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Fundamental Cornerstones of Managerial Accounting Chapter Six

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Presentation on theme: "Fundamental Cornerstones of Managerial Accounting Chapter Six"— Presentation transcript:

1 Fundamental Cornerstones of Managerial Accounting Chapter Six
Activity-Based Costing and Management Heitger/Mowen/Hansen Copyright © 2008 Cengage Learning South-Western.

2 Functional-based Cost Systems
Functional-based systems Based on volume measures, such as Direct labor hours Machine hours Two types Plantwide rates Departmental rates Often produce average costs that severely under- or overstate individual product costs

3 Functional-based Cost System Limitations
Two major factors impair their ability to assign overhead costs accurately: Proportion of non-unit-related overhead costs to total overhead costs is large Degree of product diversity is great

4 Unit and Non-Unit Activities
Unit-level-activities-- Activities that are performed each time a unit is produced. Non-unit-level-activities-- Activities that are not performed each time a unit of product is produced

5 Non-Unit-Related Overhead Costs
What is needed for accurate cost assignment of non-unit-level activities? Non-unit-level activity drivers Factors that measure the consumption of non-unit-level activities by products and other cost objects

6 Proportion of each activity consumed by a product.
Product Diversity Products consume overhead activities in systematically different proportions. Consumption Ratio --- Proportion of each activity consumed by a product.

7 Calculate activity rates.
Setup rate $1,200/4 setup hours $300 per setup hour Materials handling rate $800/10 moves $80 per move Machining rate $1,500/50 machine hours $30 per machine hour Assembly rate $500/100 machine hours $5 per direct labor hour

8 Identifying Activities and Their Attributes
Activity Dictionary Lists the activities in an organization along with some critical activity attributes Activity Attributes Financial and nonfinancial information items that describe individual items

9 Key Questions to Identify Activities
How many employees are in your department? What do they do? Do customers outside your department use any equipment? What resources are used by each activity? What are the outputs of each activity? Who or what uses the activity output? How much time do workers spend on each activity? Time on each activity by equipment?

10 Assigning Costs to Activities
Must determine how much it costs to perform each activity Requires identification of the resources being consumed Labor, materials, energy, and capital Cost of resources is found in the general ledger Resources must be assigned using driver tracing Work distribution matrix Used to assign labor resources

11 Factors that measure the consumption of resources by activity.
Resource Drivers Factors that measure the consumption of resources by activity.

12 Assigning Costs to Products
Usage of the activity (as measured by activity drivers) Predetermined activity rate x To calculate this rate, the practical capacity of each activity must be determined

13 Activity-Based Customer Costing
Customers are cost objects of fundamental interest. Customer management can produce significant gains in profit. Customers can consume customer-driven activities in different proportions. Assigning the costs of customer service to customers is much the same as assigning manufacturing costs to products.

14 Supplier Costing Methodology
Cost of a supplier is much more than the purchase price of the components or materials acquired. Assigning the cost to suppliers is similar to cost assignments we have seen for products and customers.

15 Process-Value Analysis
Focuses on cost reduction instead of cost assignment Emphasizes the maximization of systemwide performance. Concerned with: Driver analysis Activity analysis Performance measurement

16 Activity Inputs and Outputs
Resources consumed by the activity in producing its output Activity Outputs Result or product of an activity

17 Driver Analysis: The Search for Root Causes
Activity Output Measure The number of times the activity is performed Driver Analysis The effort expended to identify those factors that are the root causes of activity costs

18 Activity Analysis Process of identifying, describing, and evaluating the activities It should produce four outcomes: What activities are done How many people perform the activities The time and resources required to perform the activities An assessment of the value of the activities to the organization

19 Value-Added Activities
Activities necessary to remain in business Two types: Value-added by mandate Necessary to comply with legal mandate Discretionary activities

20 Discretionary Value-Added Activities
Three conditions must be met simultaneously for the activity to be classified as value-added: Produces a change of state Change of state was not achievable by preceding conditions Enables other activities to be performed

21 Non-Value-Added Activities
All activities other than those that are absolutely essential to remain in business Examples: Scheduling Storing Moving Inspecting Waiting Challenge of activity analysis is to find ways to produce the good without using any of these activities.

22 Cost Reduction Four Ways: Activity elimination Activity selection
Activity reduction Activity sharing

23 Activity Elimination Once activities that fail to add value are identified, measures must be taken to rid the organization of these activities.

24 Activity Selection Involves choosing among different sets of activities that are caused by competing strategies. The lowest-cost design strategy should be chosen.

25 Activity Reduction Decreases the time and resources required by an activity. This approach focuses on improving efficiency.

26 Activity Sharing Increases the efficiency by using economies of scale. This lowers the per-unit cost of the cost driver and the amount of cost traceable to the products that consume the activity.

27 Is the activity non value-added or value-added?
Warranty work Is the activity non value-added or value-added? Performing warranty work is a non value-added activity Why? It is done to correct something that wasn’t done right the first time.

28 Activity Performance Measurement
Designed to assess how well an activity was performed and the results achieved. Measures are both financial and nonfinancial Centers on 3 dimensions: Efficiency Quality Time

29 Efficiency, Quality, & Time
Focuses on the relationship of activity inputs to activity outputs. Quality Concerned with doing the activity right the first time. Time Longer times usually mean more resource consumption and less ability to respond to customer demands.

30 What is the velocity? Cycle time?
Assume that a company takes 10,000 hours to produce 20,000 units of a product. What is the velocity? Cycle time? Velocity = 20,000/10,000 = 2 units per hour Velocity is the number of units of output that can be produced in a given period of time.

31 What is the velocity? Cycle time?
Assume that a company takes 10,000 hours to product 20,000 units of a product. What is the velocity? Cycle time? Cycle Time = 10,000/20,000 = ½ hour Cycle time is the length of time it takes to produce a unit of output from the time the raw materials are received until the good is delivered to finished goods inventory.


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