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Activity-Based Costing and Management (ABC/M)

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Title: Activity-Based Costing and Management (ABC/M)


1
Activity-Based Costing and Management (ABC/M)
  • December 20-27, 05
  • Chapters 5 16
  • Objectives
  • Understand the differences between volume-based
    costing systems and activity-based costing system
  • Understand how activity-based costing systems
    are used in manufacturing and service industries.
  • Understand the role of activity-based costing
    systems in total quality management (TQM)
    philosophy (also see Chapter 16)

2
Product Costing
Product Costing The process of accumulating,
classifying, and assigning direct materials,
direct labor, and factory overhead costs to
products or services Several different product
costing systems are available, including
Methods Product Costing Systems
Cost accumulation method - Job Costing (ch 4) - Process Costing (ch 11)
Cost Measurement Method - Actual costing - Normal costing - Standard costing
Overhead Assignment Method - Traditional (ch 5) - Activity-based costing (ch 5)
3
Overhead AssignmentTraditional Volume-Based
Costing System
Products
4
Overhead AssignmentActivity-based costing system
Products
5
Overhead AssignmentTraditional Volume-Based
Costing System
  • Type 1 ________________________
  • Simple but omits allocation of service department
    costs
  • Use single cost driver throughout the plant
  • Type 2 ________________________
  • More detailed cost measures, particularly if the
    departments perform quite different activities.
  • Cost drivers are determined based on the nature
    of each department.
  • Ex

6
Traditional Volume-Based Costing System
  • The traditional volume-based costing system may
    provide reasonably accurate costs when a firms
    operation possess the following characteristics
  • ________________________________________________
  • ________________________________________________
  • ________________________________________________
  • Similar distribution channels, customer demands,
    and customers

7
Limitations of Traditional Volume-Based Costing
Motivations for ABC
  • Recent changes in manufacturing and business
    environments have made traditional volume-based
    costing systems unreliable and inaccurate
  • ________________________________________________
  • ________________________________________________
  • ________________________________________________
  • ________________________________________________
  • ________________________________________________

8
Limitations of Traditional Volume-Based Costing
Motivations for ABC
  • A traditional volume-based overhead costing
    system, whether plantwide or departmental, often
    leads to inaccurate product costs
    (________________________ ________________________
    ____________________)
  • Distortions of volume-based overhead cost systems
    increase ___________________________
  • Inaccurate cost information can lead to
    undesirable strategic results, such as
    ________________________ _________________________
    ___________________

9
Ex1 Volume-based(problem 5-26 pg 168)
  • GWS Hospital uses a hospitalwide overhead rate
    based on nurse-hours. The intensive care unit
    (ICU), which has 30 beds, applies overhead using
    patient-days. Its budgeted cost and operating
    data for the year follow
  • Budget information
  • Hospital total overhead 69,120,000
  • Hospital total nurse-hours 1,152,000
  • Budget Cost Driver Information

Cost Pool Budget Cost Cost Driver Budget Cost Driver Activity
Beds Equipment Nursing Care 810,000 422,000 457,500 Number of bed-days Number of patient-days Number of nurse-hours 900 845 6,000
In June, GWSs intensive care unit had the
following operating data 5,900 nurse-hours 870
patient days
Required Calculate the ICUs overhead costs for
the month of June using (1) The hospital wide
rate (2) The ICU departmentwide rate (3) The
cost driver for the ICU department (ABC)
10
Activity-Based Costing
Direct labor hours
Activity-Based Costing (ABC) is a costing
approach that assigns resource costs to a cost
object based on activities performed for the cost
object
Machine hours
Lot size
Number of setups
Number of engineering hours
Number of layers
11
Basic Terms in ABC
  • An activity is an action or an aggregation of
    actions performed within an organization
  • Ex ___________________________________________
  • A resource is an economic element needed or
    consumed in performing activities
  • Ex ___________________________________________
  • A resource consumption cost driver is an activity
    or characteristic that consumes resources
  • Ex ___________________________________________
  • An activity consumption cost driver measures how
    much of an activity a cost object uses
  • Ex ___________________________________________

12
Cost Assignment in ABC
  • A two-stage cost assignment assigns factory
    overhead costs to activity centers or cost pools
    and then to costs objects
  • Activity-based systems differ from traditional
    volume-based costing systems in two ways
  • The ABC system defines cost pools as activities
    or activity centers rather than production plant
    or department cost centers
  • The cost drivers that the ABC system uses to
    assign activity costs to cost objects are drivers
    based on an activity or activities performed for
    the cost objects

13
(No Transcript)
14
Steps in Designing an ABC system
  • Step 1 _____________________________
  • Resource costs
  • Categories of activities
  • Step 2 _____________________________
  • Step 3 _____________________________

next
15
Categories of Activity
  1. _______________________ An activity that is
    performed for each unit of production
  2. _______________________ An activity that is
    performed for each batch of products rather than
    for each unit of production
  3. _______________________ An activity that is
    performed to support the production of a given
    product
  4. _______________________ An activity that is
    performed to sustain the production of products
    in general

back
16
Traditional volume-based costing vs
ABCIllustrated Example (pg 143-145)
AW SZ
Production volume Unit Selling price Unit direct material and labor costs Direct labor-hours 5,000 400 200 25,000 20,000 200 80 75,000
  • HBT., successfully produces and sells two types
    of communication systems, AW and SZ. The company
    has the following financial and cost data for the
    two products
  • The companys management accountant has
    identified the following activities, budgeted
    cost pools, and activity drivers

Activity Budgeted Cost Pool Activity Cost Driver
Engineering Setups Machine running Packing 125,000 300,000 1,500,000 75,000 Engineering hours Number of setups Machine-hours Number of packing orders
Total 2,000,000
Activity Consumption Activity Consumption Activity Consumption
Activity Cost Driver AW SZ Total
Engineering hours Number of setups Machine-hours Number of packing orders 5,000 200 50,000 5,000 7,500 100 100,000 10,000 12,500 300 150,000 15,000
REQUIRED Illustrate product profitability (gross
profits or gross margins) obtained from
traditional costing system, using direct
labor-hours as the cost driver, and from the
activity-based costing system, using both
volume-based and nonvolume-based cost drivers.
Comment on the results based on these two costing
systems.
17
Activity-Based Management (ABM)
  • ABM can be classified into two categories
  • Operational enhances operation efficiency and
    asset utilization and lowers costs
  • Strategic attempts to alter the demand for
    activities and increase profitability at the
    current activity efficiency
  • ABM uses the following to improve operations
  • Cost driver analysis examines, quantifies, and
    explains the effects of the cost driver on the
    cost of an activity
  • A cause-and-effect diagram maps out causes that
    affect an activity, process, stated problem, or
    outcome
  • A Pareto analysis is a histogram of cost drivers
    that contribute to the total cost
  • Performance measurement identifies the work
    performed and the results achieved by an
    activity, process, or organizational unit

18
Cause and Effect Diagram
Quality Problem or Desired Outcome
19
Pareto Analysis
220 - 200 - 180 - 160 - 140 - 120 - 100 -
80 - 60 - 40 - 20 -
Cumulative
1 Egg size 2 Blending speed 3 Liqueur
4 Blending duration 5 Quality of
chocolate 6 Improper refrigeration
1 2 3 4 5 6
20
Activity Analysis
  • To be competitive, a firm must assess each of its
    activities based on
  • its need by the product or customer
  • its efficiency, and
  • its value content
  • A firm performs an activity because it is
  • required to meet the specification of the product
    or service or satisfy customer demand
  • required to sustain the organization, or
  • deemed beneficiary to the firm
  • Identify high-value-added and low-value added
    activities
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