Title: ActivityBased Management and ActivityBased Costing
1Cost Accounting Foundations and
Evolutions Kinney, Prather, Raiborn
Chapter 5 Activity-Based Management and
Activity-Based Costing
2Learning Objectives (1 of 2)
- Identify the focus of activity-based management
- Explain why non-value-added activities cause
costs to increase unnecessarily - Explain why cost drivers are designated in
activity-based costing
3Learning Objectives (2 of 2)
- Contrast activity-based costing to the
traditional cost accounting system - Describe the types of information provided by an
activity-based costing/management system - Explain when it is appropriate to use
activity-based costing
4Activity-Based Management
- Focuses on activities during production and
performance process - Improves the value received by customers
- Enhances profitability
5Activity
- An activity is a repetitive action performed in
fulfillment of a business function
6Activity-Based Management
Operational control Quality management Business
process improvement Performance measurement
Activity analysis Cost driver analysis Activity-ba
sed costing Continuous improvement
7Activity Based Management
- External Benefits
- Increased customer value
- Enhanced profitability
- Internal Benefits
- More efficient production
- More accurate cost determination
- More effective performance evaluation
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9Activity Analysis
- Non-value-added activity
- Increases time spent on product or service but
does not increase worth - Unnecessary from customer perspective
- Can be reduced, redesigned or eliminated without
affecting market value or quality - Business-value-added activities are essential
- Value-added activity
- Increases worth of product or service to a
customer - Customer is willing to pay for it
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11Process
- A process is a series of activities that, when
performed together, satisfy a specific objective - Production
- Distribution
- Selling
- Administration
12Activity Analysis
- Create a Process Map (detailed flowchart) for
each process - Identify each step
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14Activity Analysis
- Create a Process Map (detailed flowchart) for
each process - Identify each step
- Create Value Chart
- Identify stages and time spent in stages from
beginning to end of process
Value-Added Processing Time Service Time
Non-Value-Added Inspection Time Transfer
Time Idle Time
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16Cycle Time
- Cycle Value- Non-
- Time Added Value-Added
- Activities Activities
Eliminate or minimize activities that add the
most time and cost and the least value
17Manufacturing Cycle Efficiency
18Manufacturing Cycle Efficiency
- 100 efficiency unrealistic
- Reducing non-value-added activities will increase
Manufacturing Cycle Efficiency - Value-added activity usually represents about 10
of total cycle time - Just-in-time (JIT) increases MCE
19Non-Value-Added Activities
- Attributed to following factors
- Systemic
- Physical
- Human
- Eliminating or reducing non-value-added
activities that create the most costs will - Increase product/service quality
- Decrease cycle time and cost
20Cost Driver Analysis
- Cost drivers are factors that have a direct
cause-effect relationship to a cost - Limit the number of cost drivers
- Cost of measurement should not exceed benefit of
using the cost driver - Easy to understand
- Directly related to activity being performed
- Appropriate for measurement
21A Management Tool
- Combine
- Activity analysis
- What activities are non-value-added?
- Cost driver analysis
- What causes costs to be incurred?
22Cost Driver Analysis
- Unit-level costs
- direct material, direct labor
- Batch-level costs
- setup, inspection
- Product/process-level costs
- engineering changes, product development
- Organizational or facility costs
- building depreciation, plant managers salary
23Product Cost Behavior
- Unit-level costs are variable in relation to
change in production volume - Batch, product/process, and organizational level
costs are variable for reasons other than changes
in production volume
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25Product Cost
26Product and Company Profitability Total product
revenue ltTotal product costgt Net product
margin ltOrganizational/facility-level
costsgt Company profit or loss
Unit Batch Product
For each product line
Not GAAP
27Activity-Based Costing
- Recognizes several levels of costs
- Accumulates costs into related cost pools
- Uses multiple cost drivers to assign costs to
products and services
28When to Use ABC
- Companies use ABC when
- They have a wide variety of products or services
- High overhead costs are not proportional to the
unit volume of individual products - Automation makes it difficult to assign overhead
to products using direct labor or machine hours - Profit margins are difficult to explain
- Hard-to-make products show big profits and
easy-to-make products show losses
29Two-Step Allocation
- Collect costs in general ledger and subsidiary
accounts - Identify activity centers
30Choosing an Activity Center
- Geographical proximity of equipment
- Centers of managerial responsibility
- Magnitude of product costs
- Choose a manageable number of activity centers
31Two-Step Allocation
- Collect costs in general ledger and subsidiary
accounts - Identify activity centers
- Accumulate costs into activity center cost pools
- Identify cost drivers
32ABC Cost Pools
- Assumptions about activity center cost pools
- Costs in each cost pool are
- Driven by homogenous activities
- Strictly proportional to the activity
33Two-Step Allocation
- Collect costs in general ledger and subsidiary
accounts - Identify activity centers
- Accumulate costs into activity center cost pools
cost drivers - Allocate costs to products and services
- activity driver measures demands placed on
activities, thus, the resources consumed by
products/services
34Activity Drivers
- Reports requested
- Job change actions
- Hiring actions
- Training hours
- Transactions processed
- Engineering changes
- Defects discovered
- Repair hours
- Material requisitions
- Purchase requisitions
- Space occupied
- Set-ups
- Moves
- Employees
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36Traditional vs. ABC Costing
- When ABC implemented
- Cost reduced for high volume, standard products
- Cost increased for low-volume, complex specialty
products
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38Long-Term Variable Costs
- Cost drivers
- Product variety number of different types of
products - Product complexity number of processes through
which a product flows
39ABC Costing Considerations
- Number and diversity of products/services
produced - Diversity and differential degree of support
services used for different products - Extent to which common processes are used
- Effectiveness of current cost allocation methods
- Rate of growth of period costs
40Use ABC Costing when.
- Product Variety and Process Complexity
- Lack of Commonality in Overhead Costs
- Problems with Current Cost Allocations
- Changes in Business Environment
41Use ABC Costing when.
- Product Variety and Process Complexity
- Caused by mass customization
- Too many choices, opportunity for errors
- Pareto Principle
- Commonality of parts
- Reduced by
- Simultaneous (or Concurrent) Engineering
- Design for Manufacturability
42Use ABC Costing when.
- Lack of Commonality in Overhead Costs
- - Some products/services use substantially
more overhead than others - Problems with Current Cost Allocations
- - Significant changes in process with no
change in cost allocations - - Expense majority of period costs when
incurred -
43Use ABC Costing when.
- Changes in Business Environment
- Increase in competition
- Change in management strategy
44Continuous Improvement
- Eliminates non-value-added activities to reduce
cycle time - Makes products/performs services with zero
defects - Reduces product costs on an ongoing basis
- Simplifies products and processes
ABC Costing Supports Continuous Improvement
45Criticisms of ABC
- Significant amount of time and cost to implement
- Must overcome barriers to change
- Does not conform to GAAP
- May not promote total quality management
46Advantages of ABC and ABM
- Identify and monitor significant technology costs
- Trace technology costs directly to products
- Identify the cost drivers that create or
influence cost - Identify activities that do not contribute to
perceived customer value
47Advantages of ABC and ABM
- Illustrate the impact of new technologies on all
elements of performance - Translate company goals into activity goals
- Analyze the performance of activities across
business functions - Analyze performance problems
- Promote standards of excellence
48Questions
- What are the differences between activity-based
costing and traditional cost accounting? - What are cost drivers and activity drivers?
- What are two advantages and two criticisms of
activity-based costing?