Title: Revision
1Revision
B405F Advanced Management Accounting
2Five-Step Decision Process
- Gathering information
- Making predictions
- Choosing an alternative
- Implementing the decision
- Evaluating performance
3The Meaning of Relevance
- Relevant costs and relevant revenues are expected
future costs and revenues that differ among
alternative courses of action. - Sunk costs are irrelevant because they are past
costs. - Common fixed costs are irrelevant because they
are non-differential costs.
4Quantitative and Qualitative Relevant Information
- Quantitative factors are outcomes that are
measured in numerical terms - Financial
- Nonfinancial
- Qualitative factors are outcomes that cannot be
measured in numerical terms - Nonfinancial
5One-Time-Only Special Order
- Decision criteria
- Accept the order if the revenue differential
is greater than the cost differential.
6Make or Buy Decision
- Opportunity costs are not recorded in formal
accounting records since they do not generate
cash outlays. - These costs also are not ordinarily incorporated
into formal reports.
7Product-Mix Decisions Under Capacity Constraints
- Decision criteria Aim for the highest
contribution margin per unit of the constraining
factor. - When multiple constraints exist, optimization
techniques such as linear programming can be used
in making decisions.
8Equipment Replacement
- The book value of existing equipment is
irrelevant since it is neither a future cost nor
does it differ among any alternatives (sunk costs
never differ).
9Decisions and Performance Evaluation
- Managers often behave consistent with their
short-run interests and favor the alternative
that yields best performance measures in the
short run. - When conflicting decisions are generated,
managers tend to favor the performance evaluation
model. - Top management faces a challenge that is,
making sure that the performance-evaluation model
of subordinate managers is consistent with the
decision model.
10Time Horizon of Pricing Decisions
- Two key differences when pricing for the long
run relative to the short run - Costs that are often irrelevant for short-run
pricing decisions (fixed costs) are often
relevant in the long run. - Profit margins in long-run pricing decisions are
often set to earn a reasonable return on
investment.
11Alternative Long-Run Pricing Approaches
- Market-based
- Cost-based (also called cost-plus)
12Target Price is...
- the estimated price for a product (or service)
that potential customers will be willing to pay. - The target price, calculated using customer and
competitors inputs, forms the basis for
calculating target costs.
13Target Costs
- Target sales price per unit
- Target operating income per unit
- Target cost per unit
14Implementing Target Pricing and Target Costing
- Steps in developing target prices and target
costs - Develop a product that satisfies the needs of
potential customers. - Choose a target price.
- Derive a target cost per unit.
- Perform value engineering to achieve target costs.
15Value-Added Costs
- A value-added cost is a cost that customers
perceive as adding value, or utility, to a
product or service - Adequate memory
- Pre-loaded software
- Reliability
- Easy-to-use keyboards
16Nonvalue-Added Costs
- A nonvalue-added cost is a cost that customers do
not perceive as adding value, or utility, to a
product or service. - Cost of expediting
- Rework
- Repair
17Cost Incurrence and Locked-in Costs
Cumulative Costs per unit
Locked-in Cost Curve
Cost Incurrence Curve
Value Chain Functions
Manufacturing
Mktg., Dist., Cust. Svc.
RD and Design
18Cost-Plus Pricing
- The general formula for setting a cost-based
price is to add a markup component to the cost
base. - Cost base X
Markup component
Y Prospective selling price X
Y
19Life-Cycle Budgeting
- The product life-cycle spans the time from
original research and development, through sales,
to when customer support is no longer offered for
that product. - A life-cycle budget estimates revenues and costs
of a product over its entire life.
20Predicted Costs
- Many of the production, marketing, distribution
and customer service costs are locked in
the RD and design stage. - Life-cycle budgeting facilitates value
engineering at the design stage before
costs are locked in.
21Strategy
- Strategy specifies how an organization matches
its own capabilities with the opportunities in
the marketplace to accomplish its objectives - A thorough understanding of the industry is
critical to implementing a successful strategy
22The Balanced Scorecard
- The balanced scorecard translates an
organizations mission and strategy into a
comprehensive set of performance measures. - The balanced scorecard does not focus solely on
achieving financial objectives. - It highlights the nonfinancial objectives that
an organization must achieve in order to meet its
financial objectives.
23The Balanced Scorecard Flowchart
24Aligning the Balanced Scorecard to Strategy
- Different strategies call for different
scorecards. - What are some of the financial perspective
measures? - Operating income
- Revenue growth
- Cost reduction is some areas
- Return on investment
25Aligning the Balanced Scorecard to Strategy
- What are some of the customer perspective
measures? - Market share
- Customer satisfaction
- Customer retention percentage
- Time taken to fulfill customers requests
26Aligning the Balanced Scorecard to Strategy
- What are some of the internal business process
perspective measures? - Innovation Process
- Manufacturing capabilities
- Number of new products or services
- New product development time
- Number of new patents
27Aligning the Balanced Scorecard to Strategy
- Operations Process
- Yield
- Defect rates
- Time taken to deliver product to customers
- Percentage of on-time delivery
- Setup time
- Manufacturing downtime
28Aligning the Balanced Scorecard to Strategy
- Post-sales service
- Time taken to replace or repair defective
products - Hours of customer training for using the product
29Aligning the Balanced Scorecard to Strategy
- What are some of the learning and growth
perspective measures? - Employee education and skill level
- Employee satisfaction scores
- Employee turnover rates
- Information system availability
- Percentage of processes with advanced controls
30Features of a Good Balanced Scorecard
- Tells the story of a firms strategy,
articulating a sequence of cause-and-effect
relationships the links among the various
perspectives that describe how strategy will be
implemented - Helps communicate the strategy to all members of
the organization by translating the strategy into
a coherent and linked set of understandable and
measurable operational targets
31Features of a Good Balanced Scorecard
- Must motivate managers to take actions that
eventually result in improvements in financial
performance - Limits the number of measures, identifying only
the most critical ones - Highlights less-than-optimal tradeoffs that
managers may make when they fail to consider
operational and financial measures together
32Balanced Scorecard Implementation Pitfalls
- Managers should not assume the cause-and-effect
linkages are precise they are merely hypotheses - Managers should not seek improvements across all
of the measures all of the time - Managers should not use only objective measures
subjective measures are important as well
33Balanced Scorecard Implementation Pitfalls
- Managers must include both costs and benefits of
initiatives placed in the balanced scorecard
costs are often overlooked - Managers should not ignore nonfinancial measures
when evaluating employees - Managers should not use too many measures
34Evaluating Strategy
- Strategic Analysis of Operating Income 3 parts
- Growth Component measures the change in
operating income attributable solely to the
change in the quantity of output sold between the
current and prior periods - Price-Recovery Component measures the change in
operating income attributable solely to changes
in prices of inputs and outputs between the
current and prior periods - Productivity Component measures the change in
costs attributable to a change in the quantity of
inputs between the current and prior periods
35Revenue Effect Analysis
P2
Price Recovery Component
Q2
Growth Component
P1
Q1
36Cost Effect Analysis
Q2
Productivity Component
P2
Price Recovery Component
Q
P1
Growth Component
Q1
37The Management of Capacity
- Managers can reduce capacity-based fixed costs by
measuring and managing unused capacity - Unused Capacity is the amount of productive
capacity available over and above the productive
capacity employed to meet consumer demand in the
current period
38Analysis of Unused Capacity
- Two Important Features
- Engineered Costs result from a cause-and-effect
relationship between output and the resources
used to produce that output - Discretionary Costs have two parts
- They arise from periodic (annual) decisions
regarding the maximum amount to be incurred - They have no measurable cause-and-effect
relationship between output and resources used
39Managing Unused Capacity
- Downsizing (Rightsizing) is an integrated
approach of configuring processes, products, and
people to match costs to the activities that need
to be performed to operate effectively and
efficiently in the present and future - Because identifying unused capacity for
discretionary costs is difficult, downsizing,
or otherwise managing this unused capacity, is
also difficult.
40Customer-Profitability Profiles
- Customer profitability reports often
highlight that a small percentage of
customers contribute a large percentage
of operating income. - It is important that companies devote
sufficient resources to maintaining and expanding
relationships with these key contributors to
profitability.
41Other Factors in Evaluating Customer Profitability
- Likelihood of customer retention
- Potential for sales growth
- Long-run customer profitability
- Increases in overall demand from having
well-known customers - Ability to learn from customers
42Sales Volume Variance
aMi
Sales Mix
aQ
Sales Quantity
bMi
bQ
BCMi
aX
Market Share
aZ
BCM
Market Size
bX
bZ
43Purposes of Cost Allocation
- There are four essential purposes of cost
allocation - To provide information for economic decisions
- To motivate managers and other employees
- To justify costs or compute reimbursement
- To measure income and assets for reporting to
external parties
44Cost Allocation Criteria
Cost Allocation by Ability to Bear
How many resources are consumed by the cost
object?
Cost Allocation by Cause and Effect
The ability for the cost object to absorb
additional cost given reasonable profit margin
Cost Object
Cost Allocation by Benefit Received
User
How many benefits are received by the user from
using the cost object?
45Allocating Costs of a Supporting Department to
Operating Departments
- Supporting (Service) Department provides the
services that assist other internal departments
in the company - Operating (Production) Department directly adds
value to a product or service
46Allocation Method Tradeoffs
- Single-rate method is simple to implement, but
treats fixed costs in a manner similar to
variable costs - Dual-rate method treats fixed and variable costs
more realistically, but is more complex to
implement
47Allocation Bases
- Under either method, allocation of support costs
can be based on one of the three following
scenarios - Budgeted overhead rate and budgeted hours
- Budgeted overhead rate and actual hours
- Actual overhead rate and actual hours
- Choosing between actual and budgeted rates
budgeted is known at the beginning of the period,
while actual will not be known with certainty
until the end of the period
48Budgeted versus Actual Rates
- Budgeted rates let the user department know in
advance the cost rates they will be charged. - Users are better equipped to determine the amount
of the service to request. - Budgeted rates also help motivate the manager of
the supplier department to improve efficiency.
49Budgeted versus Actual Usage Allocation Bases
- When budgeted usage is the allocation base, user
divisions will know in advance their allocated
costs. - This information helps the user divisions with
both short-run and long-run planning. - The main justification given for the use of
budgeted usage to allocate fixed costs relates to
long-run planning.
50Allocating Support Departments Costs
- Three methods are widely used to allocate the
costs of support departments to operating
departments - Direct allocation method
- Step-down method
- Reciprocal method
51Direct Method
52Step-Down Method
53Reciprocal Method
54Allocating Common Costs
- Common Cost the cost of operating a facility,
activity, or like cost object that is shared by
two or more users at a lower cost than the
individual cost of the activity to each user - Two methods for allocating common cost are
- Stand-alone cost-allocation method
- Incremental cost-allocation method
55Joint-Cost Basics
- Joint costs are the costs of a single production
process that yields multiple products
simultaneously. - Industries abound in which a single production
process simultaneously yields two or more
products.
56Joint Products and Byproducts
Main Products Joint Products
Byproducts
High
Low
Sales Value
57Approaches to Allocating Joint Costs
- The two basic approaches to allocating joint
costs are - Approach 1 Allocate costs using market-based
data such as revenues. - Approach 2 Allocate costs in some physical
measure-based data such as weight or volume.
58Allocating Joint Costs
- Approach 1
- The sales value at splitoff method
- The estimated net realizable value (NRV) method
- The constant gross-margin percentage NRV method
59Constant Gross-Margin Percentage NRV Method
- Step 1 Compute the overall gross-margin
percentage. - Step 2 Use the overall gross-margin
percentage and deduct the gross margin
from the final sales values to obtain the
total costs that each product should
bear. - Step 3 Deduct the expected separable costs
from the total costs to obtain the joint-
cost allocation.
60Comparison of Methods
- Why is the sales value at splitoff method widely
used? - It is objective.
- It does not anticipate subsequent management
decisions on further processing. - It uses a meaningful common denominator.
- It is simple.
61Irrelevance of Joint Costs for Decision
Making
- No techniques for allocating joint-product costs
should guide decisions about whether a product
should be sold at the splitoff point or processed
beyond splitoff.
62Accounting for Byproducts
- Although byproducts have much lower sales value
than do joint or main products, the presence of
byproducts can affect the allocation of joint
costs. - Byproduct accounting methods differ on whether
byproducts are recognized in the financial
statements at the time of production or the time
of sale.
63Production Method
Sales Method
Revenue MP Only MP BP
COGS
Total Cost BP NRV
Total Cost
EI (MP)
COGS
EI
COGS
Total EI EI (MP) EI (BP)
64Operation Costing
Process-costing Systems
Job-costing Systems
Operation Costing System
- A hybrid costing system of customized
manufacturing (job-order) and mass production
(process) systems - Produce batches of similar products with each
batch being a variation of one design.
65Operation Costing
- The production system is a sequence of operations
or processes that a product must go through. - All products may not go through all of the
processes
Batch A
Operation 1
Materials
Finished Goods Inventory
Operation 3
Batch B
Operation 2
Batch C
66Accounting for Operation Costing
- Separate WIP for each operation (or process).
- As the product moves between operations, debit
receiving operation's WIP, credit sending
operation's WIP. - Direct materials are traced directly to each
batch (or order). - Conversion costs are accumulated by operation. A
single average conversion cost is then applied to
units that go through the operation, regardless
of which batch they belong to.
67Spoilage, Rework and Scrap Terminology
- There are three types of costs that arise as a
result of defects - Spoilage (???)
- Rework (???)
- Scrap (????)
- Some amount of spoilage, rework, or scrap appears
to be an inherent part of many production
processes.
68Abnormal Spoilage
- Abnormal spoilage costs are written off as losses
of the accounting period in which detection of
the spoiled units occurs. - Companies record the units of abnormal spoilage
and keep a separate Loss from Abnormal Spoilage
account.
69FIFO Spoilage
- The FIFO method of process costing keeps costs in
the beginning inventory separate from the costs
in the current period when determining the costs
of good units (which includes a normal spoilage
amount) and the costs of abnormal spoilage.
70Job Costing Spoilage or Rework
- Normal spoilage or rework can be assigned to a
specific job or, if common to all jobs, as part
of manufacturing overhead. - Abnormal spoilage or rework is written off as a
cost of the period.
71Recognizing Scrap
- Scrap, if material in dollar amount, is
recognized in the accounting records either at
the time of its sale or at the time of its
production. - Scrap, if immaterial, is often recognized as
other revenues at time of sale.
72Recognizing Material Scrap at Time of Sale
- Recognizing sale of scrap specific to Job 10
- Cash or Accounts Receivable 300
Work-in-Process (Job 10) 300 - Recognizing sale of scrap common to all jobs
- Cash or Accounts Receivable 300
Manufacturing Overhead Control 300
73Recognizing Material Scrap at Time of Production
- Recognizing scrap specific to Job 10 is
returned to the storeroom - Materials Control 300
Work-in-Process (Job 10)
300 - Recognizing scrap common to all jobs is returned
to the storeroom - Materials Control 300
Manufacturing Overhead Control 300
74Quality and Failure
75The Financial Perspective Costs of Quality
- The costs of quality (COQ) refer to costs
incurred to prevent, or costs arising as a result
of, the production of a low-quality product. - These costs focus on conformance quality and are
incurred in all business functions of the value
chain.
76The Financial Perspective Costs of Quality
- Prevention costs--costs incurred in precluding
the production of products that do not conform
to specifications. - Appraisal costs--costs incurred in detecting
which of the individual units of products do not
conform to specifications.
77The Financial Perspective Costs of Quality
- Internal failure costs--costs incurred by a
nonconforming product detected before it is
shipped to customers. - External failure costs--costs incurred by a
nonconforming product detected after it is
shipped to customers.
78Cost of Quality Exclusions
- Opportunity Costs resulting from poor quality
- Contribution Margin and Income forgone from lost
sales - Lower Prices
- Excluded due to estimation difficulties and being
unrecorded as to the financial accounting records
79Nonfinancial Measures
- Nonfinancial measures of customer-satisfaction
- Nonfinancial measures of internal performance
- Measures of learning and growth
80Evaluating Quality Performance
- Advantages of Financial COQ measures
- Financial measures are helpful to evaluate
tradeoffs among prevention costs, appraisal
costs, and failure costs. - Financial COQ measures assist in problem solving
by comparing different quality-improvement
programs and setting priorities for achieving
maximum cost reduction. - COQ provides a single, summary measure of quality
performance.
81Evaluating Quality Performance
- Advantages of nonfinancial measures of quality
- Nonfinancial measures of quality are often easy
to quantify and understand. - Nonfinancial measures direct attention to
physical processes and hence focus attention on
the precise problem areas that need improvement.
82Control Charts
Production Line B
m 2s
m s
Defect Rate
m
m - s
m - 2s
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Days
83Pareto Diagram
700
Number of Times Defect Observed
500
Copies are fuzzy and unclear
Copies are too light/dark
200
Paper gets jammed
84Cause-and-Effect Diagrams
Methods and Design Factors
Human Factors
Flawed part design Incorrect manufacturing sequenc
e
Inadequate supervision Poor training New operator
Multiple suppliers Incorrect specification Variati
on in purchased components
Inadequate tools Incorrect speed Poor maintenance
Machine-related Factors
Materials and Components Factors
85 Time as a Competitive Weapon
- Companies need to measure time in order to manage
it properly. - Two common operational measures of time are
- Customer-response time
- On-time performance
86Customer-Response Time
Order is placed
Order is received
Order is set up
Order is manufactured
Order is delivered
Waiting Time
Mfg. Time
Receipt Time
Manufacturing Lead Time
Delivery Time
Customer-Response Time
87Theory of Constraints
- The objective of TOC is to increase throughput
contribution while decreasing investments and
operating costs. - TOC considers a short-run time horizon and
assumes operating costs to be fixed costs.
88Theory of Constraints
- The theory of constraints emphasizes the
management of bottlenecks as the key to improving
the performance of the production system as a
whole.
89Methods to Relieve Bottlenecks
- Eliminate idle time at the bottleneck operation
- Process only those parts or products that
increase throughput contribution, not parts or
products that will remain in finished goods or
spare parts inventories - Shift products that do not have to be made on the
bottleneck operation to nonbottleneck processes,
or to outside processing facilities
90Methods to Relieve Bottlenecks
- Reduce setup time and processing time at
bottleneck operations - Improve the quality of parts or products
manufactured at the bottleneck operation
91Costs Associated with Goods for
Sale
- Five categories of costs associated with goods
for sale are - Purchasing costs
- Ordering costs
- Carrying costs
- Stockout costs
- Quality costs
92Economic-Order-Quantity Decision Model
- The formula for the EOQ model is
- EOQ
- D Demand in units for a specified time period
- P Relevant ordering costs per purchase order
- C Relevant carrying costs of one unit in
- stock for the time period used for D
93Considerations in Obtaining Estimates of Relevant
Costs
- Obtaining accurate estimates of the cost
parameters used in the EOQ decision model is a
challenging task. - What are the relevant incremental costs of
carrying inventory? - Only those costs of the purchasing company that
change with the quantity of inventory held
94Considerations in Obtaining Estimates of Relevant
Costs
- What is the relevant opportunity cost of capital?
- It is the return forgone by investing capital in
inventory rather than elsewhere. - It is calculated as the required rate of return
multiplied by those costs per unit that vary with
the number of units purchased and that are
incurred at the time the units are received.
95Economic-Order-Quantity Decision Model
- What are the relevant total costs?
- The formula for relevant total costs (RTC) is
RTC Annual relevant ordering costs Annual
relevant carrying costs
RTC ( ) P ( ) C
- Q can be any order quantity, not just EOQ.
QC 2
D Q
Q 2
DP Q
96Economic-Order-Quantity Decision Model
10,000
8,000
Annual relevant total costs
Relevant Total Costs (Dollars)
6,000
5,434
Annual relevant ordering costs
4,000
Annual relevant carrying costs
2,000
600
1,200
1,800
2,400
988 EOQ
Order Quantity (Units)
97Reorder Point
988
Reorder Point
Reorder Point
494
Weeks
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Lead Time 2 weeks
98Safety Stock
- Safety stock is inventory held at all times
regardless of the quantity of inventory ordered
using the EOQ model. - Safety stock is used as a buffer against
unexpected increases in demand or lead time and
unavailability of stock from suppliers.
99Evaluating Managers and Goal-Congruence Issues
- Goal-congruence issues can arise when there is an
inconsistency between the EOQ decision model and
the model used to evaluate the performance of the
manager implementing the inventory management
decisions.
100Materials Requirement Planning (MRP)
- Materials requirements planning (MRP) systems
take a push-through approach that manufactures
finished goods for inventory on the basis of
demand forecasts. - MRP predetermines the necessary outputs at each
stage of production. - Inventory management is a key challenge in an MRP
system.
101Just-In-Time Production Systems
- Just-in-time (JIT) production systems take a
demand pull approach in which goods are only
manufactured to satisfy customer orders. - Demand triggers each step of the production
process, starting with customer demand for a
finished product at the end of the process, to
the demand for direct materials at the beginning
of the process.
102Major Features of a JIT System
- The five major features of a JIT system are
- Organizing production in manufacturing cells
- Hiring and retaining multi-skilled workers
- Emphasizing total quality management
- Reducing manufacturing lead time and setup time
- Building strong supplier relationships
103Benefits of JIT Systems
- Benefits of JIT production
- Lower carrying costs of inventory
- Eliminating the root causes of rework, scrap,
waste, and manufacturing lead time.
104Performance Measures and Control in JIT Production
- To manage and reduce inventories, the management
accountant must design performance measures to
control and evaluate JIT production. - What information may management accountants use?
- Personal observation by production line workers
and managers - Financial performance measures, such as inventory
turnover ratios
105Performance Measures and Control in JIT Production
- What are nonfinancial performance measures of
time, inventory, and quality? - Manufacturing lead time
- Units produced per hour
- Days inventory on hand
- Total setup time for machines/Total manufacturing
time - Number of units requiring rework or scrap/Total
number of units started and completed
106Backflush Costing
- A unique production system such as JIT often
leads to its own unique costing system. - Organizing manufacturing in cells, reducing
defects and manufacturing lead time, and ensuring
timely delivery of materials enables purchasing,
production, and sales to occur in quick
succession with minimal inventories.
107Backflush Costing
- Where journal entries for one or more stages in
the cycle are omitted, the journal entries for a
subsequent stage use normal or standard costs to
work backward to flush out the costs in the cycle
for which journal entries were not made.
108Trigger Points
- Stage A Purchase of direct materials
- Stage B Production resulting in work in
process - Stage C Completion of a good finished unit or
product - Stage D Sale of finished goods
109Trigger Points
- Assume trigger points A, C, and D.
- This company would have two inventory accounts
- Type
Account Title 1. Combined
materials Inventory Material and materials
in work-in- and In-Process process
inventory Control - 2. Finished goods Finished Goods Control
110Trigger Points
- Assume trigger points A and D.
- This company would have one inventory account
- Type
Account Title Combines direct materials
Inventory inventory
and any direct Control
materials in work-in-process
and finished goods inventories
111Special Considerations in Backflush Costing
- Backflush costing does not necessarily comply
with GAAP - However, inventory levels may be immaterial,
negating the necessity for compliance - Backflush costing does not leave a good audit
trail the ability of the accounting system to
pinpoint the uses of resources at each step of
the production process