Title: Cost Behavior: Analysis and Use
1Cost BehaviorAnalysis and Use
2Types of Cost Behavior Patterns
Recall the summary of our cost behavior
discussion from Chapter 2.
3Total Variable Cost Example
- Your total long distance telephone bill is
based on how many minutes you talk.
Total Long DistanceTelephone Bill
Minutes Talked
4Variable Cost Per Unit Example
- The cost per minute talked is constant. For
example, 10 cents per minute.
Per MinuteTelephone Charge
Minutes Talked
5Total Fixed Cost Example
- Your monthly basic telephone bill is probably
fixed and does not change when you make more
local calls.
Monthly Basic Telephone Bill
Number of Local Calls
6Fixed Cost Per Unit Example
- The fixed cost per local call decreases as more
local calls are made.
Monthly Basic Telephone Bill per Local Call
Number of Local Calls
7Cost Behavior
Examples of normally variable costs
Service Organizations Supplies and travel
Merchandisers Cost of Goods Sold
Merchandisers and Manufacturers Sales commissions
and shipping costs
Manufacturers Direct Material, Direct Labor, and
Variable Manufacturing Overhead
Examples of normally fixed costs
Merchandisers, manufacturers, and service
organizations Real estate taxes, Insurance, Sales
salariesDepreciation, Advertising
8The Activity Base
Unitsproduced
Machinehours
A measure of the event causing the incurrence
of a variable cost a cost driver
Laborhours
Milesdriven
9The Linearity Assumption and the Relevant Range
EconomistsCurvilinear Cost Function
Total Cost
Activity
10The Linearity Assumption and the Relevant Range
EconomistsCurvilinear Cost Function
Total Cost
Accountants Straight-Line Approximation
(constant unit variable cost)
Activity
11The Linearity Assumption and the Relevant Range
A straight line closely approximates a
curvilinear variable cost line within the
relevant range.
EconomistsCurvilinear Cost Function
RelevantRange
Total Cost
Accountants Straight-Line Approximation
(constant unit variable cost)
Activity
12Types of Fixed Costs
Fixed Costs
Discretionary May be altered in the short-term by
current managerial decisions
Committed Long-term, cannot be reduced in the
short term.
Examples Depreciation on Buildings and Equipment
Examples Advertising and Research and Development
13Trend Toward Fixed Costs
- Increased automation.
- Increase in salaried knowledge workers who are
difficult to train and replace.
Implications Managers are more locked-in with
fewer decision alternatives. Planning becomes
more crucial because fixed costs are difficult to
change with current operating decisions.
14Fixed Costs and Relevant Range
- Example Office space is available at a
rental rate of 30,000 per year in increments of
1,000 square feet. As the business grows more
space is rented, increasing the total cost.
15Fixed Costs and Relevant Range
90
Total cost doesnt change for a wide range of
activity, and then jumps to a new higher cost for
the next higher range of activity.
Relevant Range
60
Rent Cost in Thousands of Dollars
30
0
0 1,000 2,000
3,000 Rented Area (Square Feet)
16Total Costs
- Total costhas both fixed and variablecomponents.
17Total Costs
Total cost
Variable Costs
Cost
Fixed Costs
Activity
18Total Costs
Total cost Y a bX
Variable Costs
Cost
bX
Fixed Costs
a
Activity
19The Analysis of Total Costs
20Account Analysis
Each account is classified as eithervariable or
fixed based on the analysts knowledge of how
the account behaves.
21Engineering Estimates
Cost estimates are based on an evaluation of
production methods, and material, laborand
overhead requirements.
22The High-Low Method
- WiseCo recorded the following production activity
and maintenance costs for two months -
- Using these two levels of activity, compute
- the variable cost per unit
- the fixed cost and then
- express the costs in equation form Y a bX.
23The High-Low Method
Change?in costChange in units
24The High-Low Method
- Unit variable cost 3,600 4,000 units
0.90 per unit
25The High-Low Method
- Unit variable cost 3,600 4,000 units
0.90 per unit - Fixed cost Total cost Total variable cost
- Fixed cost 9,700 (0.90 per unit
9,000 units) - Fixed cost 9,700 8,100 1,600
26The High-Low Method
- Unit variable cost 3,600 4,000 units
0.90 per unit - Fixed cost Total cost Total variable cost
- Fixed cost 9,700 (0.90 per unit
9,000 units) - Fixed cost 9,700 8,100 1,600
- Total cost Fixed cost Variable cost (Y a
bX) Y 1,600 0.90X
27The High-Low Method
- If sales salaries and commissions are 10,000
when 80,000 units are sold and 14,000 when
120,000 units are sold, what is the variable
portion of sales salaries and commission? - a. 0.08 per unit
- b. 0.10 per unit
- c. 0.12 per unit
- d. 0.125 per unit
28The High-Low Method
- If sales salaries and commissions are 10,000
when 80,000 units are sold and 14,000 when
120,000 units are sold, what is the fixed portion
of sales salaries and commissions? - a. 2,000
- b. 4,000
- c. 10,000
- d. 12,000
29The Scattergraph Method
Plot the data points on a graph (total cost vs.
activity).
30The Scattergraph Method
Draw a line through the data points with about
anequal numbers of points above and below the
line.
31The Scattergraph Method
The slope of this line is the variable unit cost.
(Slope is the change in total cost for a one unit
change in activity).
32The Scattergraph Method
Vertical distance is the change in cost.
33Least-Squares Regression Method
- Accountants and managers may use computer
software to fit a regression line through the
data points. - The cost analysis objective is the same Y a
bx
Least-squares regression also provides a
statistic, calledthe adjusted R2, that is a
measure of the goodnessof fit of the regression
line to the data points.
34Least-Squares Regression Method
Y
20
Total Cost
10
0
X
0 1 2 3 4
Activity
35The Contribution Format
Lets put our knowledge of cost behavior to work
by preparing a contribution format income
statement.
36The Contribution Format
The contribution margin format emphasizes cost
behavior. Contribution margin covers fixed
costsand provides for income.
37The Contribution Format
38End of Chapter 5