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Activity Based Costing: A Tool to Aid Decision Making

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Presentation on theme: "Activity Based Costing: A Tool to Aid Decision Making"— Presentation transcript:

1 Activity Based Costing: A Tool to Aid Decision Making

2 Activity Based Costing (ABC)
ABC is designed to provide managers with cost information for strategic and other decisions that potentially affect capacity and therefore “fixed” costs. ABC is a good supplement to our traditional cost system I agree!

3 Activity Based Costing (ABC)
Both manufacturing and nonmanufacturing costs may be assigned to products. A number of cost pools each allocated to a product or cost object. Some manufacturing costs may be excluded from product costs. Allocation bases often differ from traditional costing systems. Overhead rates may be based on activity at capacity.

4 How Costs are Treated Under Activity-Based Costing
Departmental Overhead Rates Level of Complexity Plantwide Overhead Rate Overhead Allocation

5 Plantwide Overhead Rate
Companies tended to use direct labor as the overhead allocation base. There was a belief that direct labor and overhead costs were highly correlated.

6 Departmental Overhead Rates
Finishing Department Many companies have a system in which each department has its own overhead rate. Painting Department Shipping Department

7 Departmental Overhead Rates
Indirect Labor Indirect Materials Other Overhead Stage One: Costs assigned to pools Department 1 Department 2 Department 3 Cost pools

8 Departmental Overhead Rates
Indirect Labor Indirect Materials Other Overhead Stage One: Costs assigned to pools Department 1 Department 2 Department 3 Cost pools Stage Two: Costs applied to products Products

9 Departmental Overhead Rates
Indirect Labor Indirect Materials Other Overhead Stage One: Costs assigned to pools Department 1 Department 2 Department 3 Cost pools Direct Labor Hours Machine Hours Raw Materials Cost Stage Two: Costs applied to products Products Departmental Allocation Bases

10 Cost of Idle Capacity Activity Based Costing
Traditional Cost Accounting The predetermined overhead rate is based on budgeted activity. This results in applying overhead costs of unused, or idle, capacity. Activity Based Costing Products are charged for the costs of capacity they use – not for the costs of capacity they don’t use.

11 Designing an ABC System
Cost Objects (e.g., products and customers) Activities Consumption of Resources Cost

12 Designing of an ABC System
Steps for Implementing ABC Identify and define activities and activity cost pools. Trace costs to activities and cost objects. Assign costs to activity cost pools. Calculate activity rates. Assign costs to cost objects. Prepare management reports.

13 Identify and Define Activities and Activity Cost Pools
A part of the production process for which management wants a separate reporting of the costs of the activity involved. Unit-Level Activity Batch-Level Product-Level Customer-Level Organization- sustaining

14 Identify and Define Activities and Activity Cost Pools
At Classic Brass, the ABC team, selected the following activity cost pools and activity measures:

15 Identify and Define Activities and Activity Cost Pools
$ Activity Cost Pool is a “bucket” in which costs are accumulated that relate to a single activity measure in the ABC system.

16 Identify and Define Activities and Activity Cost Pools
Customer Orders - assigned all costs of resources that are consumed by taking and processing customer orders. Product Designs - assigned all costs of resources consumed by designing products. Order Size - assigned all costs of resources consumed as a consequence of the number of units produced. Customer Relations – assigned all costs associated with maintaining relations with customers. Other – assigned all overhead costs that are not associated with the other cost pools.

17 Whenever Possible, Directly Trace Overhead Costs to Activities and Cost Objects

18 Assign Costs to Activity Cost Pools
At Classic Brass the following distribution of resource consumption across activity cost pools is determined. **Not included because they are directly traced to customer orders.

19 Assign Costs to Activity Cost Pools
Indirect factory wages $500,000 Percent consumed by customer orders % $125,000

20 Assign Costs to Activity Cost Pools
Factory equipment depreciation $300,000 Percent consumed by customer orders % $ 60,000

21 Assign Costs to Activity Cost Pools

22 Calculate Activity Rates
The ABC team determines that Classic Brass will have these total activities for each activity cost pool . . . 1,000 customer orders 200 new designs 20,000 machine-hours 100 customer relations activities Now the team can compute the individual activity rates by dividing the total cost for each activity by the total activity levels.

23 Calculate Activity Rates
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24 Limitations of ABC ABC produces numbers, like product margins, that are at odds with numbers produced by traditional costing system. Some managers find it difficult to adjust to this change. ABC systems are a major project requiring substantial resources. The benefits of increased accuracy must outweigh these additional costs. ABC data can be misinterpreted and must be used with care when making decisions.


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