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Cost accounting

Cost accounting is defined by the Institute of Management Accountants as "a systematic set of procedures for recording and reporting measurements of the cost of manufacturing goods and performing services in the aggregate and in detail. It includes methods for recognizing, allocating, aggregating and reporting such costs and comparing them with standard costs".[1] Often considered a subset of managerial accounting, its end goal is to advise the management on how to optimize business practices and processes based on cost efficiency and capability. Cost accounting provides the detailed cost information that management needs to control current operations and plan for the future.[2]

Cost accounting information is also commonly used in financial accounting, but its primary function is for use by managers to facilitate their decision-making.

Origins of cost accounting edit

All types of businesses, whether manufacturing, trading or producing services, require cost accounting to track their activities.[2] Cost accounting has long been used to help managers understand the costs of running a business. Modern cost accounting originated during the industrial revolution when the complexities of running large scale businesses led to the development of systems for recording and tracking costs to help business owners and managers make decisions. Various techniques used by cost accountants include standard costing and variance analysis, marginal costing and cost volume profit analysis, budgetary control, uniform costing, inter firm comparison, etc. Evaluation of cost accounting is mainly due to the limitations of financial accounting. Moreover, maintenance of cost records has been made compulsory in selected industries as notified by the government from time to time.[3]

In the early industrial age most of the costs incurred by a business were what modern accountants call "variable costs" because they varied directly with the amount of production. Money was spent on labour, raw materials, the power to run a factory, etc., in direct proportion to production. Managers could simply total the variable costs for a product and use this as a rough guide for decision-making processes.

Some costs tend to remain the same even during busy periods, unlike variable costs, which rise and fall with volume of work. Over time, these "fixed costs" have become more important to managers. Examples of fixed costs include the depreciation of plant and equipment, and the cost of departments such as maintenance, tooling, production control, purchasing, quality control, storage and handling, plant supervision and engineering.[4]

In the early nineteenth century, these costs were of little importance to most businesses. However, with the growth of railroads, steel and large scale manufacturing, by the late nineteenth century these costs were often more important than the variable cost of a product, and allocating them to a broad range of products led to bad decision making[citation needed]. Managers must understand fixed costs in order to make decisions about products and pricing.

For example: A company produced railway coaches and had only one product. To make each coach, the company needed to purchase $60 of raw materials and components and pay 6 labourers $40 each. Therefore, the total variable cost for each coach was $300. Knowing that making a coach required spending $300, managers knew they could not sell below that price without losing money on each coach. Any price above $300 would make a contribution to the fixed costs of the company. If the fixed costs were, say, $1000 per month for rent, insurance and owner's salary, the company could therefore sell 5 coaches per month for a total of $3000 (priced at $600 each), or 10 coaches for a total of $4500 (priced at $450 each), and make a profit of $500 in each case.

Cost accounting vs financial accounting edit

Differences between cost and financial accounting
Cost accounting Financial accounting
Computes costs in a rigorous manner that facilitates cost control and cost reduction. Analyses transitions in the current accounting period into financial statements (Statement of Cashflows, Profit or Loss, Balance Sheet etc.).
Reports only to the organizations internal management to aid their decision-making. Reports the results and financial position of the business to the government, creditors, investors, and other external parties.
Cost classifications based on functions, activities, products, processes and on the information needs of the organization in its planning and control. Cost classifications based on the types of transactions.
Combines objective and subjective assessment of costs contributing to a standard result. Aims to present a 'true and fair' view of transactions.
Information can be presented as accountants see fit. Must adhere to accounting standards such as the IFRS and GAAP.

Cost accounting methods edit

The following are some of the different cost accounting approaches:

Elements of cost accounting edit

Basic cost elements are:

  1. Material
  2. Labour
  3. Expenses and other overheads

Material (inventory) edit

The materials directly contributed to a product and those easily identifiable in the finished product are called direct materials. For example, paper in books, wood in furniture, plastic in a water tank, and leather in shoes are direct materials. Other, usually lower cost items or supporting material used in the production of in a finished product are called indirect materials. For example, the length of thread used in a garment.

Furthermore, these can be categorized into three different types of inventories that must be accounted for in different ways; raw materials, work-in-progress, and finished goods.[5]

Labour edit

Any wages paid to workers or a group of workers which may directly co-relate to any specific activity of production, maintenance, transportation of material, or product, and directly associate in the conversion of raw material into finished goods are called direct labour. Wages paid to trainees or apprentices does not come under the category of direct labour as they have no significant value.[citation needed]

Overheads edit

Overheads include:

  • Production or works overhead including factory staff
  • Administration overhead including office staff
  • Sales overhead including production and maintenance of catalogues, advertising (development and purchases), exhibitions, sales staff, cost of money
  • Distribution overhead
  • Maintenance and repair including office equipment and factory machinery
  • Supplies
  • Utilities including gas, electric, water, sewer, and municipal assessments
  • Other variable expenses
  • Salaries/payroll including wages, pensions, and paycheck deductions (e.g., National Insurance and PAYE in the UK, FICA in the US)
  • Occupancy (rent, mortgage, property taxes)
  • Depreciation (durable goods including machinery and office equipment)
  • Other fixed expenses

These categories are flexible, sometimes overlapping as different cost accounting principles are applied.

Classification of costs edit

Important classifications of costs include:

  1. By nature or traceability: Direct costs and indirect costs. Direct costs are directly attributable/traceable to cost objects, while indirect costs (not being directly attributable) are allocated or apportioned to cost objects.
  2. By function: production, administration, selling and distribution, or research and development.
  3. By behavior: fixed, variable, or semi-variable. Fixed costs remain unchanged irrespective of changes in the production volume over a given period of time. Variable costs change according to the volume of production. Semi-variable costs are partly fixed and partly variable.
  4. By controllability: Controllable costs are those which can be controlled or influenced by conscious management action. Uncontrollable costs cannot be controlled or influenced by conscious management action.
  5. By normality: normal costs and abnormal costs. Normal costs arise during routine day-to-day business operations. Abnormal costs arise because of any abnormal activity or event not part of routine business operations, such as accidents or natural disasters.
  6. By time: Historical costs and predetermined costs. Historical costs are costs incurred in the past. Predetermined costs are computed in advance on basis of factors affecting cost elements.
  7. By decision-making costs: These costs are used for managerial decision making:
    1. Marginal costs: The marginal cost is the change in the total cost caused by increasing or decreasing output by one unit.
    2. Differential costs: This cost is the difference in total cost resulting from selecting one alternative over another.
    3. Opportunity costs: The value of a benefit sacrificed in favour of an alternative course of action.
    4. Relevant cost: The relevant cost is a cost which is relevant in various decisions of management.
    5. Replacement cost: This cost is the cost at which existing items of material or fixed assets can be replaced at present or at a future date.
    6. Shutdown cost: Costs incurred if operations are shut down, and which would not occur if operations are continued.
    7. Capacity cost: The cost incurred by a company for providing production, administration and selling and distribution capabilities in order to perform various functions. These costs are normally fixed costs.
    8. Sunk cost: A cost already incurred, which cannot be recovered.
    9. Other costs

Standard cost accounting edit

Standard Costing is a technique of Cost Accounting to compare the actual costs with standard costs (that are pre-defined) with the help of Variance Analysis. It is used to understand the variations of product costs in manufacturing.[6] Standard costing allocates fixed costs incurred in an accounting period to the goods produced during that period. This allowed the full cost of products that were not sold in the period they were produced to be recorded as 'inventory' in the Balance sheet to be carried forward to the next accounting period, using a variety of complex accounting methods, which was consistent with the principles of GAAP (Generally Accepted Accounting Principles). It also essentially enabled managers to ignore the fixed costs, and look at the results of each period in relation to the "standard cost" for any given product.

For Example: if the railway coach company normally produced 40 coaches per month, and the fixed costs were still $1000/month, then each coach could be said to incur an Operating Cost/overhead of $25 =($1000 / 40). Adding this to the variable costs of $300 per coach produced a full cost of $325 per coach.

This method tended to slightly distort the resulting unit cost, but in mass-production industries that made one product line, and where the fixed costs were relatively low, the distortion was very minor.

For Example: if the railway coach company made 100 coaches one month, then the unit cost would become $310 per coach ($300 + ($1000 / 100)). If the next month the company made 50 coaches, then the unit cost = $320 per coach ($300 + ($1000 / 50)), a relatively minor difference.

An important part of standard cost accounting is a variance analysis, which breaks down the variation between actual cost and standard costs into various components (volume variation, material cost variation, labor cost variation, etc.) so managers can understand why costs were different from what was planned and take appropriate action to correct the situation.

The development of throughput accounting edit

As business became more complex and began producing a greater variety of products, the use of cost accounting to make decisions to maximize profitability came into question. Management circles became increasingly aware of the Theory of Constraints in the 1980s and began to understand that "every production process has a limiting factor" somewhere in the chain of production. As business management learned to identify the constraints, they increasingly adopted throughput accounting to manage them and "maximize the throughput dollars" (or other currency) from each unit of constrained resource.

Throughput accounting aims to make the best use of scarce resources (bottleneck) in a JIT (Just in time) environment.[7]

"Throughput", in this context, refers to the amount of money obtained from sales minus the cost of materials that have gone into making them.

Mathematical formulae edit

 
 

Activity-based costing edit

Activity-based costing (ABC) is a system for assigning costs to products based on the activities they require. In this case, activities are those regular actions performed inside a company.[8] "Talking with the customer regarding invoice questions" is an example of activity inside most companies.

Companies may be moved to adopt ABC by a need to improve costing accuracy, that is, understand better the true costs and profitability of individual products, services, or initiatives. ABC gets closer to true costs in these areas by turning many costs that standard cost accounting views as indirect costs essentially into direct costs. By contrast, standard cost accounting typically determines so-called indirect and overhead costs simply as a percentage of certain direct costs, which may or may not reflect actual resource usage for individual items.

Under ABC, accountants assign 100% of each employee's time to the different activities performed inside a company (many will use surveys to have the workers themselves assign their time to the different activities). The accountant then can determine the total cost spent on each activity by summing up the percentage of each worker's salary spent on that activity.

A company can use the resulting activity cost data to determine where to focus its operational improvements. For example, a job-based manufacturer may find that a high percentage of its workers are spending their time trying to figure out a hastily written customer order. Via (ABC) Activity-based costing, the accountants now have a currency amount pegged to the activity of "Researching Customer Work Order Specifications". Senior management can now decide how much focus or money to budget for resolving this process deficiency. Activity-based management includes (but is not restricted to) the use of activity-based costing to manage a business.

While (ABC) Activity-based costing may be able to pinpoint the cost of each activity and resources into the ultimate product, the process could be tedious, costly and subject to errors.

As it is a tool for a more accurate way of allocating fixed costs into a product, these fixed costs do not vary according to each month's production volume. For example, the elimination of one product would not eliminate the overhead or even direct labour cost assigned to it. Activity-based costing (ABC) better identifies product costing in the long run, but may not be too helpful in day-to-day decision-making.

Integrating EVA and process-based costing edit

Recently, Mocciaro Li Destri, Picone and Minà (2012) proposed a performance and cost measurement system that integrates the Economic Value Added criteria with Process-Based Costing (PBC).[9] The EVA-PBC methodology allows us to implement the EVA management logic not only at the firm level, but also at lower levels of the organization. EVA-PBC methodology plays an interesting role in bringing strategy back into financial performance measures.

Lean accounting edit

Lean accounting[10] has developed in recent years to provide the accounting, control, and measurement methods supporting lean manufacturing and other applications of lean thinking such as healthcare, construction, insurance, banking, education, government and other industries.

There are two main thrusts for Lean Accounting. The first is the application of lean methods to the company's accounting, control, and measurement processes. This is not different from applying lean methods to any other processes. The objective is to eliminate waste, free up capacity, speed up the process, eliminate errors & defects, and make the process clear and understandable. The second (and more important) thrust of Lean Accounting is to fundamentally change the accounting, control, and measurement processes so they motivate lean change & improvement, provide information that is suitable for control and decision-making, provide an understanding of customer value, correctly assess the financial impact of lean improvement, and are themselves simple, visual, and low-waste. Lean Accounting does not require the traditional management accounting methods like standard costing, activity-based costing, variance reporting, cost-plus pricing, complex transactional control systems, and untimely and confusing financial reports. These are replaced by:

  • lean-focused performance measurements
  • simple summary direct costing of the value streams
  • decision-making and reporting using a box score
  • financial reports that are timely and presented in "plain English" that everyone can understand.
  • radical simplification and elimination of transactional control systems by eliminating the need for them.
  • driving lean changes from a deep understanding of the value created for the customers.
  • eliminating traditional budgeting through monthly sales, operations, and financial planning processes (SOFP)
  • value-based pricing
  • correct understanding of the financial impact of lean change

As an organization becomes more mature with lean thinking and methods, they recognize that the combined methods of lean accounting in fact creates a lean management system (LMS) designed to provide the planning, the operational and financial reporting, and the motivation for change required to prosper the company's on-going lean transformation.

Marginal costing edit

The cost-volume-profit analysis is the systematic examination of the relationship between selling prices, sales, production volumes, costs, expenses and profits. This analysis provides very useful information for decision-making in the management of a company. For example, the analysis can be used in establishing sales prices, in the product mix selection to sell, in the decision to choose marketing strategies, and in the analysis of the impact on profits by changes in costs. In the current environment of business, a business administration must act and take decisions in a fast and accurate manner. As a result, the importance of cost-volume-profit is still increasing as time passes.

CONTRIBUTION MARGIN

A relationship between the cost, volume and profit is the contribution margin. The contribution margin is the revenue excess from sales over variable costs. The concept of contribution margin is particularly useful in the planning of business because it gives an insight into the potential profits that a business can generate. The following chart shows the income statement of a company X, which has been prepared to show its contribution margin:

Sales $1,000,000
(-) Variable Costs $600,000
Contribution Margin $400,000
(-) Fixed Costs $300,000
Income from Operations $100,000

CONTRIBUTION MARGIN RATIO

The contribution margin can also be expressed as a percentage. The contribution margin ratio, which is sometimes called the profit-volume ratio, indicates the percentage of each sales dollar available to cover fixed costs and to provide operating revenue. For the company Fusion, Inc. the contribution margin ratio is 40%, which is computed as follows:

 

The contribution margin ratio measures the effect on operating income of an increase or a decrease in sales volume. For example, assume that the management of Fusion, Inc. is studying the effect of adding $80,000 in sales orders. Multiplying the contribution margin ratio (40%) by the change in sales volume ($80,000) indicates that operating income will increase $32,000 if additional orders are obtained. To validate this analysis the table below shows the income statement of the company including additional orders:

Sales $1,080,000
(-) Variable Costs $648,000 (1,080,000 x 60%)
Contribution Margin $432,000 (1,080,000 x 40%)
(-) Fixed Costs $300,000
Income from Operations $132,000

Variable costs as a percentage of sales are equal to 100% minus the contribution margin ratio. Thus, in the above income statement, the variable costs are 60% (100% - 40%) of sales, or $648,000 ($1,080,000 X 60%). The total contribution margin $432,000, can also be computed directly by multiplying the sales by the contribution margin ratio ($1,080,000 X 40%).

Government procurement edit

The United States' federal procurement rules (the Federal Acquisition Regulation, FAR) require government Contracting Officers negotiating contract prices to verify that suppliers' cost submissions are in accordance with the government's contract cost principles and procedures and, in certain cases, the requirements and procedures of the federal Cost Accounting Standards.[11] Relevant cost data or pricing data may be required from the supplier, in order to undertake a "cost realism analysis", also known as a "price realism analysis".[12] FAR defines a cost realism analysis as

The process of independently reviewing and evaluating specific elements of each offeror's proposed cost estimate to determine whether the estimated proposed cost elements are realistic for the work to be performed; reflect a clear understanding of the requirements; and are consistent with the unique methods of performance and materials described in the offeror’s technical proposal.[11]

Similarly, where a government agency requests a fixed price submission, provision may be made for a cost or price realism analysis to take place during the evaluation process.[12]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Cost Accounting vs. Managerial Accounting - AccountingVerse". accountingverse.com. Retrieved 2019-07-16.
  2. ^ a b Vanderbeck, Edward J. (February 2012). Principles of Cost Accounting - Edward J. Vanderbeck - Google Books. Cengage Learning. ISBN 978-1133187868. Retrieved 2013-03-01.
  3. ^ Bhabatosh Banerjee, Cost accounting : theory and practice
  4. ^ Performance management, Paper f5. Kaplan Publishing UK. Pg 3
  5. ^ Australian Government (2018-07-23). "Types of inventory". www.business.gov.au. Retrieved 2023-03-30.
  6. ^ Management Accounting & Control. India: Icfai Business School. pp. 15–16.
  7. ^ Performance management, Paper f5. Kaplan Publishing UK. Pg 17
  8. ^ Performance management, Paper f5. Kaplan Publishing UK. Pg 6
  9. ^ Mocciaro Li Destri A., Picone P. M. & Minà A. (2012), Bringing Strategy Back into Financial Systems of Performance Measurement: Integrating EVA and PBC, Business System Review, Vol 1., Issue 1. pp.85-102.
  10. ^ Brian H. Maskell; Bruce Baggaley; Larry Grasso (December 19, 2003), Practical Lean Accounting, Productivity Press, New York, NY
  11. ^ a b Federal Acquisition Regulation, Subpart 15.4 - Contract Pricing, accessed 30 March 2023
  12. ^ a b Government Accountability Office, Decision: Matter of DKW Communications, Inc., file B-411853.2; B-411853.3; B-411853.4, published 8 January 2016, accessed 30 March 2023

Further reading edit

  • Cost Accounting, 3rd edition - Md. Omar Faruk, Sohel Ahmed, Sharif Hossain.
  • Maher, Lanen and Rahan, Fundamentals of Cost Accounting, 1st Edition (McGraw-Hill 2005).
  • Horngren, Datar and Foster, Cost Accounting - A Managerial Emphasis, 11th edition (Prentice Hall 2003).
  • Kaplan, Robert S. and Bruns, W. Accounting and Management: A Field Study Perspective (Harvard Business School Press, 1987) ISBN 0-87584-186-4
  • Nicholson, Jerome Lee, and John Francis Deems Rohrbach. Cost accounting. New York: Ronald Press, 1919.
  • Blocher, Stout, Juras and Cokins,Cost Management - A Strategic Emphasis, 7th Edition (McGraw-Hill 2016).

External links edit

  • Accounting Systems, introduction to Cost Accounting, ethics and relationship to GAAP.

cost, accounting, this, article, needs, attention, from, expert, accounting, specific, problem, potentially, inaccurate, information, wikiproject, accounting, able, help, recruit, expert, july, 2019, defined, institute, management, accountants, systematic, pro. This article needs attention from an expert in Accounting The specific problem is potentially inaccurate information WikiProject Accounting may be able to help recruit an expert July 2019 Cost accounting is defined by the Institute of Management Accountants as a systematic set of procedures for recording and reporting measurements of the cost of manufacturing goods and performing services in the aggregate and in detail It includes methods for recognizing allocating aggregating and reporting such costs and comparing them with standard costs 1 Often considered a subset of managerial accounting its end goal is to advise the management on how to optimize business practices and processes based on cost efficiency and capability Cost accounting provides the detailed cost information that management needs to control current operations and plan for the future 2 Cost accounting information is also commonly used in financial accounting but its primary function is for use by managers to facilitate their decision making Contents 1 Origins of cost accounting 2 Cost accounting vs financial accounting 3 Cost accounting methods 4 Elements of cost accounting 4 1 Material inventory 4 2 Labour 4 3 Overheads 5 Classification of costs 6 Standard cost accounting 7 The development of throughput accounting 7 1 Mathematical formulae 8 Activity based costing 9 Integrating EVA and process based costing 10 Lean accounting 11 Marginal costing 12 Government procurement 13 See also 14 References 15 Further reading 16 External linksOrigins of cost accounting editAll types of businesses whether manufacturing trading or producing services require cost accounting to track their activities 2 Cost accounting has long been used to help managers understand the costs of running a business Modern cost accounting originated during the industrial revolution when the complexities of running large scale businesses led to the development of systems for recording and tracking costs to help business owners and managers make decisions Various techniques used by cost accountants include standard costing and variance analysis marginal costing and cost volume profit analysis budgetary control uniform costing inter firm comparison etc Evaluation of cost accounting is mainly due to the limitations of financial accounting Moreover maintenance of cost records has been made compulsory in selected industries as notified by the government from time to time 3 In the early industrial age most of the costs incurred by a business were what modern accountants call variable costs because they varied directly with the amount of production Money was spent on labour raw materials the power to run a factory etc in direct proportion to production Managers could simply total the variable costs for a product and use this as a rough guide for decision making processes Some costs tend to remain the same even during busy periods unlike variable costs which rise and fall with volume of work Over time these fixed costs have become more important to managers Examples of fixed costs include the depreciation of plant and equipment and the cost of departments such as maintenance tooling production control purchasing quality control storage and handling plant supervision and engineering 4 In the early nineteenth century these costs were of little importance to most businesses However with the growth of railroads steel and large scale manufacturing by the late nineteenth century these costs were often more important than the variable cost of a product and allocating them to a broad range of products led to bad decision making citation needed Managers must understand fixed costs in order to make decisions about products and pricing For example A company produced railway coaches and had only one product To make each coach the company needed to purchase 60 of raw materials and components and pay 6 labourers 40 each Therefore the total variable cost for each coach was 300 Knowing that making a coach required spending 300 managers knew they could not sell below that price without losing money on each coach Any price above 300 would make a contribution to the fixed costs of the company If the fixed costs were say 1000 per month for rent insurance and owner s salary the company could therefore sell 5 coaches per month for a total of 3000 priced at 600 each or 10 coaches for a total of 4500 priced at 450 each and make a profit of 500 in each case Cost accounting vs financial accounting editSee also Financial accounting Differences between cost and financial accounting Cost accounting Financial accountingComputes costs in a rigorous manner that facilitates cost control and cost reduction Analyses transitions in the current accounting period into financial statements Statement of Cashflows Profit or Loss Balance Sheet etc Reports only to the organizations internal management to aid their decision making Reports the results and financial position of the business to the government creditors investors and other external parties Cost classifications based on functions activities products processes and on the information needs of the organization in its planning and control Cost classifications based on the types of transactions Combines objective and subjective assessment of costs contributing to a standard result Aims to present a true and fair view of transactions Information can be presented as accountants see fit Must adhere to accounting standards such as the IFRS and GAAP Cost accounting methods editThe following are some of the different cost accounting approaches Activity based costing Cost volume profit analysis Environmental accounting Joint cost Process costing Project accounting Resource consumption accounting Standard cost accounting Target costing Throughput accounting True cost accounting Life cycle costingElements of cost accounting editBasic cost elements are Material Labour Expenses and other overheadsMaterial inventory edit The materials directly contributed to a product and those easily identifiable in the finished product are called direct materials For example paper in books wood in furniture plastic in a water tank and leather in shoes are direct materials Other usually lower cost items or supporting material used in the production of in a finished product are called indirect materials For example the length of thread used in a garment Furthermore these can be categorized into three different types of inventories that must be accounted for in different ways raw materials work in progress and finished goods 5 Labour edit Any wages paid to workers or a group of workers which may directly co relate to any specific activity of production maintenance transportation of material or product and directly associate in the conversion of raw material into finished goods are called direct labour Wages paid to trainees or apprentices does not come under the category of direct labour as they have no significant value citation needed Overheads edit Overheads include Production or works overhead including factory staff Administration overhead including office staff Sales overhead including production and maintenance of catalogues advertising development and purchases exhibitions sales staff cost of money Distribution overhead Maintenance and repair including office equipment and factory machinery Supplies Utilities including gas electric water sewer and municipal assessments Other variable expenses Salaries payroll including wages pensions and paycheck deductions e g National Insurance and PAYE in the UK FICA in the US Occupancy rent mortgage property taxes Depreciation durable goods including machinery and office equipment Other fixed expensesThese categories are flexible sometimes overlapping as different cost accounting principles are applied Classification of costs editImportant classifications of costs include By nature or traceability Direct costs and indirect costs Direct costs are directly attributable traceable to cost objects while indirect costs not being directly attributable are allocated or apportioned to cost objects By function production administration selling and distribution or research and development By behavior fixed variable or semi variable Fixed costs remain unchanged irrespective of changes in the production volume over a given period of time Variable costs change according to the volume of production Semi variable costs are partly fixed and partly variable By controllability Controllable costs are those which can be controlled or influenced by conscious management action Uncontrollable costs cannot be controlled or influenced by conscious management action By normality normal costs and abnormal costs Normal costs arise during routine day to day business operations Abnormal costs arise because of any abnormal activity or event not part of routine business operations such as accidents or natural disasters By time Historical costs and predetermined costs Historical costs are costs incurred in the past Predetermined costs are computed in advance on basis of factors affecting cost elements By decision making costs These costs are used for managerial decision making Marginal costs The marginal cost is the change in the total cost caused by increasing or decreasing output by one unit Differential costs This cost is the difference in total cost resulting from selecting one alternative over another Opportunity costs The value of a benefit sacrificed in favour of an alternative course of action Relevant cost The relevant cost is a cost which is relevant in various decisions of management Replacement cost This cost is the cost at which existing items of material or fixed assets can be replaced at present or at a future date Shutdown cost Costs incurred if operations are shut down and which would not occur if operations are continued Capacity cost The cost incurred by a company for providing production administration and selling and distribution capabilities in order to perform various functions These costs are normally fixed costs Sunk cost A cost already incurred which cannot be recovered Other costsStandard cost accounting editThis section may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia s quality standards The specific problem is quality Please help improve this section if you can July 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Main article Standard cost accounting Standard Costing is a technique of Cost Accounting to compare the actual costs with standard costs that are pre defined with the help of Variance Analysis It is used to understand the variations of product costs in manufacturing 6 Standard costing allocates fixed costs incurred in an accounting period to the goods produced during that period This allowed the full cost of products that were not sold in the period they were produced to be recorded as inventory in the Balance sheet to be carried forward to the next accounting period using a variety of complex accounting methods which was consistent with the principles of GAAP Generally Accepted Accounting Principles It also essentially enabled managers to ignore the fixed costs and look at the results of each period in relation to the standard cost for any given product For Example if the railway coach company normally produced 40 coaches per month and the fixed costs were still 1000 month then each coach could be said to incur an Operating Cost overhead of 25 1000 40 Adding this to the variable costs of 300 per coach produced a full cost of 325 per coach This method tended to slightly distort the resulting unit cost but in mass production industries that made one product line and where the fixed costs were relatively low the distortion was very minor For Example if the railway coach company made 100 coaches one month then the unit cost would become 310 per coach 300 1000 100 If the next month the company made 50 coaches then the unit cost 320 per coach 300 1000 50 a relatively minor difference An important part of standard cost accounting is a variance analysis which breaks down the variation between actual cost and standard costs into various components volume variation material cost variation labor cost variation etc so managers can understand why costs were different from what was planned and take appropriate action to correct the situation The development of throughput accounting editMain article Throughput accounting As business became more complex and began producing a greater variety of products the use of cost accounting to make decisions to maximize profitability came into question Management circles became increasingly aware of the Theory of Constraints in the 1980s and began to understand that every production process has a limiting factor somewhere in the chain of production As business management learned to identify the constraints they increasingly adopted throughput accounting to manage them and maximize the throughput dollars or other currency from each unit of constrained resource Throughput accounting aims to make the best use of scarce resources bottleneck in a JIT Just in time environment 7 Throughput in this context refers to the amount of money obtained from sales minus the cost of materials that have gone into making them Mathematical formulae edit throughput cost accounting ratio returnfactory hours displaystyle text throughput cost accounting ratio frac text return text factory hours nbsp throughput sales material costs displaystyle text throughput text sales text material costs nbsp Activity based costing editMain article Activity based costing Activity based costing ABC is a system for assigning costs to products based on the activities they require In this case activities are those regular actions performed inside a company 8 Talking with the customer regarding invoice questions is an example of activity inside most companies Companies may be moved to adopt ABC by a need to improve costing accuracy that is understand better the true costs and profitability of individual products services or initiatives ABC gets closer to true costs in these areas by turning many costs that standard cost accounting views as indirect costs essentially into direct costs By contrast standard cost accounting typically determines so called indirect and overhead costs simply as a percentage of certain direct costs which may or may not reflect actual resource usage for individual items Under ABC accountants assign 100 of each employee s time to the different activities performed inside a company many will use surveys to have the workers themselves assign their time to the different activities The accountant then can determine the total cost spent on each activity by summing up the percentage of each worker s salary spent on that activity A company can use the resulting activity cost data to determine where to focus its operational improvements For example a job based manufacturer may find that a high percentage of its workers are spending their time trying to figure out a hastily written customer order Via ABC Activity based costing the accountants now have a currency amount pegged to the activity of Researching Customer Work Order Specifications Senior management can now decide how much focus or money to budget for resolving this process deficiency Activity based management includes but is not restricted to the use of activity based costing to manage a business While ABC Activity based costing may be able to pinpoint the cost of each activity and resources into the ultimate product the process could be tedious costly and subject to errors As it is a tool for a more accurate way of allocating fixed costs into a product these fixed costs do not vary according to each month s production volume For example the elimination of one product would not eliminate the overhead or even direct labour cost assigned to it Activity based costing ABC better identifies product costing in the long run but may not be too helpful in day to day decision making Integrating EVA and process based costing editRecently Mocciaro Li Destri Picone and Mina 2012 proposed a performance and cost measurement system that integrates the Economic Value Added criteria with Process Based Costing PBC 9 The EVA PBC methodology allows us to implement the EVA management logic not only at the firm level but also at lower levels of the organization EVA PBC methodology plays an interesting role in bringing strategy back into financial performance measures Lean accounting editMain article Lean accounting Lean accounting 10 has developed in recent years to provide the accounting control and measurement methods supporting lean manufacturing and other applications of lean thinking such as healthcare construction insurance banking education government and other industries There are two main thrusts for Lean Accounting The first is the application of lean methods to the company s accounting control and measurement processes This is not different from applying lean methods to any other processes The objective is to eliminate waste free up capacity speed up the process eliminate errors amp defects and make the process clear and understandable The second and more important thrust of Lean Accounting is to fundamentally change the accounting control and measurement processes so they motivate lean change amp improvement provide information that is suitable for control and decision making provide an understanding of customer value correctly assess the financial impact of lean improvement and are themselves simple visual and low waste Lean Accounting does not require the traditional management accounting methods like standard costing activity based costing variance reporting cost plus pricing complex transactional control systems and untimely and confusing financial reports These are replaced by lean focused performance measurements simple summary direct costing of the value streams decision making and reporting using a box score financial reports that are timely and presented in plain English that everyone can understand radical simplification and elimination of transactional control systems by eliminating the need for them driving lean changes from a deep understanding of the value created for the customers eliminating traditional budgeting through monthly sales operations and financial planning processes SOFP value based pricing correct understanding of the financial impact of lean changeAs an organization becomes more mature with lean thinking and methods they recognize that the combined methods of lean accounting in fact creates a lean management system LMS designed to provide the planning the operational and financial reporting and the motivation for change required to prosper the company s on going lean transformation Marginal costing editSee also Cost volume profit analysis and Marginal cost The cost volume profit analysis is the systematic examination of the relationship between selling prices sales production volumes costs expenses and profits This analysis provides very useful information for decision making in the management of a company For example the analysis can be used in establishing sales prices in the product mix selection to sell in the decision to choose marketing strategies and in the analysis of the impact on profits by changes in costs In the current environment of business a business administration must act and take decisions in a fast and accurate manner As a result the importance of cost volume profit is still increasing as time passes CONTRIBUTION MARGINA relationship between the cost volume and profit is the contribution margin The contribution margin is the revenue excess from sales over variable costs The concept of contribution margin is particularly useful in the planning of business because it gives an insight into the potential profits that a business can generate The following chart shows the income statement of a company X which has been prepared to show its contribution margin Sales 1 000 000 Variable Costs 600 000Contribution Margin 400 000 Fixed Costs 300 000Income from Operations 100 000CONTRIBUTION MARGIN RATIOThe contribution margin can also be expressed as a percentage The contribution margin ratio which is sometimes called the profit volume ratio indicates the percentage of each sales dollar available to cover fixed costs and to provide operating revenue For the company Fusion Inc the contribution margin ratio is 40 which is computed as follows Contribution Margin Ratio Sales Variable Costs Sales displaystyle text Contribution Margin Ratio text Sales Variable Costs text Sales nbsp The contribution margin ratio measures the effect on operating income of an increase or a decrease in sales volume For example assume that the management of Fusion Inc is studying the effect of adding 80 000 in sales orders Multiplying the contribution margin ratio 40 by the change in sales volume 80 000 indicates that operating income will increase 32 000 if additional orders are obtained To validate this analysis the table below shows the income statement of the company including additional orders Sales 1 080 000 Variable Costs 648 000 1 080 000 x 60 Contribution Margin 432 000 1 080 000 x 40 Fixed Costs 300 000Income from Operations 132 000Variable costs as a percentage of sales are equal to 100 minus the contribution margin ratio Thus in the above income statement the variable costs are 60 100 40 of sales or 648 000 1 080 000 X 60 The total contribution margin 432 000 can also be computed directly by multiplying the sales by the contribution margin ratio 1 080 000 X 40 Government procurement editThe United States federal procurement rules the Federal Acquisition Regulation FAR require government Contracting Officers negotiating contract prices to verify that suppliers cost submissions are in accordance with the government s contract cost principles and procedures and in certain cases the requirements and procedures of the federal Cost Accounting Standards 11 Relevant cost data or pricing data may be required from the supplier in order to undertake a cost realism analysis also known as a price realism analysis 12 FAR defines a cost realism analysis asThe process of independently reviewing and evaluating specific elements of each offeror s proposed cost estimate to determine whether the estimated proposed cost elements are realistic for the work to be performed reflect a clear understanding of the requirements and are consistent with the unique methods of performance and materials described in the offeror s technical proposal 11 Similarly where a government agency requests a fixed price submission provision may be made for a cost or price realism analysis to take place during the evaluation process 12 See also editAccountancy Cost overrun Fixed asset turnover Management accounting IT cost transparency Kaizen costing Profit modelReferences edit Cost Accounting vs Managerial Accounting AccountingVerse accountingverse com Retrieved 2019 07 16 a b Vanderbeck Edward J February 2012 Principles of Cost Accounting Edward J Vanderbeck Google Books Cengage Learning ISBN 978 1133187868 Retrieved 2013 03 01 Bhabatosh Banerjee Cost accounting theory and practice Performance management Paper f5 Kaplan Publishing UK Pg 3 Australian Government 2018 07 23 Types of inventory www business gov au Retrieved 2023 03 30 Management Accounting amp Control India Icfai Business School pp 15 16 Performance management Paper f5 Kaplan Publishing UK Pg 17 Performance management Paper f5 Kaplan Publishing UK Pg 6 Mocciaro Li Destri A Picone P M amp Mina A 2012 Bringing Strategy Back into Financial Systems of Performance Measurement Integrating EVA and PBC Business System Review Vol 1 Issue 1 pp 85 102 Brian H Maskell Bruce Baggaley Larry Grasso December 19 2003 Practical Lean Accounting Productivity Press New York NY a b Federal Acquisition Regulation Subpart 15 4 Contract Pricing accessed 30 March 2023 a b Government Accountability Office Decision Matter of DKW Communications Inc file B 411853 2 B 411853 3 B 411853 4 published 8 January 2016 accessed 30 March 2023Further reading editCost Accounting 3rd edition Md Omar Faruk Sohel Ahmed Sharif Hossain Maher Lanen and Rahan Fundamentals of Cost Accounting 1st Edition McGraw Hill 2005 Horngren Datar and Foster Cost Accounting A Managerial Emphasis 11th edition Prentice Hall 2003 Kaplan Robert S and Bruns W Accounting and Management A Field Study Perspective Harvard Business School Press 1987 ISBN 0 87584 186 4 Nicholson Jerome Lee and John Francis Deems Rohrbach Cost accounting New York Ronald Press 1919 Blocher Stout Juras and Cokins Cost Management A Strategic Emphasis 7th Edition McGraw Hill 2016 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cost accounting Accounting Systems introduction to Cost Accounting ethics and relationship to GAAP Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cost accounting amp oldid 1215540594, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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