7,920
Materials handling Rs 27,998
Production control Rs 2,400
You are required to prepare a statement showing the overhead allocated and
apportioned to each of the production departments.
Solution
Allocation
Allocation is simply a matter of extracting the data given in the question and
putting it under (i.e. allocating it to) the appropriate headings. In effect, in this
example, the allocation has already been done: you just need to rearrange the
information.
Apportionment
Service department costs (Materials handling and Production control) now have to
be re-apportioned to production departments. The 'portions' are the percentages
shown in the question.
Now that all the production overhead costs have been attributed to production
cost centres, the total for each cost centre can be related to the cost units worked
on in that cost centre.
There are no hard and fast rules for which bases of apportionment to use
Except that whichever method is used to apportion overheads, it must be fair.
Possible bases of apportionment include the following:
Other costs
Power Rs 24,400
Rent and rates Rs 48,800
Solution
Power is most appropriately apportioned on the basis of kilowatt hours (KwH).
The total is 146,400 hours and the proportion used in, for example, Machining is
therefore 83,844/146,400. Applying this fraction to the cost of power Rs 24,400
gives Rs 13,974 as the amount to be apportioned to Machining. Rent and rates is
most appropriately apportioned on the basis of floor space. The total is 122,000
m2 so the proportion used in, for example, the Finishing department is
13,200/122,000. Applying this fraction to the cost of rent and rates gives Rs 5,280
as a fair share for Finishing. The same calculations should be carried out for each
of the other departments giving the following results.
The total column is the same as in the original question, so the overall answer is
unchanged.
In selecting a basis for apportioning an overhead item, the cost of obtaining a high
degree of accuracy must be considered. For example, the charge for heat and
light could be shared on the basis of a complex formula incorporating power
points, light bulbs and wattage but you should be aware that the end result would
still be open to question.
Rs
Supervision 7,525
Indirect workers 6,000
Holiday pay and National Insurance 6,200
Tooling cost 9,400
Machine maintenance labour cost 4,500
Power 1,944
Small tools and supplies 1,171
Insurance of machinery 185
Insurance of building 150
Rent and rates 2,500
Depreciation of machinery 9,250
________
48,825__
Q R S T Total
Floor Space (sq meter) 1,800 1,500 800 900 5,000
Kilowatt hours 270,000 66,000 85,000 65,000 486,000
Capital cost of machines (Rs.) 30,000 30,000 8,000 16,000 74,000
Indirect workers (persons) 3 3 1 1 8
Total workers (persons) 19 24 12 7 62
Machine maintenance hours 3,000 2,000 3,000 1,000 9,000
Tooling costs (Rs) 3,500 4,300 1,000 600 9,400
Supervision costs (Rs) 2,050 2,200 1,775 1,500 7,525
Small tools and supplies (Rs) 491 441 66 173 1,171
Machine running hours 30,000 36,000 19,000 8,000 93,000
Allocate and apportion each of the costs given to the four groups of machines on
a suitable basis and then calculate a cost per machine running hour (a machine
hour rate) for each of the four groups of machines.
The sub-total of allocated costs would be suitable for control information and the
grand total would be used, as we'll see later, for absorption purposes.
Example
Speed Manufacturing Co Ltd has three production departments (two machine shops
and one ssembly shop) and three service departments, one of which – the
Engineering Service Department – serves the machine shops only.The annual
budgeted overhead costs for the year are:
62,570 22,600
Rs
Depreciation of machinery 22,000
Insurance of machinery 4,000
Insurance of building 1,800 (Note 1)
Power 3,600
Light and heat 3,000
Rent and rates 7,050 (Note 2)
Notes:
1. Because of special fire risks, Machine shop A is responsible for a special
loading of insurance on the building. This results in a total building
insurance cost for Machine shop A of one-third of the annual premium.
Solution
(a) Overhead analysis sheet
Genera
Machin shop Assem Engineerin
Indirect wages stores l Total
eA B bly g service
Service
Consumable Rs Rs Rs Rs Rs Rs Rs
supplies 23,260 20,670 8,110 4,100 2,670 3,760 62,570
6,300 9,100 2,100 1,400 2,100 1,600 22,600
Bases of apportionment
Depreciation and insurance of Book value of machinery
machinery:
Insurance of building: One-third to machine shop A,
balance apportioned on area
Power: Power consumption
Light and heat: Area
Rent and rates: Area excluding general Service
Notional rent: 8% × Rs 6,000
Workings
(W-1) Consumable supplies Consumable supplies Stores cost
apportionment
Rs
Machine shop A 6,300 63/175
Machine shop B 9,100 91/175
Example
A company has three production departments, A, B and C, and two service
departments, maintenance (M) and payroll (P). The following table shows how
Production Service
Department A B C M P
Costs (Rs) 3,000 4,000 2,000 2,500 2,700
Proportion M (%) 20 30 25 – 25
Proportion P (%) 25 25 30 20 –
Solution
Production Service
A B C M P
Rs Rs Rs Rs Rs
Costs 3,000 4,000 2,000 2,500 2,700
Reapportion M 500 (20%) 750 (30%) 625 (25%) (2,500) 625 (25%)
– 3,325
Reapportion P 831 (25%) 831 (25%) 998 (30%) 665 (20%) (3,325)
665
Reapportion M 133 200 166 (665) 166
166
Reapportion P 41 42 50 33 (166)
33
Reapportion M 7 10 8 (33) 8
Reapportion P* 4,515 5,835 3,850
Department Rs '000
A 120
B 80
C 65
X 24
Y 15
Service
Production/Service Departments
department
A B C X Y
X 30% 30% 20% – 20%
Y 50% 10% 30% 10% –
4 Absorption
4.1 Introduction
The final stage in the process (Step 5, if you look back at the introduction to this
chapter) is to reflect the cost of overheads in individual cost units. This is done using
a rate per unit, just like materials or labour.
Where the absorption basis is units, hours or whatever is appropriate for the basis
being used.
Example
Returning to the example of the ABC Washing Machine Company we found the
following production overhead costs.
Let's say it has been decided that a separate absorption rate for each cost centre
is to be calculated as follows:
Solution
Absorption rates:
The production overhead absorbed is then added to the direct cost of each
washing machine to determine the total production cost per unit. For example if
we are told that a regular washing machine incurs a direct material cost of Rs 220
per unit and a direct labour cost of Rs 55 per unit, the total production cost can be
built up as follows.
Rs
Direct material 220.00
Direct labour 55.00
275.00
Production overhead (as above) 42.76
Total production cost 317.76
It is usual for a product to pass through more than one department during the
production process. Each department will normally have a separate departmental
overhead absorptions rate OAR.
Machining Assembly
Product A 1 hr 1 hr
Product B 2 hrs 1/2 hr
Product C None 4 hrs
Machining Assembly
Rs 100,000 Rs 150,000
Solution
(i) Departmental OAR
Machining Assembly
Budgeted overheads Rs 100,000 Rs 150,000
Budgeted labour hours (1 x 1,000) + (2 x 1 x 1,000) + (1/2 x
2,000) = 5,000 2,000)
+ (4 x 500) = 4,000
OAR Rs 20 Rs 37.50
Machining Assembly
OAR Rs 20 Rs 37.50
One unit of “B” requires 2 hrs 1/2 hr
Overhead absorbed Rs 40 18.75
Total hours for producing one unit of “B” (2+1/2 hrs) = 2.5 hours
Total overhead absorbed for one unit of “B” (2.5 x 27.78) = Rs 69.45
Production department 1 2
Fixed overhead Rs 240,000 Rs 200,000
Total direct labour cost Rs 2,400,000 Rs 4,000,000
Total direct materials cost Rs 200,000 Rs 400,000
44
If fixed overheads are absorbed on the basis of direct labour cost, what is the
fixed overhead cost per unit of IC?
5.1 Introduction
The rates used to absorb overheads into cost units will not, of course, be
calculated with hindsight. They will be predetermined rates, based upon budgeted
figures.
Budgeted volume' may relate to units, direct labour hours, machine hours, etc.If
either or both of the actual overhead cost or activity volume differ from budget, the
use of this rate is likely to lead to what is known as under absorption or over
absorption of overheads.
Example
In year 9 the budget for the machine shop shows:
In January year 9 the machine shop incurred Rs 5,400 of overhead and 1,050
machine hours were worked.
Solution
Absorption rate = Budgeted overhead = Rs 60,000______ = Rs 5.00 per machine
hour Bugdgeted volume 12,000 machine hours
Rs
actual overhead costs were Rs 400 higher than the budgeted amount of (Rs
60,000 / 12) = Rs 5,000 for the month
actual volume was 50 hours greater than the budgeted (12,000 hours / 12) =1,000
hours for the month.
Example
Following data relates to STAR manufacturing:
Actual labour and machine hours recorded against each cost centre were:
Required:
Calculate the followings:
Solution
(i)
Absorption rates:
Per machine hour Rs 1.277
Per labour hour Rs 1.481 Rs 2.525
(ii)
Machining Assembly Finishing
Rs Rs Rs
Amount absorbed 41,694 45,970 9,911
Actual cost incurred 43,528 49,575 9,240
——— ——— ———
Over/ (Under) absorption (1,834) (3,605) 671
——— ——— ———
Rs/unit
Direct costs 17
Fixed overhead 9
26
other costs were as budgeted.What was the amount, if any, of over or under
absorption of fixed overhead?
The unit cost of production will include overhead at the predetermined rate and,
generally, overhead under or over-absorbed will be shown as a separate item in
the costing profit and loss account.
A large balance in the over/under-absorbed account may indicate that unit costs
are inaccurate and management should be made aware that such costs must be
used with care. This situation can be avoided by undertaking regular reviews of
the overhead absorption rate to ensure that it still reflects current operating
conditions.
The following example will illustrate the cost accounting entries relating to
overhead absorbed.
Machine
Hours Direct labour Direct wages Units
worked hours worked Rs Produced
Solution
(a)
Dr Cr
Rs Rs
Factory overhead control account 1,550,000
Accounts payable 1,550,000
Overheads incurred
Dr Cr
Rs Rs
Department A overhead account 100,000
Department B overhead account 400,000
Department C overhead account 700,000
Department D overhead account 350,000
Factory overhead control account _ 1,550,000
Transfer of actual departmental overhead for 1,550,000 1,550,000
period
(c)
Dr Cr
Rs Rs
Profit and loss account 27,500
Department B overhead account 2,500
Department C overhead account 20,000
Department D overhead account 5,000
Transfer of under-absorbed departmental 27,500 27,500
expenses for period
Working
Absorbed overhead
Rs
Department A 10,000 machine hours x Rs 100,000
10
Department B 5,300 labour hours x Rs 75 397,500
Department C 100% of Rs 680,000 680,000
Department D 13,800 units x Rs 25 345,000
1,522,500
By the time you have finished this chapter you should be able to:
explain absorption costing
prepare cost statements for allocation and apportionment of overheads
including reciprocal service departments
calculate and discuss overhead absorption rates
calculate under/over recovery of overheads.
calculate product costs under absorption costing.
Overheads
1 What is overhead? (1.2)
2 What are the three ways in which indirect production costs are incurred? (1.3)
Absorption
6 How is the overhead absorption rate calculated? (4.1)
7 State five possible absorption bases that may be used (4.2)
2. A method of dealing with overheads involves spreading common costs over cost
centres on the basis of benefit received. This is known as:
A overhead absorption
B overhead apportionment
C overhead allocation
D overhead analysis
Required:
Calculate the budgeted overhead absorption rates for each production department
using the following methods:
(i) a machine hour rate in the weaving department
(ii) a direct labour hour rate in the proofing department
(iii) another suitable method in the finishing department
1) D
2) B
3) C
Rs Rs Rs Rs Rs
Supervision A 2,050 2,200 1,775 1,500 7,525
Indirect workers 4 2,250 2,250 750 750 6,000
Holiday pay and NI 5 1,900 2,400 1,200 700 6,200
Tooling cost A 3,500 4,300 1,000 600 9,400
Machine
maintenance labour 6 1,500 1,000 1,500 500 4,500
Power 2 1,080 264 340 260 1,944
Small tools, etc. A 491 441 66 173 1,171
Insurance of 3 75 50 20 40 185
machines
Insurance of buildings 1 54 45 24 27 150
Rent and rates 1 900 750 400 450 2,500
Depreciation of
machinery 3 3,750 2,500 1,000 2,000 9,250
17,550 16,200 8,075 7,000 48,82
5
Machine running 30,000 36,000 19,000 8,000
hours
Machine hour rate Rs Rs Rs 0.425 Rs 0.875
0.585 0.450
Bases of apportionment:
1 Floor space 5 Total workers
2 Kilowatt hours 6 Machine maintenance hours
3 Capital cost of machines A Direct – allocated
4 No of indirect workers
Note that depreciation is apportioned on the basis of capital cost. The usage of
machines will be reflected in the machine hour rate.
cost
Fixed over head cost per unit of IC:
Rs per unit
Department 1 Rs 15 × 10% 1.50
Department 1 Rs 8 × 5% 0.40
1.90
Test your understanding 4
Over/(under) absorption = Absorbed overheads − Incurred overheads
Budgeted fixed overhead = 3,000 units × Rs 9 = Rs 27,000.
Rs
Fixed overhead absorbed (3,200 units × Rs 9) 28,800
Fixed overhead incurred (27,000 × Rs 1.05) 28,350
Over-absorbed fixed overheads 450
Fibrex Ltd
Note: Overheads are indirect costs so take care to ensure that the direct materials
and wages are not included in the overhead calculations.
Total
Reapportionments:(s 900 1,500 600 (3,600) 600
ee Tutorial note)
Personnel Number of
mployees -
6:10:4:4
7200
Total
Equipment Gross book
maintenance alue (or 4800 1200 1200 - (7200)
machine
hours) 4:1:1
Total
Tutorial note:
Reapportionment of service cost centres
As personnel provides a service to another service department (equipment
maintenance) it is important to reapportion first the service cost centre which
services other service cost centres, i.e. in this case personnel. Then the total of
the equipment maintenance costs, including a charge from personnel, can be
reapportioned to the production cost centres.
Absorption Cost
Marginal Cost and Marginal Costing
Principle of Marginal Costing
Marginal Costing and Absorption Costing and the calculation of profit
Reconciling Profit
Marginal Costing versus Absorption Costing
Fixed costs, in contrast are cost that remain unchanged in a time period,
regardless of the volume of production and sale.
Marginal production cost is the part of the cost of one unit of product or service
which would be avoided if that unit were not produced, or which would increase
if one extra unit were produced.
From this we can develop the following definition of marginal costing as used in
management accounting:
Marginal costing is the accounting system in which variable costs are charged
to cost units and fixed costs of the period are written off in full against the
aggregate contribution.
Note that variable costs are those which change as output changes – these are
treated under marginal costing as costs of the product. Fixed costs, in this
system, are treated as costs of the period.
Selling price Rs 10
Direct materials Rs 3 per unit
Direct wages Rs 2 per unit
Variable production overhead Re 1 per unit
Fixed production overhead Rs 10,000 per month.
The fixed overhead absorption rate is based on volume of 5,000 units per
month. Show the operating statement for the month, when 4,800 units were
produced and sold under marginal costing.
Solution
The variable cost of sales is simply Rs 3 + Rs 2 + Re 1 = Rs 6 per week.
Rs
Sales (4,800 x Rs 10) 48,000
Variable cost of sales (4,800 x Rs 6) 28,800
Contribution 19,200
Fixed overhead 10,000
Operating profit 9,200
Based on what we have seen above, the idea of profit is not a particularly
useful one as it depends on how many units are sold. For this reason, the
contribution concept is frequently employed by management accountants.
2 Absorption costing
Rs
Sales (4,800 units) 48,000
Cost of sales (4,800 x Rs 8) (W1) 38,400
Operating margin 9,600
Under-absorbed overhead (W2) (400)
Operating profit 9,200
Workings
(W1) Unit cost is materials (Rs 3) + wages (Rs 2) + variable overhead (Re 1) +
fixed overhead absorbed Rs 10,000/5,000 = Rs 2 per unit, giving a cost
per unit of Rs 8
(W2) Rs
Fixed overhead incurred 10,000
Fixed overhead absorbed (4,800 units x Rs 2) 9,600
400
Rs Rs
Profit under MC 9,200
Stock valuation (TAC) 1,200 x Rs 8 9,600
Stock valuation (MC) 1,200 x Rs 6 7,200
Difference (1,200 x Rs 2) 2,400
Profit under TAC 11,600
Solution
The budgeted profit and loss account based on the above is as follows:
Rs Rs Rs Rs Rs Rs Rs Rs
Sales value 4,000 9,000 10,00 23,00
0 0
Variable cost 1,000 6,000 8,00 15,00
0 0
Fixed 1,500 2,500 2,250 8,250 3,00 11,00 6,750 21,75
overhead 0 0 0
Net 1,500 750 (1,000) 1,250
profit/(loss)
Clearly, there is little value in comparing products in this way. If the fixed overhead is
common to all three products, there is no point in apportioning it.
Rs Rs Rs Rs
Sales value 4,000 9,000 10,000 23,000
Variable cost 1,000 6,000 8,000 15,000
Contribution 3,000 3,000 2,000 8,000
Fixed 6,750
overhead
1,250
From this presentation under marginal costing provides better information that
all components X, Y and Z are contributing to meet fixed cost and business
should not stop producing any component.
4.1 Introduction
We have identified the following differences between the TAC and MC
approaches to costing units:
Profit statement layout – TAC deducts fixed production overheads as part
of cost of sales to get to gross profit; MC only includes variable costs in
cost of sales to get to contribution; with fixed overhead costs deducted as a
period cost.
Over/under absorption adjustment is necessary only for TAC.
Changes in stock levels will lead to differing reported profits under the wo
approaches. Make sure you understand these points by working this
example and trying the test your understanding that follows.
Example
A company sells a product for Rs 10 per unit, and incurs Rs 4 per unit for
variable costs in its manufacture. The fixed costs are Rs 900 per month and
are absorbed on the basis of the normal production volume of 250 units per
month. The activity levels for the last four months, when no expenditure
variances arose, were as follows:
Solution
The profit statement using absorption costing would be as follows:
1st month 2nd month 3rd month 4th month 5th month
Rs Rs Rs Rs Rs
Sales value 1,000 1,500 2,000 3,000 7,500
Rs Rs Rs Rs Rs
Opening
stock – 1,520 2,280 2,280 –
@ Rs 7.60
Variable
costs of
1,200 1,000 800 800 3,800
production
@ Rs 4
Fixed
costs@ Rs.
1080 900 720 720 3420
900/250=
Rs. 3.60
2280 3420 3800 3800 7220
Closing
Stock @ 1520 2280 2280 1520 1520
Rs. 7.60
Cost of
(760) (1140) (1520) (2280) (5700)
Sales
Under/Over
Absorption 180 Nil (180) (180) (180)
(W)
Net Profit 420 360 300 540 1620
If marginal costing had been used instead of absorption, the result would have
been shown as:
The total profit for the four months is Rs 720 less under marginal costing
principles. This is because the closing stock at the end of the fourth month is
valued at Rs 800 (Rs 4 × 200 units) compared with Rs 1,520 under absorption
costing. Therefore Rs 720 of the fixed production costs are carried forward in
stock unde absorption costing, to be charged against the sales of a later
month. The profit figures for each month can be reconciled as follows:
The profit figures for each month can be reconciled as follows: If marginal
costing is adopted, then stocks of work-in-progress and finished products will
be valued at variable production costs only. Where production and sales
Fundamentals of Cost and Management Accounting (Study Text) 171 | P a g e
levels are not in sympathy and stock levels are fluctuating, the net profit will be
different from that disclosed by an absorption method of costing.
The level of stock at the beginning of the year was 1,000 units and the
companymaintained its stock of finished products at the same level at the end
of each of the four quarters. Based on its quarterly production budget, the cost
per unit was:
Rs
Prime cost 3.50
Production overhead 0.75
Selling and administration 0.30
overhead
Total 4.55
Fixed production overhead, which has been taken into account in calculating
the above figures, was Rs 5,000 per quarter. Selling and administration
overhead was treated as fixed, and was charged against sales in the period in
which it was incurred.
You are required to present a tabular statement to bring out the effect on net
profit of the declining volume of sales over the four quarters given, assuming
in respect of fixed production overhead that the company:
(a) absorbs it at the budgeted rate per unit (i.e. absorption costing);
(b) does not absorb it into the product cost, but charges it against sales in
each quarter (i.e.marginal costing).
Fixed cost is ought to incur regardless of any decision about product output
level. So marginal costing is more useful in decision making as it does not
include fixed cost in product cost.
Rs
Direct material 2
Direct labour 1
Variable production overhead 2
Fixed production overhead 3
8
Administration costs are incurred at the rate of Rs 20,000 per annum. The
company achieved the following production and sales of blankets:
As Your paper is a computer based exams so for MCQ’s you may use
this formula and most of the MCQ’s are easily calculated with minimum
time.
Marginal costing
1 What is marginal costing? (1.2)
2 What is the difference between marginal costing and absorption costing? (1.2)
3 What is contribution? (1.2)
4 What is the reason for the difference in operating profit under marginal
and absorption costing? (1.4)
5 What is the best figure to use for comparison product profitability? (1.6)
Answers to MCQs:
1) B
2) B
3) A
Cost of sales:
Prime costs (Rs 3.50 per unit) 35,000 31,500 24,500 19,250
Production overhead absorbed 7,500 6,750 5,250 4,125
(Rs 0.75 per unit)
Under-absorbed production – 500 1,500 2,250
overhead (W)
Working
Fixed production overhead absorption rate:
Rs.
Prime cost 3.50
Variable Production overhead
(Rs. 0.75 – Rs. 0.50 fixed) 0.25
3.75
(a) Operating
statement
Year 1 Year 2 Year 3
Rs 000 Rs 000 Rs 000 Rs 000 Rs 000 Rs 000
Marginal costing
Sales 1,080 1,320 1,140
Opening stock @ Nil 50 50
Rs 5
Add: Production 500 550 450
cost @ Rs 5
500 600 500
Less: Closing 50 50 25
stock @ Rs 5
Cost of sales (450) (550) (475)
Absorption costing
Sales 1,320 1,140
Opening stock @ Rs8 Nil 80 80
Add: production cost 800 880 720
b) The difference in profit arises because of the difference in the amount of fixed
production overhead included in stock under the absorption costing system.
When the opening and closing stock includes the same amount of fixed
overheads (i.e. here when the volume of opening and closing stock is the
same, in year 2) profit is the same under both techniques. Where volume of
stock has gone up (year 1) and the amount of fixed production overhead in
stock has increased then profit is higher under absorption costing and vice
versa.
Add:
Increase in fixed overhead
included in stock under
absorption costing:
10,000 units @ Rs 3 30 – –
Less:
Decrease in fixed
overhead included in
stock under absorption
costing:
5,000 units @ Rs 3 – – (15)
Profit per absorption 370 480 360
costing
Costing Method
Job Costing
Batch Costing
The costing system would have the same basic characteristics as the systems of
other organisations which are engaged in similar activities.
Specific order costing methods are appropriate for organisations which produce
cost units which are separately identifiable from one another. Job costing and
batch costing are types of specific order costing.
2 Job costing
Job number;
Description of the job; Specifications, etc.;
Customer details;
Estimated cost, analysed by cost element;
Selling price, and hence estimated profit;
Delivery date promised;
Actual costs to date, analysed by cost element;
Actual delivery date, once the job is completed;
Sales details, for example delivery note no., invoice no.
Materials requisition Rs
D57 48
D61 24
D70 26
Total 98
Two operatives paid at Rs 4.20 per hour each had been employed in separate
cost centres on Production Order No. 1001 during January and their time sheets
showed that each had worked for thirty hours on that order. The overhead rates
for the cost centres in which the operatives are employed are in one centre Rs
2.00 per direct labour hour and 100% on direct wages in the other. Administration
and other overhead are recovered at the rate of 30% on production cost.
Required:
Prepare a statement showing the cost and profitability of the order from A
Note: actual and estimated profit on the order would be compared and any
significant difference reported to management. The estimate should have been
compiled on the same lines as the actual cost in the above statement to assist in
locating the particular costs which were not as estimated.
If volume were half budget, i.e. 1,500 hours, actual results would show:
Actual overhead incurred would not fall to half the budget, however, because of
the fixed element. It may fall to, perhaps, Rs 24,000 but job costs would reflect
overhead at the predetermined rate of Rs 10 per hour, leaving Rs 9,000 under-
absorbed. Actual profit would therefore be Rs(16,000 - 9,000) = Rs 7,000.
Example
Company B bases its estimates on the following formulae:
Thus both jobs will be priced the same even though it would appear from the
direct wages estimate that Job Y takes 50% more time to complete and therefore
uses much more of the factory's resources. Job X may be over-priced in relation
to competitors whereas Job Y is under- priced and the business would lose its
Job X customers and get more orders for Job Y. Consider what would happen if
1,500 hours were available. The factory could produce only 10 of Job Y
compared with 15 of Job X, with the resulting lower total contribution.
Example
Thus a job that takes one hour in Y will be charged the same amount for
overhead as a job that takes an hour in Z even though the latter centre costs
twice as much per hour to operate. Once again, estimates would not reflect a
realistic charge for the use of resources and over or under-pricing may result.
Example
Jones is paid Rs 6 per hour for a basic week of 40 hours. In one week he worked
four hours overtime at time and a half and received Rs 32 under a group bonus
scheme. His time sheet for that week shows:
Hours
Job A 20
Job B 10
Job C 8
Training 6
44
Rs
Basic 40 x Rs 6 240
Overtime 4 x Rs 9 36
Bonus 32
308
(b) Basic rate used for costing and overtime premium/bonus treated as
indirect wages. Different allocations would result as follows:
Overhead:
Training 6 x Rs 7.00 42 6 x Rs 6.00 36
Overtime – 4 x Rs 3.00 12
Bonus – 32
308 308
(b) The company is at present operating a day and evening shift. It now
proposes a night shift whose average wage rate would involve a premium.
This night shift would concentrate on one particular contract that would
continue over a period of two to three years. Discuss how the company
should deal with the night shift premium in calculating the costs of its
products.
(c) One of the major production cost centres involves a chemical process that
is very complex. The time required to produce any particular quantity of
output depends rather unpredictably on a wide range of factors, some of
which are outside the control of the operator. As a result, a subsidiary
smaller machine to do 'touching up' work as and when products require it
has been installed in that cost centre. Discuss the case for treating the
wages of the operator of the subsidiary machine as an overhead of the cost
centre rather than as direct wages.
(c) Route cards – Each production order or job can be supported by route cards
that specify the sequence of operations and the estimated time for each
operation or stage. Actual time would be recorded and causes of excess time
noted where appropriate.
(c) Regular reports – The above documents will form the basis of a report to
show the incidence of excess usage together with an analysis of main
causes. The aim would be to prevent recurrence, where possible by
appropriate action, e.g.:
3 Batch costing
Within each batch are a number of identical units but each batch will be
different.
Each batch is a separately identifiable cost unit which is given a batch
number in the same way that each job is given a job number.
Costs can then be identified against each batch number.For example
materials requisitions will be coded to a batch number to ensure that the
cost of materials used is charged to the correct batch.
When the batch is completed the unit cost of individual items in the
batch is found by dividing the total batch cost by the number of items in
each batch.
Summary
This chapter has considered two of the specific order costing methods, job
costing and batch costing. You should ensure you are clear when each would be
used, but note that the costing principles applied to each are very similar.
By the time you have finished this chapter you should be able to:
compare and contrast job, batch, contract and process costing systems
prepare ledger accounts for job and batch costing systems.
Job costing
2 What information will be recorded on a job cost card? (2.2)
3 What are the potential problems arising from inaccurate absorption rates?(2.3)
Batch costing
4 What is batch costing? (3.1)
A firm uses job costing and recovers overheads on direct labour. Three jobs
were worked on during a period, the details of which were:
1. Jobs 1 and 2 were the only incomplete jobs. The value of closing work-in-
progress was:
A) Rs 180,425
B) Rs 214,425
C) Rs 175,700
D) Rs 205,300
2. Job 3 was completed during the period and consisted of 2,400 identical circuit
boards. The firm adds 50% to total production costs to arrive at a selling
price.The selling price of a circuit board (to the nearest penny) is Rs
A) Rs 41.4
B) Rs 42.5
C) Rs 43.7
D) Rs 40.6
A firm makes special assemblies to customers' orders and uses job costing. The
data for a period are:
3. The overhead to be absorbed by job number CC20 for the period (to the nearest
Rs)mIs:
A) Rs 72,760
B) Rs 74,530
C) Rs 71,220
D) Rs 70,570
3. Job number BB15 was completed and delivered during the period and the firm
wishes to earn 33 1/3 % profit on sales.
The selling price of job number BB15 (to the nearest Rs) is:.
A) Rs 56,640
B) Rs 57,730
C) Rs 54,440
D) Rs 52,520
(2) 76 direct labour hours were worked in Department A at a basic wage of Rs 4.50
per hour. 6 of these hours were classified as overtime at a premium of 50%.
(3) 300 kilos of Material Z were issued from stores to Department B. Department B
returned 35 kilos of Material Z to the storeroom being excess to equirements for
the job.
(4) 110 direct labour hours were worked in Department B at a basic wage of Rs 4.00
per hour. 30 of these hours were classified as overtime at a premium of 50%. All
Overhead costs incurred during the month on all jobs in the two production
departments were as follows:
Dept A Dept B
Rs Rs
Indirect labour, at basic wage rate 2,510 2,960
Overtime premium 450 60
Lubricants and cleaning compounds 520 680
Maintenance 720 510
Other 1,200 2,150
Materials are priced at the end of each month on a weighted average basis.
Relevant information of material stock movements during the month, for materials
Y and Z, is as follows:
Material Y Material Z
Opening stock 1,050 kilos 6,970 kilos
(value Rs 529.75) (value Rs 9,946.50)
500 kilos at
Rs 0.50 per kilo
400 kilos at
Rs 0.52 per kilo
(a) to prepare a list of the costs that should be assigned to Job No. 123.
Provide an explanation of your treatment of each item.
(b) to discuss briefly how information concerning the cost of individual jobs can
be used.
1. B
2. A
3. A
4. A
(b) It appears that the night shift will be operated to fulfil the one particular long-
term contract. Consequently, there would be no justification for including
thenight-shift premium in factory overhead as that would unfairly burden jobs
completed during the day and evening shift. In fact it could be appropriate to
separate this particular contract from the normal costing routine and treat it as
a marginal contract by only charging costs directly incurred.
(c) The alternative methods for dealing with the wages of the operator of the
subsidiary machine are:
(i) Charge as direct wages – This method implies that the operator's time
can conveniently be analysed between products. In addition, the machine
operating costs should be charged in conjunction with the operator's
wages, i.e. a composite machine hour rate will be developed.
The approach in answering is to go through items (1) to (4) one at a time and
select the relevant information from the other parts of the question as needed.
(1) Kilos Rs
Material Y:
Opening stock 1,050 529.75
Purchases 600 300.00
500 250.00
400 208.00
2,550 1,287.75
(2)
Department A labour: 76 hours @ Rs 4.50 = Rs 342.00
It is assumed that the overtime is not worked at the specific request of the
customer for Job 123 and hence the premium has been exclude from direct cost
and therefore included in production overhead.
22,970 33,306.50
Rs 384.25
(4)
Department B labour: 110 hours @ Rs 4 = Rs 440.00
The cost of the overtime premium should be charged as a direct cost to the other
customer's jobs.
(5)
Production overhead:
Dept A Dept B
Rs Rs
Amount incurred:
(b)
The cost of individual jobs may be used in the following ways:
(i) The estimated cost can be calculated in advance in order to provide a basis
for fixing the selling price. In this case it would be necessary to use a
predetermined overhead absorption rate.
(ii) The estimated budgeted cost can be used as a guideline while the work is
being carried out so as to try to ensure that actual costs are kept within the
original estimate.
(iii) The actual cost of jobs can be used for valuing work-in-progress stock if the
job is on hand at the end of the accounting period.
(iv) The actual cost can be compared with the estimated cost in order to identify
variances on individual cost items. This should help to control costs and to
improve the quality of future estimates.
(v) Actual cost can be compared with the selling price of the job in order to
assess profitability of the job.
Nature of services
Characteristics of services
Service Costing
Understanding of cost units and cost per unit in services
Heterogeneity – the nature and standard of the service will be variable due to the
high human input.
Simultaneous production and consumption – the service that you require cannot
be inspected in advance of receiving it. Or we can say that services are consumed
as they are received by the service provider.
hotel
college
hairdressers
restaurant
We can ask the following questions about, e.g. the hotel industry.
(1) Is output in the form of performance? Yes – the hotel provides a bed and possibly
breakfast. You will judge the service of the hotel on how comfortable the bed was and
how tasty the breakfast was. You cannot really ‘touch’ the performance of the
hotel.
(2) Is the standard of the service variable? Yes – your stay at the hotel may vary
each time you stay there. You may not have such a comfortable bed and your
(3) Can you inspect the services in advance of receiving them? In general, you
cannot sleep in a hotel bed or eat breakfast at the hotel until you have booked in and made
a contract to buy the services of the hotel.
(4) Can the hotel services be stored? No! You cannot take your bed away with
you, nor can you keep your breakfast – it must be eaten during the morning of
your stay.
In service costing, it is not uncommon for labour to be the only direct cost
involved in providing a service and for overheads to make up most of the
remaining total costs.
In service costing it is sometimes necessary to classify costs as being fixed,
variable or semi-variable. If costs are semi-variable, it is necessary to separate
them into their fixed and variable constituents using the high/low method.
The cost per service unit is calculated by establishing the total costs involved in
providing the service and dividing this by the number of service units used in
providing the service.
The calculation of a cost per service unit is as follows.
Solution
Total canteen expenditure in month = Rs 42,150
Rs 42,150
Average cost per meal served = ––––––– = Rs 0.75 per meal
56,200
Rs 59,010
Average income per meal = ––––––– = Rs 1.05 per meal
56,200
A (i) only
B (i) and (ii) only
C (ii) only
D (ii) and (iii) only
Costs will be classified under appropriate headings for the particular service. This
will involve the issue of suitable cost codes to be used in the recording and,
therefore, the collection of costs. For a transport undertaking the main cost
classification may be based on the following activities:
Within each of these there would need to be a sub classification of costs, each
with its own code, so that under (c) fixed charges, there might appear the following
breakdown:
In service costing it is often important to classify costs into their fixed and variable
elements. Many service applications involve high fixed costs and the higher the
number of cost units the lower the fixed costs per unit. The variable cost per unit
will indicate to management the additional cost involved in the provision of one
extra unit of service. In the context of a transport undertaking, fixed and variable
costs are often referred to as standing and running costs respectively.
(c) Cost per unit calculations using the data in and dividing by the data in
(d) Different cost units may be used for different elements of costs and the same
cost or group of costs may be related to different cost unit bases to provide
additional control information to management. In the transport organisation,
for example, the operating and running costs may be expressed in per mile
and per day terms
(e) Analyses based on the physical cost units. On a transport cost sheet, the
following non-cost statistics may be shown:
5.1 Introduction
These reports are derived from the cost sheets and other data collected. Usually
costs are presented as totals for the period, classified often into fixed and variable
costs. The next section illustrates how such statements would be prepared for a
number of difference service organisations.
The following figures were taken from the annual accounts of two electricity supply
boards working on uniform costing methods. Meter reading, billing and collection
costs:
Board A Board B
Rs 000 Rs 000
Salaries and wages of:
Meter reading 150 240
Billing and collection 300 480
Transport and travelling 30 40
Collection agency charges – 20
Bad debts 10 10
General charges 100 200
Miscellaneous 10 10
600 1,000
Units sold (millions) 2,880 9,600
Number of consumers 800 1,600
(thousands)
Sales of electricity (millions) Rs18 Rs50
Size of area (square miles) 4,000 4,000
Prepare a comparative cost statement using suitable units of cost. Brief notes
should be added, commenting on likely causes for major differences in unit costs
so disclosed.
Rs Rs
Cost per:
Millions units sold 208 105
Thousand consumers 750 625
Rsm of sales 33,333 20,000
Square mile area 150 250
(a) Area density. B covers the same size of area but has double the number of
consumers, indicating that B is a more urban territory.
(b) Industrialisation. Costs per unit are almost twice as high for A but the
pattern is not continued for costs in relation to sales value. B, therefore,
probably contains a higher proportion of industrial consumers at cheaper
rates.
(c) Territory covered. Comparative costs per square mile deviate from the
pattern shown by the other measurement units, confirming that the bulk of
costs is incurred in relation to consumers and usage.
Example 4
Remix Ltd makes ready-mixed cement and operates a small fleet of vehicles that
delivers the product to customers within its delivery area.
General data
Maintenance records for the previous five years reveal:
There are five vehicles operating a five-day week, for fifty weeks a year. Inflation
can be ignored.Standard cost data include: Drivers' wages are Rs 150 each per
week. Supervisor/relief driver's wage is Rs 200 per week. Depreciation, on a
straight-line basis with no residual value.
Cost Life
Loading equipment Rs 100,000 5 years
Vehicles Rs 30,000 each 5 years
You are required to calculate a standard rate per tonne/mile of operating the
vehicles.
Solution
Calculation of standard rate per tonne/mile:
Running costs
Rs Rs
Maintenance costs (W1) 0.05
Petrol/oil 0.20
Repairs cost 0.075
______
0.325
______
Total per annum: Rs 0.325 x 170,000 (W2) 55,250
Sundry costs
Maintenance fixed costs (W1) 5,000
Drivers' wages: Rs 150 x 52 x 5 39,000
Supervisor/relief driver: Rs 200 x 52 10,400
Depreciation of loading equipment:
Rs 100,000 / 5 20,000
Depreciation of vehicles (Rs 30,000 x 5) / 5 30,000
Mileage Maintenance
cost
Rs
High 180,000 14,000
Low 160,000 13,000
Four key differences can be identified between the products of service industries
and those of a manufacturing business.
Heterogeneity – the nature and standard of the output will be variable, due to
the high human input. Heterogeneous means 'consisting of elements that are
not of the same kind or nature' e.g. you may get a completely different
standard of service from two different waiters in the same restaurant (or from
the same waiter on different nights). Thus it is difficult to come up with a
standard cost that is meaningful for all the units of service.
Looking back at the cost statement for the power supply industry you can see that
this is very different to the sort of statement we have been used to dealing with in
the manufacturing environment. The main difference between manufacturing and
service cost statements may be identified as:
Summary
This chapter has considered the last of the three specific order-costing methods,
contract costing. We considered how costs are attributed to contracts, and how
profit may be recognised in the profit and loss account part way through the
contract period.
We looked at the particular aspects of service costing, where there is rarely one
cost unit that can be used for all planning and control purposes. We contrasted the
nature of a service business with that of manufacturing concern, and looked at
how this affects the way in which cost information is reported. By the time you
have finished this chapter you should be able to prepare and contrast cost
statements for service and manufacturing organisations.
2 Explain what is meant by a composite cost unit, giving two examples. (4.2)
3 What are the four main differences between the product of a service
business and that of a manufacturer? (6.1)
hotel
airline, train and bus companies
hairdressers
taxi company
college/university
firm of accountants/auditors
distribution company
utility company (gas/electricity/telephone)
banks
insurance companies
hospitals
Direct labour costs may be a high proportion on the total cost of providing a service
and composite cost units are characteristic features of service costing. (i) and
(ii) are therefore applicable and the correct answer is B.
Job and batch costing are the costing system used when the work done by an
organisation consists of separately identifiable jobs or batches. (Job & batch
costing already discussed in previous chapter.) Process costing is the costing
method used when goods are produced as a direct result of a sequence of
continuous operations or processes.
2 Process costing
Introduction
As discussed in chapter 9, Process costing is a costing method used when mass
production of many identical products takes place, for example, the production of
bars of chocolate, cans of soup or tins of paint. It is an example of continuous
operation costing. One of the distinguishing features of process costing is that all
the products in a process are identical and indistinguishable from each other. For
this reason, an average cost per unit is calculated for each process.
Net costs of inputs = Cost incurred for Inputs – scrap value of normal loss +
Disposal value of normal loss
Expected output = Input units – Normal loss units
Expected output is what we expect to get out of the process. Another main feature
of process costing is that the output of one process forms the material input of the
next process.
Unit Rs Unit Rs
Input transferred 1000 24000
from process 1
Additional raw 5000 Output 1000 ?
materials transferred to
process 3
Direct labour 4000
Departmental 3000
overhead
1,000 36,000 1,000 ?
Solution
Net costs of input
Average cost per unit = ––––––––––––––
Expected output
Process 2 Account
Unit Rs Unit Rs
Input transferred 1000 24000
from process 1
Additional raw 5000 Output 1000 36,000
materials transferred to
process 3
Direct labour 4000
Departmental 3000
overhead
1,000 36,000 1,000 36,000
Note that the units completed in Process 1 form the opening WIP in Process 2
and that the units completed in Process 2 form the opening WIP in Process 3.
Normal losses
Sometimes in a process, the total of the input units may differ from the total of
the output units.
Losses may occur due to the evaporation or wastage of materials and this
may be an expected part of the process.
Normal loss is the loss that is expected in a process and it is often expressed
as a percentage of the materials input to the process.
Rs 24,000
Average cost per unit = –––––––––– = Rs 25 per unit
960
Process 1 Account
Unit Rs Unit Rs
Raw materials 1000 10,000 Normal loss 40 0
Direct labour 8,000 Transferred to 960 24,000
finished goods
(W3)
Departmental 6,000
overhead
(1) If normal loss is sold as scrap then the formula for calculating the average
cost of the units output does not really change – simply the costs of inputs
are reduced by the revenue received from the scrap that is sold i.e. giving
the net cost.
(2) If normal loss has a scrap value, it is valued in the process account at this
value.
(3) If normal loss does not have a scrap value, it is valued in the process
account as Rs Nil.
Required:
Calculate the average cost per unit in Process 1 and produce the process account
and the scrap account.
Solution
Average cost per unit in Process 1 (W2) = Rs 24.50
Process 1 Account
Unit Rs Unit Rs
Raw materials 1000 10,000 Normal loss 40 480
Direct labour 8,000 Transferred to 960 23,520
finished goods
(W3)
Departmental 6,000
overhead
Scrap Account
Rs. Rs. .
480 480
––––
(W1)
Normal loss = 4% x 1,000 = 40 units
This amount is debited to the scrap account and credited to the process account
and used to reduce the cost of inputs to the process.
(W2)
Rs 23,520
= ––––––– = Rs 24.50 per unit
960
(W3)
Units transferred to finished goods are valued at the average cost per unit, Rs
24.50.
The costs of abnormal losses and gains are not absorbed into the cost of good
output but are shown as losses and gains in the process account.
Abnormal loss and gain units are valued at the same cost as units of good
output.
Required: Calculate the average cost per unit in Process 1 and produce the
process account and the abnormal gains and losses account.
Solution
Process 1 Account
Unit Rs Unit Rs
Raw materials 1000 10,000 Normal loss 40 0
Direct labour 8,000 Abnormal loss 16 400
(W1)
Departmental 6,000 Transferred to 944 23,600
overhead finished goods
(W3)
Rs. Rs.
400 400
Rs 24,000
Average cost per unit = –––––––––––
1,000 – 40
Rs 24,000
= ––––––– = Rs 25.00 per unit
960
(W3)
Actual output = 944 units
Abnormal loss is valued at the same cost as good output, i.e. Rs 25.00 per unit.
(W4)
Value of units transferred to finished goods = 944 x Rs 25.00 = Rs 23,600
Calculate the average cost per unit in Process 1 and produce the process
account, abnormal gains and losses account and the scrap account.
Unit Rs Unit Rs
Raw materials 1000 10,000 Normal loss (W1) 40 480
Direct labour 8,000 Abnormal loss 16 392
(W3)
Departmental 6,000 Transferred to 944 23,128
overhead finished goods
(W4)
Rs. Rs.
Process 1 (W3) 392 Scrap (16 × Rs. 12) 192
Income Statement 200
392 392
Scrap Account
Rs. Rs.
Process 1 (W3) 480 Cash (56 × Rs. 12) 672
(Normal Loss)
672 672
(W1)
Normal loss = 4% x 1,000 = 40 units
Scrap value of normal loss = 40 x Rs 12 = Rs 480
(W2)
Rs 24,000 – Rs 480(W1)
Average cost per unit = ––––––––––––––––––
1,000 – 40 (W1)
Rs 23,520
= ––––––– = Rs 24.50 per unit
960
(W3)
Actual output = 944 units
Abnormal loss is valued at the same cost as good output, i.e. Rs 24.50 per unit
(W4)
Value of units transferred to finished goods = 944 x Rs 24.50 = Rs 23,128
Unit Rs Unit Rs
Raw materials 1000 10,000 Normal loss (W1) 40 0
Direct labour 8,000
Departmental 6,000 Transferred to 980 24,500
overhead finished goods
Abnormal gain 20 5,000 (W1)
Rs. Rs.
Income Statement 500 Process 1 (W3) 500
500 500
Workings:
(W1)
Normal loss = 4% x 1,000 = 40 units
(W2)
Net costs of input
Average cost per unit = –––––––––––––
Expected output
Rs 24,000
Average cost per unit = –––––––––––
1,000 – 40
Rs 24,000
= ––––––– = Rs 25.00 per unit
960
(W4)
Value of units transferred to finished goods = 980 x Rs 25.00 = Rs 24,500
Required:
Calculate the average cost per unit in Process 1 and produce the process
account, abnormal gains and losses account and the scrap account.
Solution
Process 1 Account
Unit Rs Unit Rs
Raw materials 1000 10,000 Normal loss (W1) 40 480
Direct labour 8,000
Departmental 6,000 Transferred to 980 24,010
overhead finished goods
Abnormal gain 20 490 (W4)
Rs. Rs.
490 490
Scrap Account
Rs. Rs.
Process 1 (W3) 480 Cash (56 × Rs. 12) 240
(Normal Loss) 240 Abnormal gain and Loss 192
480 480
Workings:
(W1)
Normal loss = 4% x 1,000 = 40 units
(W2)
Net costs of input
Average cost per unit = –––––––––––––––
Expected output
Rs 24,000 – Rs 480(W1)
Average cost per unit = ––––––––––––––––––
1,000 – 40 (W1)
Rs 23,520
= –––––––– = Rs 24.50 per unit
960
(W3)
Actual output= 944 units
(W4)
Value of units transferred to finished goods = 980 x Rs 24.50 = Rs 24,010
Suggested approach for answering normal loss, abnormal loss/gain
questions
(1) Calculate any normal loss units (forms part of the output units)
(2) Draw the process account and enter the units or produce a flow of units
(Input units = output units). The balancing figure for the units is either
an abnormal loss or gain.
(3) Value the inputs.
(4) Value the normal loss (if any).
(5) Calculate the average cost per unit:
Net costs of input
––––––––––––––––
Expected output
(6) Value the good output and abnormal loss or gain at this average cost per
unit.
In Process 2, W&B Ltd have initiated a quality control inspection. This inspection
takes place BEFORE any new ingredients are added in to Process 2.The
inspection is expected to yield a normal loss of 5% of the input from Process 1.
These losses are sold as animal fodder for Rs. 1 per kg.
The following information is for Process 2 for the period just ended:
Units Rs
Transfer from Process 1 500 kg 750
Material added in Process 2 300 kg 300
Labour 200 hrs 800
Overheads – 500
Actual output 755 kg –
Prepare the process account, abnormal loss and gain account, and scrap
WIP
At the end of an accounting period there may be some units that have entered a
production process but the process has not been completed. These units are
called closing work in progress (or WIP) units.
If we assume that there is no opening WIP, then the output at the end of a
period will consist of the following:
Closing WIP units become the opening WIP units in the next accounting
period.
It would not be fair to allocate a full unit cost to part processed units and so
we need to use the concept of equivalent units (EUs) which spreads out the
process costs of a period fairly between the fully- processed and part
processed units.
Concept of EUs
Process costs are allocated to units of production on the basis of EUs.
The idea behind this concept is that a part processed unit can be
expressed as a proportion of a fully completed unit. We can say that an
equivalent unit is a notional whole unit which is assumed to be completed
in a process in a period.
For example, if 100 units are exactly half-way through the production
process, they are effectively equal to 50 fully completed units. Therefore
the 100 part processed units can be regarded as being equivalent to 50
fully completed units or 50 EUs.
Solution
Statement of EUs
Outp % EUs
Fully worked units ut
600 100% 600
Closing WIP 200 70% 140
Total 800
Costs 740
Rs 4,440
Cost per EU Rs 6
Process 1 Account
Unit Rs Unit Rs
Input 800 4,440 Transferred to 600 3,600
finished goods
(600 x Rs. 6)
For most processes the material is input at the start of the process, so it is only
the addition of labour and overheads that will be incomplete at the end of the
period.
This means that the material cost should be spread over all units, but
conversion costs should be spread over the EUs.
This can be achieved using an expanded Statement of EUs which separates
out the materials and labour costs.
Note that the term conversion costs are often used to describe the addition of
labour and overheads together in a process.
For Process 1 in LJK Ltd the following is relevant for the latest period:
Only 40% complete with respect to conversion, but 100% complete with respect to
materials.
Required:
Produce the process account
Solution
The value of fully worked units and WIP are calculated as follows:
Statement of EUs
Workings
(W1) Fully worked units are valued at Rs 20 per unit (Rs 8 + Rs 12).
400 x Rs 20 = Rs 8,000
During the period 8,250 units were received from the previous process at a value
of Rs 453,750, labour and overheads were Rs 350,060 and material introduced
was Rs 24,750.
At the end of the period the closing WIP was 1,600 units which were 100%
complete in respect of materials, and 60% complete in respect of labour and
overheads. The balance of units was transferred to Finished goods.
Calculate the cost per EU, the value of finished goods and closing WIP.
Statement of EUs
Output Materials Conversion
% EUs %EUs
Fully worked
Closing WIP
Total units
Costs:
Total cost
Cost per EU
The value of finished goods is Rs
The value of WIP is Rs
Until now, we have assumed that there has been no opening WIP. In reality, this
is unlikely to be the case.
These methods are similar to the valuation methods studied when we looked
at materials in an earlier chapter.
Degree of completion:
Required:
Prepare the process account for August using the weighted average method.
Solution
Process 1 Account
Unit Rs Unit Rs
Opening WIP 400 23,655 Transferred to 1,700 184,394
Materials 1600 100,000 process 2
Conversion 86,000
Statement of EUs
Materials Rs 98,000
Labour Rs 60,000
Production overheads Rs 39,000
Units added to the process 1,000
There were 200 units of opening WIP which are valued as follows:
Materials Rs 22,000
Labour Rs 6,960
Production overheads Rs 3,000
There were 300 units of closing WIP fully complete as to materials but only 60%
complete for labour and 50% complete for overheads.
Calculate the following:
In the weighted average method opening inventory values are added to current
costs to provide an overall average cost per unit. With FIFO, opening WIP units
are distinguished from those units added in the period.
With FIFO it is assumed that the opening WIP units are completed first.
This means that the process costs in the period must be allocated between:
This also means that if opening WIP units are 75% complete with respect to
materials and 40% complete with respect to labour, only 25% ‘more work’ will
need to be carried out with respect to materials and 60% with respect to
labour.
Material Rs 100,000
Conversion Rs 86,000
There were no process losses.
Required:
Prepare the process account for August using the FIFO method.
Solution
Process 1 Account
Unit Rs Unit Rs
Opening WIP 400 23,655 Transferred to 1,700 183,534
Materials 1600 100,000 process 2
Conversion 86,000
Statement of EUs
Materials Conversion
Output
% EUs % EUs
Materials
Units transferred to Process 2 1,700
Closing WIP 300
Opening WIP (400)
–––––
Material units added in period 1,600
–––––
Of the 1,600 units added in the process, 1,300 (units added less closing
WIP) were started and finished in the period.
Opening WIP
Note that the opening WIP is 100% complete with respect to materials and
therefore no further work or costs are involved in completing the opening WIP
units.
Similarly, the opening WIP is 25% complete with respect to conversion costs and
therefore 75% of the conversion work/costs are still outstanding.
1,300 units were fully worked in the process = 1,300 x Rs 111.643 = Rs 145,136
Costs to complete 400 units of opening WIP = 300 units (conversion EUs) x Rs
49.143 = Rs 14,743
All materials used are added at the beginning of the process. Labour costs and
production overhead costs are incurred evenly as the product goes through the
process. Production overheads are absorbed at a rate of 100% of labour costs.
Opening inventory
Costs associated with these opening units are Rs 1,800 for materials. In addition
Rs 4,000 had been accumulated for labour and overhead costs.
Period costs
Costs incurred during the period were:
Materials Rs 19,000
Labour costs Rs 19,000
During the period, 2,000 units were passed to Process 2. There were no losses.
The company uses a FIFO method for valuing process costs.
Required:
Calculate the total value of the units transferred to Process 2.
Required:
Prepare the process account for February.
Solution
Normal loss is 15% of input, i.e. 15% x 200 kg = 30 kg
(1) Calculate the expected number of EUs of output (where expected output is actual
finished units plus the abnormal loss).
Rs 1,000
Materials ––––– = Rs 5.88
170
Rs 4,100
Conversion ––––– = Rs25
164
(5) Write up the process account and normal and abnormal loss accounts.
Process 1 Account
KG Rs KG Rs
Materials 200 1,000 Normal Loss 30 -
Labour and 4,100 Finished goods 160 4,941
overheads (W1)
Abnormal loss 10 159
(W2)
Workings
(W1) 160 x Rs 30.88 = Rs 4,941
(W2) Abnormal loss (10 x Rs 5.88) + (4 x Rs 25) = Rs 159
KG Rs KG Rs
Process 30
KG Rs KG Rs
Process account 10 159 Income 159
statement
10 159 - 159
Normal and abnormal losses (or gains) must be recorded and valued. Remember
that abnormal losses (or gains) do not affect the cost per EUs calculation.
Introduction
The nature of process costing is such that processes often produce more than
one product. These additional products may be described as either joint products
or by-products. Essentially joint products are main products whereas by-products
are incidental to the main products.
Joint products
Joint products are two or more products separated in the course of processing,
each having a sufficiently high saleable value to merit recognition as a main
product. I.e. Joint product is a product which has significant sales value.
By-products
By-products are outputs of some value produced incidentally in manufacturing
something else (main products). We can also say that a by-product is a product
which has insignificant sales value.
By-products, such as sawdust and bark, are secondary products from the
timber industry (where timber is the main or principal product from the
process).
Sawdust and bark have a relatively low sales value compared to the timber
which is produced and are therefore classified as by-products.
Joint process costs occur before the split off point. They are sometimes called
pre-separation costs or common costs.
The joint costs need to be apportioned between the joint products at the split
off point to obtain the cost of each of the products in order to value closing
inventory and cost of sales.
Rs
Direct material cost 10,000
Direct labour cost 5,000
Overheads 3,000
Total cost 18,000
The process produces joint products A and B, which are then sold at the prices
given below. The output figure represents all of the output from the process.
Required:
Calculate the cost of sales, and gross profit for products A and B assuming:
(i) Joint costs are apportioned by market value
(ii) Joint costs are apportioned by production units.
Solution
(a) Market value basis
Product A Product B Total
Sales value Rs 10,000 Rs 20,000 R s 30,000
Joint costs apportioned
(see working) Rs 6,000 Rs 12,000 Rs 18,000
Gross profit Rs 4,000 Rs 8,000 Rs 12,000
Working
Total joint costs = Rs (10,000 + 5,000 = 3,000) =Rs 18,000
10,000
Joint costs allocated to Product A = ––––– × Rs 18,000 = Rs 6,000
30,000
20,000
Joint costs allocated to Product B = ––––– × Rs 18,000 = Rs 12,
30,000
Working
Total output units = 2,000 + 8,000 = 10,000
2,000
Joint costs allocated to Product A = ––––– × Rs 18,000 = Rs 3,600
10,000
The costs incurred in the process are shared between the joint products alone.
The by-products do not pick up a share of the costs, like normal loss.
The sales value of the by-product at the split off point is treated as a reduction
in costs instead of an income, again just the same as normal loss.
If the by-product has no known value at the split off point but does have a
value after further processing, the net income of the by-product is used to
reduce the costs of the process
Net income (or net realisable value) = Final sales value – Further processing
costs
It is now possible to sell by-product C after further processing for Rs 0.50 per
unit. The further processing costs are Rs 0.20 per unit. 2,000 units of
by-product C are produced.
Required:
How are the joint costs of Rs 18,000 apportioned when by-product C is produced?
Solution
With the production of by-product C, joint costs are reduced by the net
income from the process.
Income from by-product = Rs (0.5 – 0.2) x 2,000 = Rs 600
Joint costs are now Rs 18,000 – Rs 600 = Rs 17,400
2,000
Joint costs allocated to Product A = –––––– × Rs 17,400 = Rs 3,400
10,000
8,000
Joint costs allocated to Product B = –––––– × Rs 17,400 = Rs 13,920
10,000
Product B requires further processing after separation from the other two
products. This costs a total of Rs 201,930.
Product C also requires further processing to make it saleable, and this costs Rs
0.40 per kg.
Calculate the total profit earned by Products A and B in the period, using the net
realisable values (net income) to apportion joint costs.
You may be required to deal with joint and by-products when preparing process
accounts. Joint products should be treated as ‘normal’ output from a process. The
treatment of by-products in process accounts is slightly more complicated.
To calculate the number of units in a period, by-product units (like normal loss)
reduce the number of units output.
When by-products are produced, the cost per unit is calculated as follows:
OR
We can now consolidate what we have learned in this chapter by looking at how
joint and by-products are recorded in a process account.
Process 2 Account
KG Rs KG Rs
Transfer from 500 750 Normal Loss 25 25
process 1 Finished goods 755 2,265
Additional raw 300 30
material
Direct labour 800 Abnormal loss 20 60
Departmental 500
overheads
Rs. Rs.
60.00 60.00
Scrap Account
Rs. Rs.
Process 1 (Normal loss) 25.00 Cash (45 × Rs. 1) 45.00
Abnormal gain and loss 20.00
45.00 45.00
Rs 24,750
Total cost Rs 478,500 Rs 350,060
Cost per EU Rs 58 Rs 46
Workings
(W1) Value of finished goods:
Materials: 6,650 x Rs 58 = Rs 385,700
Conversion: 6,650 x Rs 46 = Rs 305,900
Total = Rs 691,600
Total = Rs 136,960
Materials Labour
Overheads
% EU % EU % EU
Output 100 900 100 900 100 900
Closing WIP 100 300 60 180 50 150
––––– ––––– ––––
Total EUs 1,200 1,080 1,050
––––– ––––– ––––
Rs Rs Rs
Costs – period 98,000 60,000
39,000
Opening WIP 22,000 6,960 3,000
––––––– –––––– ––––––
Total costs 120,000 66,960 42,000
––––––– –––––– ––––––
Cost per unit Rs 100 Rs 62 Rs 40
(b)
Rs
Materials 300 x Rs 100 30,000
Labour 180 x Rs 62 11,160
Overheads 150 x Rs 40 6,000
–––––––
Value of closing WIP 47,160
–––––––
Total = Rs 54,000
= Rs 270,710
A B Total
Rs Rs Rs
Revenue 97,600 399,000 496,600
Further processing costs – – (201,930) (201,930)
––––––– –––––––– –––––
Net realisable values 97,600 197,070 294,670
Joint costs (89,664) (181,046) (270,710)
–––––––– ––––––– ––––––
Total profits 7,936 16,024 23,960
97,600
Joint costs apportioned to product A = ––––– × Rs 270,710 = Rs 89,664
294,670
197,070
Joint costs apportioned to product B = ––––––– × Rs 270,710 = Rs 181,046
294,670
Process Account
Unit Rs Unit Rs
Direct material 43,750 266,500 Normal loss 1,000 1,000
(W1) 3,750 37,500
Conversion costs 105,500 Abnormal loss 6,000 3,000
by-product Z
(W2)
Joint product X 18,000 180,000
(W3)
Joint product Y 15,000 150,000
(W3)
Workings:
(W1)
Scrap value of normal loss units = 1,000 x Re 1 = Rs 1,000
(W2)
By-product Z value = 6,000 x Rs 0.50 = Rs 3,000
(W3)
Process costs Rs 371,500 – Scrap value of normal loss
Rs 1,000 – Sales value of by-product Rs 3,000
Cost per EU = –––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Input units 43,750 – Normal Loss 1,000 – Byproduct 6,000
Rs 367,500
Cost per EU = ––––––––––––––––––––––
36,750 Equivalent Units
Cost per EU = Rs 10 per unit
Standard costing
Preparation of standards
Uses of standard costing
Other aspect of standard costing
The actual costs incurred are measured after the event and compared to the
predetermined standards.
The difference between the standard and the actual is known as a variance.
Analysing variances can help managers focus on the areas of the business
requiring the most attention. This is known as management by exception.
control: the standard cost can be compared to the actual costs and any
differences investigated.
performance measurement: any differences between the standard and
the actual cost can be used as a basis for assessing the performance of
cost centre managers.
The large scale repetition of production allows the average usage of resources
to be determined.
Under standard costing, for costing purposes all stocks are valued at their
standard costs.
Standard costs are set as unit costs; budgets tend to be set as total costs.
2 Types of standards
basic standards
ideal standards
attainable standards
current standards.
The types of standard described above may be evaluated against these types
of criteria:
Direct materials: standard quantity (kg, litres etc.) x standard price per
unit (kg, litre etc.).
For each of these an estimate must then be made of the quantity of materials,
number of components, number of hours etc., required for each output unit
(allowing for normal losses, wastage, inefficiency). Sources of information on
which to base such estimates would include
Material usage:
work study techniques will help to identify normal allowances for wastage,
losses etc
technical specifications of the material to be used.
Labour times
technical specifications of the tasks required to manufacture the product or
provide the service.
work study exercises, from which the standard times to perform required
tasks and grades of labour needed could be determined.
Labour rate
wage rates provided by the personnel department
forecasts of likely outcomes of any wage rate negotiations/bonus/incentive
scheme in operation.
The overheads will usually be analysed between their fixed and variable
elements, to give separate standard rates for fixed and variable production
overheads.
2 slices bread
88 grams spicy meat mix
44 grams grated cheese
20 grams pickle
Prepare the standard ingredients cost of one 'spicy meat special' sandwich.
Example
A factory in week 1 achieved the following activity level:
Solution
Actual standard hours produced were:
Standard hours
Fewer units in total were produced in week 2 than in week 1 (10,040 in week 2
compared with 10,770 in week 1). However we are attempting to add
dissimilar units and the comparison is not valid. If we convert the week 2
output to standard hours we will be able to assess whether productivity in
week 2 was in fact lower than in week 1.
Standard
hours
By the time you have finished this chapter you should be able to:
Standard costing
1 What is standard costing? (1.1)
2 What is a standard cost? (1.1)
Types of standards
3 What is a basic standard? (2.2)
4 What is an ideal standard? (2.3)
5 What is an attainable standard? (2.4)
6 What is a current standard? (2.5)
Answers to MCQs
1. C
2. C
Similarities
Both budgets and standards relate to the future.
Both budgets and standards must be quantified.
Both are used in planning.
Both are used in controlling the activities of the business. Actual results
are compared against the budget or standard and if a significant difference
Differences
The biggest difference between budgets and standards is that standards
tend to be expressed per unit, whereas budgets are for much bigger
entities such as departments, functions or resources.
Standards are most often set for materials and labour (but can be set for
variable overheads and fixed overheads). Budgets cover a much greater
variety of costs and entities, such as cash, fixed assets, research and
development, etc.
Standards are often set up in order to prepare the budget.
Variances
Direct material variances
Direct labour variance
2.1 Introduction
The purpose of calculating direct material cost variances is to quantify the
effect on profit of actual direct material costs differing from standard direct
material costs. This total effect is then analysed to quantify how much has
been caused by a difference in the price paid for the material and how much
by a difference in the quantity of material used.
The purpose of this variance is to show the effect on profit for an accounting
period of the actual direct material cost being different from the standard direct
material cost.
Example
The following standard costs relate to a single unit of product X: Rs
Direct materials 10
Direct labour 8
Production overhead 5
23
Rs
standard direct material cost = 1,000 units × Rs10 10,000
actual direct material cost 12,000
direct materials cost variance - adverse 2,000
It should be noted that this form of analysis corresponds to the two estimates
that form the basis of the standard cost. It is this that allows the direct material
total cost variance to be analysed.
Formula:
Material Price Variance = (Actual quantity x Standard Price) – (Actual quantity
x actual Price)
The standard price per kg of material was stated above to be Rs 2/kg. This
can be used to calculate the expected cost of the actual materials used to
make 1,000 units of product X. On this basis the 4,800 kg of material should
have cost:
The actual cost of these materials was Rs 12,000 that is Rs 2,400 (Rs 12,000
Rs 9,600) more than expected. Since the actual price was greater than
expected this will cause the profit to be lower than expected. This variance,
known as the direct material price variance, is adverse.
Returning to our example concerning product X, it was stated that each unit of
product X had a standard direct material usage of 5 kg. This can be used to
calculate the amount of direct material (in kg) that should be used for the
actual production achieved.
You should remember that the analysis of the actual cost showed that 4,800
kg of direct material were actually used.
This saving of materials must be valued to show the effect on profit. If the
original standard direct material cost were revised to reflect this saving of
material it would become:
This is Rs 0.40 per unit of product X less than the original standard and profit
would therefore increase by this amount for every unit of product X produced.
This has a total value of:
In this case profits will be higher than expected because less material was
used than expected in the standard. Therefore the variance is said to be
favourable. We can now check that the two sub-variances total to the total
direct material cost variance:
Direct materials (40 square metres x Rs 5.30 per square metre) Rs 212
Actual results for direct materials in the period: 1,000 units were produced and
39,000 square metres of material costing Rs 210,600 (Rs 5.4 per square
metres) in total were used.
Required:
Calculate the materials total, price and usage variances for Product
“A” in the period.
Solution
Material Cost Variance = (Standard quantity x Standard price) – (Actual
quantity x Actual Price)
During April 500 units of K were made using 223 tonnes of material costing Rs
6,913. Calculate the direct material usage variance, and the direct material
price variance.
3.1 Introduction
The earlier example has assumed that the quantity of materials purchased
equalled the quantity of materials used by production. Whilst this is possible it
is not always certain to occur. Where this does not occur profit will be affected
by the change in the level of stock. The extent to which this affects the
calculation of direct material variances depends on the methods chosen to
value stock. Stocks may be valued either using:
Example
Product P requires 4 kg of material Z per unit. The standard price of material Z
is Rs 8/kg. During September 16,000 kg of Z were bought for Rs 134,400.
There was no opening stock of material Z but at the end of September 1,400
kg of Z remained in stock. Stocks of Z are valued at standard prices. The price
variance is based on the quantity purchased (i.e. 16,000 kg). The standard
cost of these materials can be calculated:
Raw material Z
Rs Rs
Creditor 134,400
Work-in-progress 116,800
Price variance 6,400
c/d 11,200
134,400 134,400
Note that the balance c/d comprises the closing stock of 1,400 kg valued at
the standard price of Rs 8/kg.
The entry representing the price variance is shown as a credit in the raw
material account because it is an adverse variance. The corresponding entry
is made to a price variance account, the balance of which is transferred to
profit and loss at the end of the year. The price variance account is as follows:
The direct material price variance based on the issues quantity can be calculated:
Rs
Standard cost of 14,600 kg:
14,600 kg x Rs 8/kg 116,800
Actual cost of 14,600 kg (above) 122,640
Direct material price variance – Adverse 5,840
Raw material Z
Rs Rs
Creditor 134,400
Work-in-progress 116,800
Direct material price 5,840
variance
c/d 11,760
134,400 134,400
4.1 Introduction
The purpose of calculating direct labour cost variances is to quantify the effect
on profit of actual direct labour costs differing from standard direct labour
costs. This total effect is then analysed to quantify how much has been
caused by a difference in the wage rate paid to employees and how much by
a difference in the number of hours worked.
The purpose of this variance is to show the effect on profit for an accounting
period of the actual direct labour cost being different from the standard direct
labour cost.
Formula:
Labour Cost Variance = (Standard rate x standard hours) – (Actual rate x
actual hours)
Example
Product Q has a standard labour cost of Rs 12 per unit. In August, 800 units
of product Q were manufactured incurring a direct labour cost of Rs 8,000.
It should be noted that this corresponds to the two estimates that form the
basis of the standard cost. It is this that allows the direct labour total cost
variance to be analysed.
Formula:
Labour Rate Variance = (Standard rate x actual hours) – (Actual rate x actual
hours)
The standard wage rate per hour was stated to be Rs 3. This can be used to
calculate the expected cost of the actual hours taken to make 800 units of
product Q. On this basis the 2,000 hours should have cost:
The actual labour cost was Rs 8,000 that is Rs 2,000 (Rs 8,000 - Rs 6,000)
more than expected. Since the actual rate was greater than expected, this will
cause the profit to be lower than expected. This variance, known as the direct
labour rate variance, is adverse.
Continuing with our example concerning product Q, it was stated that each
unit of product Q would require 4 direct labour hours. This can be used to
calculate the number of direct labour hours that should be required for the
actual production achieved.
800 units of Q x 4 direct labour hours each = 3,200 direct labour hours
You should remember that the analysis of the actual cost showed that only
2,000 hours were used.
Thus a saving of 1,200 direct labour hours (3,200 - 2,000) was achieved.
This saving of labour hours must be valued to show the effect on profit. We do
this by multiplying the difference in hours by the standard hourly rate:
In this case profit will be higher than expected because fewer hours were
used. Therefore the variance is favourable.
We can now check that the two sub-variances total to the direct labour total
cost variance:
Example
The following information relates to the production of Product X.
Solution
Labour variances in Bonding department
Labour Rate Variance = (Standard rate x actual hours) – (Actual rate x actual
hours)
Labour Rate Variance = (Standard rate x actual hours) – (Actual rate x actual
hours)
Calculate the direct labour rate and efficiency variances from the above data.
You may come across a situation which involves idle time. Idle time occurs
when labour is available for production but is not engaged in active production
due to, for example:
shortage of work
shortage of material
machine breakdown
During idle time, direct labour wages are being paid but no output is being
produced. The cost of this can be highlighted separately in an idle time
variance, so that it is not ‘hidden’ in an adverse labour efficiency variance. In
this way, management attention can be directed towards the cost of idle time.
Idle time variance can be found by use of this formula;
Idle time variance = (Standard Idle time allowed – Actual idle time) X
Standard Rate per Hour.
Note: Standard idle time allowed means if management feels appropriate that
there is a required wait in manufacturing then it can be accounted while
making standard. If no idle time is allowed in preparation of standard then the
actual idle time will be an adverse idle time variance.
Example
You are given the following extract from WQ Ltd.’s operation for April.
Of the 8,722 hours of direct labour paid for, only 8,222 were active because of
a shortage of material supplies.
= (8,722 – 8,222) × Rs 6
= Rs 3,000 adverse
This is the standard cost of wages incurred during the idle time.
The total of these two variances is the same as the original labour efficiency
variance (Rs 168 favourable).
This chapter has started your studies of variance analysis, looking at total
variances and labour variances, which can be sub-analysed as follows:
By the time you have finished this chapter you should be able to:
Self-test questions
The standard cost details are that 2 units of the material should be used for
each unit of the completed product, and the standard price of each
material unit is Rs 4.70. The entries made in the variance accounts would
be:
2. S Ltd has extracted the following details from the standard cost card of one
of its products:
During March, S Ltd produced 2,300 units of the product and incurred
direct wages costs of Rs 64,150. The actual hours worked were 11,700.
Rate Efficiency
Rs Rs
A 2,090 F 7,402 A
B 2,090 F 8,640 A
C 10,730 F 7,402 A
D 10,730 F 8,640 A
3. The following details have been extracted from a standard cost card of X
plc:
Rate Efficiency
Rs Rs
A 9,650 F 4,860 F
B 9,650 F 2,700 A
C 4,790 F 2,575 A
D 4,790 F 2,700 A
4. T plc uses a standard costing system, with its material stock account being
maintained at standard cost. The following details have been extracted
from the standard cost card in respect of direct materials:
Which of the following correctly states the material price and usage
variance to be reported?
Price Usage
A Rs 286 (A) Rs 152 (A)
B Rs 286 (A) Rs 280 (A)
C Rs 286 (A) Rs 294 (A)
D Rs 328 (A) Rs 152 (A)
Company M
The following standard costs apply in Company M that manufactures a
single product:
You are required to calculate relevant material and labour cost variances,
and present these in a format suitable for presentation to the management
of the company.
1. D
2. D
3. D
4. D
Company M
Tutorial note: The question asks for a 'format suitable for presentation to
management'. It is therefore recommended that the first part of the solution is
a summary of the variances and the detailed workings are shown separately.
Rs
Materials:
Price 1,885 (A)
Usage 2,610 (A)
_____
Cost 4,495 (A)
Labour:
Rate: 551 (A)
Efficiency 580 (F)
____
Cost 29 (F)
Labour
Actual cost 11,571 Rate variance 551 (A)
Actual hours paid/worked at
standard rate 2,755 x Rs 4 11,020
Standard hours for actual production
at standard rate 290 x 10 x Rs 4 11,600 Efficiency variance 580 (F)
Cost vairance 29 (F)
Assumptions
1.1 Introduction
In this chapter you will be learning about the analysis of overhead variances.
Your syllabus requires you to be able to analyse overhead variances in an
absorption costing system and in a marginal costing system.
You will be seeing that the analysis of fixed overhead variances does differ
between the two systems. This is because marginal costing treats fixed
overheads as a period cost, whereas absorption costing absorbs fixed
production overhead into unit production costs. This differing accounting
treatment means that different fixed production overhead variances arise in the
two systems.
2.1 Introduction
These variances are very similar to those for material and labour because, like
these direct costs, the variable overhead cost also changes when activity
changes.
During August the actual production was 20,500 units. Actual hours worked
were 41,600 hours and the variable overhead cost incurred amounted to Rs
86,700.
the variable overhead cost per hour was different to that expected (an
expenditure variance)
working more or fewer hours than expected for the actual production (an
efficiency variance)
Formula:
Total variance = (Standard rate x standard hours) – (Actual rate x actual
hours)
Actual production was 20,500 units that is the equivalent of 41,000 standard
hours. (According to the budget each unit should require 2 hours, i.e. 40,000
hours/20,000 units.)
Rs
The standard cost of 41,000 hours at Rs 2.10 per hour is 86,100
Actual cost 86,700
Variance 600 (A)
The variance is adverse because the actual cost exceeded the standard cost
and therefore profits would be lower than expected.
Formula:
Expenditure variance = (Standard rate x actual hours) – (Actual rate x actual
hours)
Formula:
Efficiency variance = (Standard rate x standard hours) – (Standard rate x
actual hours)
Rs
Direct labour:
Bonding (24 hrs @ Rs 5 per hour) 120
Finishing (15 hrs @ Rs 4.80 per hour) 72
Variable overhead:
Bonding (24 hrs @ Rs 1.50 per hour) 36
Finishing (15 hrs @ Rs 1 per hour) 15
Required:
Calculate the variable overhead total, expenditure and efficiency variances in
each department for Product X for the period.
Solution
3.1 Introduction
These variances show the effect on profit of differences between actual and
expected fixed overhead costs. By definition these costs do not change when
there is a change in the level of activity, consequently many of the variances
are calculated based upon budgets; however, the effect on profit depends
upon whether a marginal or absorption costing system is being used. In the
variance calculations that follow firstly an absorption costing system is
assumed. These are then compared with the variances that would arise if a
marginal costing system were used.
Example
Q Limited has completed its budget for October, the following data have been
extracted:
Solution
The absorption rate per machine hour (based upon the budget) is given by:
This would be used to determine the fixed overhead cost absorbed (i.e.
attributed to the actual production achieved).
According to the budget 20,000 units should require 25,000 machine hours,
this is the equivalent of 1.25 machine hours per unit (25,000/20,000).
This is the standard cost of the actual production (using absorption costing). It
is compared with the actual cost to find the total variance:
Rs
Standard cost 101,500
Actual cost 98,500
Variance 3,000 (F)
Since the actual cost is less than the standard cost it is a favourable variance.
You should note that the over absorption is equal to the total variance.
Example
Q Limited has completed its budget for October, the following data have been
extracted:
The variance is favourable because the actual expenditure is less than that
budgeted.
Formula:
Volume variance = (Standard hours for actual production x
Overhead absoprtion rate) – Budgeted expenditure
This difference of 375 standard machine hours is valued at the absorption rate
of Rs4/hr:
This variance is favourable because the actual output exceeded the expected
output. Since the cost is fixed, the actual cost/unit is lowered by making
greater production and profits will therefore increase or, looking at it another
way, production has been overcharged by Rs 1,500 and this will have to be
credited back by a favourable variance.
Fixed OH volume variance can also be found by this formula depending upon
data given in exam questions.
Since the cost is a fixed cost it is not expected to change when activity
changes thus the expected cost of any level of production is always the
budgeted cost.The purpose of variance analysis is to calculate the effect on
profit of actual performance differing from that expected, consequently, under
marginal costing this will be the difference between the actual and budgeted
expenditure.
Thus under marginal costing the total fixed production overhead variance will
always equal the fixed production overhead expenditure variance which is
calculated in the same way as for absorption costing systems.
Budget
Output Rs 22,960
Unit 6,560
Actual
Fixed production overheads Rs 24,200
Unit 6,460
Required:
Calculate the following:
(a) fixed overhead absorption rate per unit
(b) fixed overhead expenditure variance for marginal costing
(c) fixed overhead expenditure variance for absorption costing
(d) fixed overhead volume variance for marginal costing
(e) fixed overhead volume variance for absorption costing
(f) fixed overhead total variance for marginal costing
(g) fixed overhead total variance for absorption costing.
Solution
(a) FOAR = Rs 22,960/6,560 = Rs 3.50 per unit
(b) Fixed overhead expenditure variance for marginal costing.
(d) There is no fixed overhead volume variance for marginal costing. This
is because under marginal costing, fixed overheads are not expected to
change when there is a change in volume of activity.
(f) The fixed overhead total variance for marginal costing is the same as
the expenditure variance for marginal costing, i.e. Rs 1,240 (A).
(g) The fixed overhead total variance for absorption costing is the total of
the expenditure and volume variances for absorption costing, i.e. Rs
1,240 (A) + Rs 350 (A) = Rs 1,590 (A).
Fixed Overheads volume variance can also be segregated into two variances
namely; Fixed overheads efficiency variance and fixed overheads capacity
variance because efficiency and capacity of workers affects the overall
production volume.
4 Non-production overheads
4.1 Introduction
Since the purpose of variance analysis is to show the effect on profit of actual
results differing from those expected, it is also necessary to compare the costs
of non-production overheads such as selling, marketing and administration.
Variable overheads
– expenditure variance
– efficiency variance
Fixed overheads
– expenditure variance
– volume variance (absorption costing only).
Whilst the variable overhead variances are very similar to the other variable
cost variances already studied, the fixed overhead variance is approached
from a different angle, due to its nature.
By the time you have finished this chapter you should be able to:
During April, the actual production of T was 800 units, which was 100 units
fewer than budgeted. The budget shows an annual production target of
10,800, with fixed costs accruing at a constant rate hroughout the year. Actual
overhead expenditure totalled Rs 8,500 for April.
Expenditure Volume
Rs Rs
A 367 A 1,000 A
B 100 A 1,000 A
C 367 A 400 A
D 100 A 400 A
H Limited operates a standard costing system for its only product. The
standard cost card includes:
Fixed overheads are absorbed on the basis of labour hours. Fixed overhead
costs are budgeted at Rs 240,000 per annum and are expected to be incurred
in equal amounts in each of the twelve accounting periods during the year.
Actual production during period 6 was 450 units, with actual fixed overhead
costs incurred being Rs 19,600 and actual hours worked being 1,970.
Department 7
Shown below is the previous month's overhead expenditure and activity, both
budget and actual, for department 7 in a manufacturing company:
Month's Month's
budget actual
Activity:
Standard hours 8,000 8,400
Rs Rs
Fixed overheads:
Salaries 6,750 6,400
Maintenance 3,250 3,315
Variable overheads:
Power 17,600 20,140
Consumable materials 6,000 5,960
Indirect labour 4,400 4,480
Total overheads 38,000 40,295
The budgeted overheads shown above are based upon the anticipated activity
of 8,000 standard hours and it should be assumed that the department's
budgeted overhead expenditure and activity occur evenly throughout the year.
Variable overheads vary with standard hours produced.
Answers to MCQs:
1. D
2. B
3. D
Proof of total:
17,600 20,140
6,000 5,960
4,400 4,480
28,000 x 8,400/ 8,000
Rs 29,400 30,580 Rs 1,180 (A)
Sales variances
Operating statements
Deriving actual data from standard cost details and Inter-relationship between
variances
The reason for cost variances
1.1 Introduction
There are two causes of sales variances: a difference in the selling price, and a
difference in the sales volume.
Formula:
Sales volume variance = (Actual Quantity Sold – Budget Quantity sold) x
Standard Margin**
The Standard Margin equals the Contribution per unit (marginal costing), or the
profit per unit (absorption costing).
If the actual quantity sold is greater that the budget this will produce a favourable
variance as it increases profit.
Note: In Exams questions examiner might ask you to calcule sales volume
variance based on standard sales price then we have to multiply by standard
sale price instead of standard profit or standard contribution.
Formula:
Sales price variance = (Actual Price – Budget Price) x Actual Quantity sold
If the actual price is greater that the budget this will produce a favourable
variance as it increases profit.
Required:
Calculate the sales volume variance (under absorption and marginal costing)
and the sales price variance.
Solution
Sales volume variance – absorption costing
The actual sales were 500 units at Rs 2 each and costs were as expected.
Required:
Calculate the sales price and sales volume variances (using marginal costing).
Rs
Direct materials 25
Direct wages 8
Variable overhead 4
Fixed overhead 18
–––
Total standard cost 55
Standard gross profit 5
–––
Standard selling price 60
–––
The actual selling price for the period was Rs 61.
Required:
Calculate the sales price and sales volume variances for the period (using
absorption costing).
2.1 Introduction
The purpose of calculating variances is to identify the different effects of each
item of cost/income on profit compared to the expected profit. These
variances are summarised in a reconciliation statement (also called operating
statement).
(Note that bold highlighted the differences from the marginal costing version)
Example
Chapel Ltd manufactures a chemical protective called Rustnot. The following
standard costs apply for the production of 100 cylinders:
Rs
Materials 500 kgs @ Rs 80 per kg 40,000
Labour 20 hours @ Rs 150 per hour 3,000
Fixed overheads 20 hours @ Rs 100 per hour 2,000
45,000
For the month of November the following actual production and sales
information is available:
You are required to prepare an operating statement for November detailing all
the variances.
Workings
Variances
The standard price of the raw material is Rs 80 per kg. If the actual quantity of
53,200 kg had been bought at the standard price this would have been:
The actual cost was Rs 4,250,000. This is a price saving, i.e. a favourable
price variance of Rs 6,000.
Each 100 cylinders should use 500 kgs of material. Therefore the 10,600
cylinders produced should use:
The actual usage was 53,200 kgs. These additional 200 kgs of material have a
value (using standard prices) of:
(g) Labour
The standard labour rate is Rs 150 per hour. The actual labour hours were
2,040 hours, so if they had been paid at the standard rate per hour, the wage
cost would have been:
The actual wage cost was Rs 310,000. This extra Rs 4,000 is the adverse
wage rate variance.
The actual production was 10,600 cylinders so these should have taken:
80 x Rs 150 = Rs 12,000
The actual cost was Rs 220,000. The extra cost of Rs 20,000 is an adverse
fixed overhead expenditure variance.
But the actual production was 10,600 cylinders, 600 more than budgeted. This
extra volume of 600 units (valued at the standard absorption rate of Rs20/100
units) is:
Budgeted contribution X
Sales volume variance (using std X
contribution per unit)
Standard contribution on actual sales X
Sales price variance X
Cost variances: F A
Rs Rs
Material price
Material usage
Labour rate
Actual contribution
Fixed overhead expenditure – Production
Fixed overhead expenditure – Non-production
Total X
Actual profit X
Previous example (Chapel Ltd) on a marginal costing basis would appear as:
Rs
Budgeted contribution (10,000 × Rs (600-430)) 1,700,000
Total sales contribution variance (j) 102,000
1,742,000
3 Causes of variances
3.1 Introduction
The calculation of variances is only the first stage. Management wants
information to plan and control operations. It is not sufficient to know that a
variance has arisen: we must try to establish why. The figures themselves do
not provide the answers, but they point to some of the questions that should be
asked.
Note that the possible causes of variable overhead efficiency variances are the
same as those for the labour efficiency variance.
Possible causes:
unplanned price increases (sales price variance)
unplanned price reduction, for example, when trying to attract additional
business (sales price variance)
unexpected fall in demand due to recession (sales volume variance)
additional demand attracted by reduced price (sales volume variance)
failure to satisfy demand due to production difficulties (sales volume
variance)
4 Reporting of variances
In reporting variances, the concept of responsibility accounting would normally
be followed so a variance report to an individual manager should only include
figures relating to his own area of responsibility i.e. within his area of control. If
more figures are given, then they are usually reported in the form of ‘for
information only’ as a help to a manager in seeing the total picture or context in
which his figures arise.
Several questions may be asked before deciding whether or not to investigate
avariance.
These include:
Is the variance controllable?
Is the expected benefit from control action likely to exceed the expected
cost?
Is there a reasonable probability of successfully being able to correct a
variance?
Is the variance material (significant)?
Is the variance steadily getting worse?
However, not all significant controllable variances will necessarily lead to control
action. Managers should also consider:
Control action is only worthwhile if the expected benefits from the control
measures exceed the cost of implementing them.
The benefits from control action are not the same as the amount of the variance.
The amount of detail included in reports will vary according to the needs of
management. As a guide, they should be in sufficient detail to motivate the
individual manager to take the most appropriate action in all the circumstances.
If a report lacks the required amount of detail, then an individual manager should
request this from the management accountant.
By the time you have finished this chapter you should be able to:
Sales variances
1 How is the sales margin variance calculated in an absorption costing
system? (1.2)
2 How is the sales margin variance calculated under a marginal costing
system? (1.3)
Causes of variances
4 Give two possible causes of a materials price variance. (3.2)
5 Give two possible causes of a labour efficiency variance. (3.2)
6 Give two possible causes of a fixed overhead volume variance. (3.2)
If it used a standard marginal cost accounting system and its actual sales were
4,500 units at a selling price of Rs 12.00, its sales margin (contribution)
variance would be
A) Rs 6,800 favourable
B) Rs 6,800 adverse
C) Rs 800 favourable
D) Rs 800 adverse
2. P Ltd has the following data relating to its budgeted sales for October:
A) Rs 7,250 adverse
B) Rs 7,250 favourable
C) Rs 12,200 favourable
D) Rs 14,500 adverse
Budget
Selling price per unit Rs 120
Variable cost per unit Rs 80
Production and sales 18,000 units
Actual for SeptemberSales 21,000 units
Fixed costs Rs 580,000
Fixed costs expenditure variance Rs 20,000 (F)
Variable cost per unit Rs 60
A) Rs 80,000
B) Rs 100,000
C) Rs 120,000
D) Rs 140,000
The standard selling price of Glow is Rs 60/gallon and the budgeted quantity to
be produced and sold in each period is 10,000 gallons. It may be assumed that
variable overheads vary directly with the number of gallons produced. The
actual results achieved during period 4 were:
Answers to MCQs
1. A
2. B
3. C
Direct labour
Rs
Actual hours at actual rate 200,000 Rate variance Rs 4,000 (A)
Actual hours at standard rate
49,000 hours @ Rs 4/hour 196,000
Standard hours at standard rate
(9,500 x 5) @ Rs 4/hour 190,000 Efficiency Variance Rs 6,000 (A)
Variable overhead
Rs
Actual hours at actual rate 47,000 Expenditure Variance Rs 2,000 (F)
Actual hours at standard rate
49,000 hours @ Re 1/hour 49,000
Standard hours at standard rate
(9,500 x 5) @ Re 1/hour 47,500 Efficiency Variance Rs 1,500 (A)