0% found this document useful (0 votes)
58 views10 pages

Cost 1 CH-two

Uploaded by

Debela Abidhu
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
58 views10 pages

Cost 1 CH-two

Uploaded by

Debela Abidhu
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 10

CHAPTER 2: BASIC COST TERMS AND CONCEPTS

1.2Concepts and classifications of cost


Costs, Expenses and Losses
 Cost is defined as the monetary value of goods and services expended to obtain
current or future benefits.
 Expenses are expired costs for which benefits have already been received in the
current fiscal period. Expenses are deductible from revenue.
 Losses sacrifices without any benefit. Loss can be defined as the excess of all
expenses over revenues for a period.
o Accountants define cost as a resource sacrificed or forgone to achieve a specific
objective. It is usually measured as the monetary amount that must be paid to
acquire goods or services.
o An actual cost is the cost incurred (a historical cost) as distinguished from budgeted
or forecasted costs.
GENERAL COST CLASSIFICATIONS
A. Manufacturing Costs
 Direct Materials
Raw materials refer to any materials that are used in the final product; and finished product
of one company can become the raw materials of another company.
Direct materials are those materials that become an integral part of the finished product and
that can be physically and conveniently traced to it. This would include for example the
seats Boeing purchases from subcontractors to install in its commercial aircrafts.
Those that can not be traceable to the final product are called indirect materials. This can
be glue used to assemble a chair.
 Direct Labor
The term direct labor is reserved for those labor costs that can be easily i.e. physically and
conveniently traced to individual units of product. Direct labor is sometimes called touch
labor, since direct labor workers typically touch the product while it is being made.
Labor costs that cannot be physically traced to the creation of products, or that can be traced
only at great costs and inconvenience, are termed as indirect labor and treated as part of

1
manufacturing overhead. It includes the labor costs of janitors, supervisors, material
handlers, and night security guards.
 Manufacturing Overhead
-Includes all costs of manufacturing except direct materials and direct labor.
Manufacturing overhead includes items such as
 indirect materials;
 indirect labor
 maintenance and repairs on production equipment
 heat and light
 property taxes
 depreciation and insurance on manufacturing facilities.
A company also incurs costs for heat and light, property taxes, insurance, depreciation, and
so forth associated with its selling and adminstatrative functions but these costs are not
included as part of manufacturing overhead. Only those costs associated with operating the
factory is included the manufacturing overhead category.
Manufacturing overhead is also called indirect manufacturing cost, factory overhead and
factory burden

Direct Material + Direct Labor = Prime Cost


Direct Labor + Manufacturing Overhead = Conversion Cost

Exercise 1: Classify the following as direct materials, direct labor, or factory overhead:
a. Glue used in the manufacture of desks
b. Labor of a janitor
c. Factory utilities
d. Wood used in the manufacture of a table
e. Labor of a machinist
B. Non-manufacturing Costs
Generally, non-manufacturing costs are sub classified into two categories:
 Marketing or selling costs: include all cost categories to secure customer orders
and get the finished product or service into the hands of the customer. These costs

2
are often called order-getting and order filling costs. Like advertising, shipping, sales
travel, sales commissions, sales salaries, and costs of finished goods warehouses.
 Administrative Costs: include all executive, organizational associated with the
general management of an organization rather than with manufacturing, marketing
or selling. Like executive compensation, general accounting, secretarial, public
relations, and similar costs involved in the overall, general administration of the
organization as a whole.
COST CLASSIFICATIONS ON FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
1. The Balance Sheet
The balance sheet or statement of financial position, of a manufacturing company is similar
to that of a merchandising company. However there are differences in the inventory
accounts.
A merchandising company has only one class of inventory- goods purchased from suppliers
that are awaiting resale to customers. By contrast, manufacturing companies have three
classes of inventories:
o Raw materials: shows the cost of raw materials on hand and intended for use in the
manufacturing process.
o Work in process: shows the cost of goods in the manufacturing process, but not
completed at the end of the accounting period.
o Finished goods: shows the cost of the goods completed and ready for sale.
2. The Income Statement
A. Merchandising Company
Sales xxx
Cost of goods sold
Beginning merchandise inventory xxx
Add Purchases xxx
Goods available for sale xxx
Deduct: Ending merchandise inventory xxx xxx
Gross Margin xxx
Less: Operating Expenses
Selling Expenses xxx

3
Administrative Expenses xxx xxx
Net Income xxx
B. Manufacturing Company
Sales xxx
Cost of goods sold
Beginning finished goods inventory xxx
Add: Cost of goods manufactured xxx
Goods available for sale xxx
Deduct: Ending finished goods inventory xxx xxx
Gross Margin xxx
Less operating expenses:
Selling Expenses xxx
Administrative Expenses xxx xxx
Net income xxx
Schedule of Cost of Goods Manufactured
Direct Materials
Beginning raw materials inventory xxx
Add: Purchases of raw materials xxx
Raw materials available for use xxx
Deduct: Ending raw materials inventory xxx
Raw materials used in production xxx
Direct Labor xxx
Manufacturing overhead
Insurance, factory xxx
Indirect labor xxx
Machine rental xxx
Utilities, factory xxx
Supplies xxx
Depreciation, factory xxx
Property taxes, factory xxx
Total manufacturing costs xxx

4
Add: Beginning work in process inventory xxx
Total goods in production xxx
Deduct: ending work in process inventory xxx
Cost of goods manufactured xxx
Exercise 2: The following cost data relate to Taylor Products Company for the year
ended June 30, 2023.
Direct Materials $ 55,600
Direct Labor 72,400
Factory Overhead 36,500
Work in process inventory, July 1, 2022 38,200
Work in process inventory, June 30, 2023 34,800
Required:
1. Calculate the manufacturing costs for the year.
2. Calculate the cost of goods manufactured for the year.
Exercise 3: Iowa Products Company accumulated the following data for 2023.
Jan 1, 2023 Dec 31, 2023
Inventories:
Finished Goods $ 52,000 $ 54,000
Work in Process 29,600 27,800
Raw materials 14,200 15,000
Direct labor 95,000
Raw material purchases 138,000
Indirect labor 15,300
Indirect materials and supplies 10,800
Factory utilities 18,600
Depreciation expense- Factory 14,000
Factory rent 18,000
Payroll taxes- Factory wages 8,100
Repairs and maintenance 6,000
Insurance expense- Factory 6,800
Miscellaneous factory expenses 5,200

5
Sales 710,000
Sales discount 12,000
Selling expenses 95,600
General expenses 75,300
Interest expenses 7,000
Required:
1. Prepare a statement of cost of goods manufactured.
2. Prepare an income statement (assume an income tax rate of 25%)
Product Costs versus Period Costs
 Product Costs
o Product costs include all costs that are involved in acquiring or making product-
dirct materials, direct labor, and manufacturing overhead.
o Initially product costs are assigned to an inventory account on the balance sheet.
When goods are sold, the costs are released from inventory as expenses (cost of
goods sold) and matched against revenue. For this reason they are also known as
inventoriable costs.
o Product costs are not necessarily treated as expenses in the period in which they are
incurred. Rather they are treated as expenses in the period in which the related
products are sold. This means that a product cost such as direct materials or direct
labor might be incurred during one period but not treated as an expense until a
following period when the completed product is sold.
 Period Costs
o Period costs are all the costs that are not included in product costs. These costs are
expensed on the income statement in the period, in which they are incurred, the rules
of accrual accounting.
o Period costs are not included as part of the cost of either purchased or manufactured
goods like sales commissions and office rent and all selling and adminstatrative
expenses are considered to be period costs.

6
Cost Classification for Predicting Cost Behaviour
Cost behaviour means how a cost will react or respond to changes in the level of business
activity. As the activity level rises and falls, a particular cost may rises and fall as well or it
may remain constant.
1. Variable Cost
 A variable cost is a cost that varies, in total, in direct proportion to change in the
level of activity. The activity can be expressed in many ways such as units produced,
units sold, miles driven, beds occupied, hours worked and so on.
 A good example of a variable cost is direct materials. The cost of direct materials
used during a period will vary, in total, in direct proportion to the number of units
that are produced.
 In variable cost, the total cost rises and falls as the activity level rises and falls. One
interesting aspect of variable cost behaviour is that a variable cost is constant if
expressed on a per unit basis.
Example: Assume that we manufacture autos; each auto requires a battery that costs Br. 24
each. If only 1 auto is manufactured the total variable cost for batteries is Br. 24.
No. of Autos Produced Cost for Battery Total VC-Batteries
1 Br. 24 Br. 24
500 24 12,000
1,000 24 24,000
2. Fixed Cost
 A fixed cost is a cost that remains constant in total regardless of changes in the level
of activity. Unlike variable costs, fixed costs are not affected by changes in activity.
 Consequently, as the activity level rises and falls, the fixed costs remain constant in
total amount unless influenced by some outside force, such as price changes.
E.g.:- Rent Expense
 When we say a cost is fixed, we mean it is fixed within some relevant range. The
relevant range is the range of activity within which the assumptions about variable
and fixed costs are valid.

7
 Fixed costs can create difficulties if it becomes necessary to express the costs on per
unit basis. This is because if fixed costs are expressed on a per unit basis, they will
react inversely with changes in activity.
Monthly Rental Cost No. of Tests Performed Average Cost per Test
Br. 8,000 10 Br. 800
8,000 500 16
8,000 2000 4
Behaviour of the Cost (within the relevant range)

Cost In Total Per Unit


Variable Total variable cost increases and decreases Variable cost remains constant per
Cost in proportion to changes in the activity unit.
level.
Fixed Total fixed cost is not affected by changes Fixed costs decrease per unit as the
Cost in the activity level within the relevant activity level rises and increase per
range. unit as the activity level falls.

Exercise 4: Classify the following as variable cost or fixed cost.


a. President’s salary
b. Direct labor
c. Straight-line depreciation on factory building
d. Commissions paid to sales persons.
e. Direct material
f. Advertising
Exercise 5: Guild Company manufactures and sells one product. The production can vary
from 20,000 to 60,000 units. A partially schedule of the company’s total and per unit costs
for the coming year follows:
Units produced and sold
20,000 40,000 60,000
Total costs:
Variable costs $ 80,000 160000? 240,000 ?
Fixed costs 100,000 100000 ? 100000 ?
Total costs $ 180,000 260,000 ? 340,000 ?

8
Cost per unit:
Variable cost 4? 4? 4?
Fixed cost 5? 2.5? 1.67 ?
Total cost per unit 9? 6.5? 5.67 ?
Required: 1. Compute the schedule for Guild Company’s total and per unit costs.
2.Determine the cost formula in the format of Y=a + bx
COST CLASSIFICATION FOR ASSIGNING COSTS TO COST OBJECT
 A cost object is anything for which cost data are desired- including products,
product lines, customers, jobs, and organizational subunits or which is anything for
which a separate measurement of costs is desired. For the purpose of assigning costs
to cost objects, costs are classified as either direct or indirect.
 A costing system typically accounts for costs in two basic stages- accumulation and
then assignment.
 Cost accumulation is the allocation of cost data in some organized way by means
of an accounting system.
 Coat assignment is a general term that includes both (1) tracing accumulated costs
to a cost object, and (2) allocating accumulated cost to cost object
 A key question in cost assignment is whether costs have direct or an indirect
relationship to a particular cost object.
 Direct Cost
A direct cost is a cost that can be easily and conveniently traced to the particular cost object
under consideration. The concept of direct cost extends beyond just direct material and
direct labor.
 Indirect Cost
An indirect cost is a cost that cannot be easily and conveniently traced to the particular cost
object under consideration. To be traced to a cost object such as a particular product, the
cost must be caused by the cost object.
The term cost allocation is used to describe the assignment of indirect costs to a particular
cost abject.
A common cost is a cost that is common to a number of costing objects but cannot be
traced to them individually. A common cost is a particular type of indirect cost.
COST CLASSIFICATION FOR DECISION MAKING

9
Costs are an important feature of many business decisions. In making decisions, it is
essential to have a firm grasp of the concepts of differential cost, opportunity cost, and sunk
costs.
1. Differential Cost and Revenue
 A difference in cost between any two alternatives is known as a differential cost.
 A difference in revenue b/n any two alternatives is known as differential revenue.
 A differential cost is also known as an incremental cost, although technically an
incremental cost should refer only to an increase in cost from one alternative to
another; decrease in cost should be referred to as decremental costs. Differential cost
is a broader term, encompassing both cost increases (incremental cost) and cost
decreases (decremental cost) between alternatives.
 The accountant’s differential cost concept can be compared to the economist’s
marginal cost concept. The revenue that can be obtained from selling one more unit
of product is called marginal revenue, and the cost involved in producing one more
unit of product is called marginal cost.
 Differential cost can be either fixed or variable.
2. Opportunity Cost-Opportunity cost is the potential benefit that is given up when
one alternative is selected over another.
 Opportunity cost is not usually entered in the accounting records of an
organization, but it is a cost that must be explicitly considered in every decision
a manager makes.
Example: - Vicki has a part-time job that pays $100 per week while attending college.
She would like to spend a week at the beach during spring break, and her employer has
agreed to give her the time off, but without pay. The $100 in lost wages would be an
opportunity cost of taking the week off to be at the beach.
3. Sunk Cost
A sunk cost is a cost that has already been incurred and that cannot be changed by any
decision made now or in the future. Since sunk costs cannot be changed by any decision,
they are not differential costs. Therefore, they can and should be ignored when making a
decision.

10

You might also like