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Title: Don R. Hansen


1
COST MANAGEMENT
  • Don R. Hansen
  • Maryanne M. Mowen

2
Chapter Six
Support Department Cost Allocation
3
Learning Objectives
  • Describe the difference between support
    departments and producing departments.
  • Explain five reasons why support costs, may be
    assigned to producing departments.
  • Calculate charging rates, and distinguish between
    single and dual charging rates.

4
Learning Objectives (continued)
  • Allocate support center costs to producing
    departments using the direct method, the
    sequential method, and the reciprocal method.
  • Calculate departmental overhead rates.

5
Support and Producing Departments
  • Support departments are units within an
    organization that provide essential support
    services for producing departments.
  • Examples maintenance, grounds, engineering,
    housekeeping, personnel, and stores
  • Producing departments are units within an
    organization that are directly responsible for
    creating the products and services sold to
    customers.
  • Examples Services auditing, tax, management
    advisory Manufacturing grinding and assembly

6
Steps in Allocating Support Department Costs to
Producing Departments
1. Departmentalize the firm. 2. Classify each
department as a support or a producing
department. 3. Trace all overhead costs in the
firm to a support or producing department.
7
Steps in Allocating Support Department Costs to
Producing Departments
4. Allocate support department costs to the
producing departments. 5. Calculate predetermined
overhead rates for producing departments. 6. Alloc
ate overhead costs to the units of individual
product through the predetermined overhead rates.
8
Examples of Cost Drivers forSupport Departments
Support Department Possible Driver
Accounting
Number of transactions Cafeteria
Number of
employees Engineering
Number of change orders Maintenance
Machine
hours Payroll
Number of employees Personnel
Number of new hires
9
Objectives of Allocation
Objectives
  • To obtain a mutually agreeable price
  • To compute product-line profitability
  • To predict the economic effects of planning and
    control
  • To value inventory
  • To motivate managers

10
Allocation of Variable Costs(Dual Rates)
  • Rate Determination At the beginning of the
    year, the company determines what the variable
    cost per unit of service should be (a budgeted
    rate, not an actual rate, is used to assign
    variable costs).
  • Budgeted Usage Each producing department
    determines its expected or budgeted usage of the
    service for the year.
  • Actual Usage Measurement The actual units of
    service used by each producing department are
    measured.

11
Allocation of Variable Costs(Dual Rates)
  • Allocation Variable support costs are allocated
    by multiplying the budgeted rate by the usage
  • a. Product costing
  • Allocation Budgeted Rate x Budgeted Usage
  • b. Performance evaluation
  • Allocation Budgeted Rate x Actual Usage

12
Allocation of Fixed Costs(Dual Rates)
  • Determination of Budgeted Fixed Support Service
    Costs The fixed support service costs that
    should be incurred for a period need to be
    identified.
  • Computation of Allocation Ratio Using practical
    or normal capacity of each producing department,
    compute an allocation ratio as follows
  • Allocation ratio Production department
    capacity/Total capacity
  • Allocation The fixed support costs are allocated
    in proportion to each producing departments
    original support service need
  • Allocation Allocation Ratio x Budgeted Fixed
    Support Service Costs
  • Note Fixed costs are allocated the same way for
    product costing and performance evaluation.

13
Allocation of Variable and Fixed Costs An Example

Dept. A
Dept. B Total Budgeted Machine Hours
40,000 60,000 Actual Machine Used
45,000 58,000 Budgeted Fixed Costs
------- ------- 350,000 Budgeted Variable Costs
------- ------- 180,000 Variable Cost Rate
1.80 1.80 Fixed Costs Allocation
Ratio 40 60
14
Allocation of Variable and Fixed Costs An
Example (continued)

Dept. A Dept. B Variable
Cost allocated (product costing)
72,000 108,000 Variable Cost Allocated
(performance eval.) 81,000
104,400 Fixed Cost Allocated
140,000 210,000

15
Choosing A Support Department Cost Allocation
Method
  • The three methods for allocating support
    department costs to producing departments are
  • The Direct Method
  • The Sequential Method
  • The Reciprocal Method

16
Support Department AllocationAn Example

  • Support Departments Producing Departments
  • Power Maint. Grinding Assembly
  • Direct Costs 250,000 160,000 100,000 60,000
  • Normal Activity
  • Kilowatt hours ----- 200,000 600,000 200,000
  • Maintenance hours 1,000 ----- 4,500 4,500
  • For a producing department, direct costs refer
    only to overhead costs that are directly
    traceable to the department.

17
Support Department AllocationDirect Method

  • Support Departments Producing
    Departments Power Maint. Grinding Assembly
  • Direct Costs 250,000 160,000 100,000
    60,000
  • Power (250,000 ) ----- 187,500 62,500
  • Maintenance ----- (160,000 )
    80,000 80,000
  • 0 0 367,500 202,500

18
Support Department AllocationSequential Method

  • Support Departments Producing
    Departments Power Maint. Grinding Assembly
  • Direct Costs 250,000 160,000 100,000
    60,000
  • Power (250,000 ) 50,000 150,000 50,000
  • Maintenance ----- (210,000 ) 105,000
    105,000
  • 0 0 355,000 215,000

19
Reciprocal Method
  • The reciprocal method of allocation recognizes
    all interactions among support departments.

20
Reciprocal Method (continued)

  • Support Departments Producing
    Departments Power Maint. Grinding Assembly
  • Direct Costs
  • Fixed 200,000 100,000 80,000 50,000
  • Variable 50,000 60,000 20,000 10,000
  • Total 250,000 160,000 100,000 60,000

  • Proportion of Output
    Used by Power Maint. Grinding Assembly
  • Allocation ratios
  • Power --- 0.20 0.60 0.20
  • Maintenance 0.10 --- 0.45 0.45

21
Reciprocal Method (continued)
  • The cost equation for each support department can
    be expressed as follows
  • P Direct costs Share of Maintenances cost
  • P 250,000 0.1(M)
  • M Direct costs Share of Powers costs
  • M 160,000 0.2P

22
Reciprocal Method (continued)
  • Substituting the Power equation into the
    Maintenance equation, we get
  • M 160,000 0.2 (250,000 0.1M)
  • M 160,000 50,000 0.02M
  • 0.98M 210,000
  • M 214,286

23
Reciprocal Method (continued)
  • Substituting the value for M into the Power
    equation we get
  • P 250,000 0.1 (214,286)
  • P 250,000 21,429
  • P 271,429

24
Reciprocal Method (continued)

  • Support Department Producing
    Department Power Maint. Grinding Assembly
  • Direct Costs 250,000 160,000 100,000
    60,000
  • Power (271,429 ) 54,286 162,857 54,286
  • Maintenance 21,429 (214,286 ) 96,429
    96,429
  • 0 0 359,286 210,715

25
Departmental Overhead RatesUsing the Reciprocal
Method
  • The overhead rate for the grinding department is
    computed as follows (assuming the normal level of
    activity is 71,000 MH)
  • OH rate 359,286 ? 71,000 5.06 per MH
  • The overhead rate for the assembly department is
    computed as follows (assuming the normal level of
    activity is 107,500 DLH)
  • OH rate 210,715 ? 107,500 1.96 per DLH

26
End of Chapter 6
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