Systems Design: Activity-Based Costing: Three
Systems Design: Activity-Based Costing: Three
Systems Design: Activity-Based Costing: Three
qxd
9/16/03
9:23 AM
Page 126
C H A P T E R
T H R E E
Systems Design:
Activity-Based Costing
A LOOK BACK
An overview of a job-order
costing system was provided in
Chapter 2. After describing the
accumulation of direct materials
and direct labor costs on jobs, we
discussed the plantwide overhead
rate approach to assigning
manufacturing overhead to jobs.
A LOOK AT THIS
CHAPTER
Chapter 3 continues the
discussion of the allocation of
overhead costs. After addressing
the advantages and disadvantages
of the use of a plantwide
overhead rate, we provide an
overview of activity-based
costing, a technique that uses a
number of allocation bases to
assign overhead costs to
products.
A LOOK AHEAD
After comparing job-order and
process costing systems, we
provide an overview of a process
costing system in Chapter 4.
CHAPTER OUTLINE
Assigning Overhead Costs to Products
Designing an Activity-Based
Costing System
Hierarchy of Activities
An Example of an Activity-Based
Costing System Design
bre17879_ch03.qxd
9/16/03
9:23 AM
Page 127
D E C I S I O N F E AT U R E
LEARNING
OBJECTIVES
Claudia Post started a small bicycle-messenger service, Diamond Courier, in Philadelphia after having
been unceremoniously fired by a local courier service. With her background in sales, a minimum of
dollars to plunk down on starting her company, and an approach that demanded customer service
every mile of the way, Claudia was looking at $1 million dollars in sales within 17 months. Tracking
delivery trends and anticipating customer needs, she added truck deliveries, airfreight services, a
parts-distribution division, and a legal service that served subpoenas and prepared court filings for law
firms in the Philadelphia region. Within three years Diamond was booking $3.1 million dollars in
annual sales and had 40 bike messengers, an office staff of 25 employees, about 50 independent drivers
and one big problem.The company was losing money.
Post sold her jewelry to meet payroll and pay bills and with input from an adviser, she took a
close look at the profitability of each of the companys lines of business. Post had assumed that if she
charged a competitive rate, kept clients happy, and increased sales, she would make money. However,
an activity-based analysis indicated that the average cost of a bike delivery, including overhead, was
$9.24, but she was charging only $4.60. Recalls Post: The bicycle division, which I thought of as
Diamonds core business, was generating just 10% of total revenues and barely covered its own
direct-labor and insurance costs. Worse, the division created more logistical and customer-service
nightmares than any other single aspect of Diamond, therefore generating a disproportionate share of
overhead costs. With smaller competitors charging as little as $3 per delivery, she decided to drop
the bicycle messenger service and concentrate on other, more profitable lines of business. Further
analysis later led to Post closing down the airfreight and parts distribution divisions, and the business
was back on track with profits rolling in.
Today, barely 13 years after Diamond Courier made its first local messenger delivery, the
company, now Diamond Transportation Group, Inc., is a leading national provider of transportation
logistics management. States Post: Today, as in 1990, Diamond delivers highly reliable and innovative
solutions that meet our customers objectives and enhance their profitability. And consistent with
good business practices, we keep our eye on the numbers. Every day.
Sources: Susan Greco, Are We Making Money Yet? Inc., July 1996, pp. 5261; and Cheryl A.
Hodolitz, Diamond Transportation Group, private communication.
bre17879_ch03.qxd
9/16/03
9:23 AM
Page 128
s discussed in earlier chapters, direct materials and direct labor costs can be directly traced to products. Overhead costs, on the other hand, cannot be easily
traced to products and some other means must be found for assigning them to
products for financial reporting and other purposes. In the previous chapter, overhead
costs were assigned to products using a plantwide predetermined overhead rate. This
method is simpler than the other methods of assigning overhead costs to products that will
be described in this chapter, but this simplicity has a cost. A plantwide predetermined
overhead rate spreads overhead costs uniformly over products in proportion to whatever
allocation base is usedmost commonly, direct labor-hours. This procedure results in
high overhead costs for products with a high direct labor-hour content and low overhead
costs for products with a low direct labor-hour content. However, the real causes of overhead may have little to do with direct labor-hours and as a consequence, product costs
may be distorted. Activity-based costing attempts to correct these distortions by more accurately assigning overhead costs to products.
Companies use three common approaches to assign overhead costs to products. The simplest method is to use a plantwide overhead rate. A slightly more refined approach is to
use departmental overhead rates. The most complex method is activity-based costing,
which is the most accurate of the three approaches to overhead cost assignment.
128
bre17879_ch03.qxd
10/13/03
10:22 AM
Page 129
129
more, product diversity has increased. Companies are creating new products and services
at an ever-accelerating rate that differ in volume, batch size, and complexity. Managing
and sustaining this product diversity requires many more overhead resources such as production schedulers and product design engineers, and many of these overhead resources
have no obvious connection with direct labor. Finally, computers, bar code readers, and
other technology have dramatically reduced the costs of collecting and manipulating
datamaking more complex (and accurate) costing systems such as activity-based costing much less expensive to build and maintain.
Nevertheless, direct labor remains a viable base for applying overhead to products in
some companiesparticularly for external reports. Direct labor is an appropriate allocation base for overhead when overhead costs and direct labor are highly correlated. And indeed, most companies throughout the world continue to base overhead allocations on
direct labor or machine-hours. However, if factorywide overhead costs do not move in
tandem with factorywide direct labor or machine-hours, some other means of assigning
overhead costs must be found or product costs will be distorted.
IN BUSINESS
bre17879_ch03.qxd
9/16/03
130
9:23 AM
Page 130
Chapter 3
Concept 31
Activity-based costing (ABC) is a technique that attempts to assign overhead costs more
accurately to products than the simpler methods discussed thus far. The basic idea underlying the activity-based costing approach is illustrated in Exhibit 31. A customer order
triggers a number of activities. For example, if Nordstrom orders a line of womens skirts
from Calvin Klein, a production order is generated, materials are ordered, patterns are
created, textiles are cut to pattern and then sewn, and the finished products are packed for
shipping. These activities consume resources. For example, ordering the appropriate materials consumes clerical timea resource the company must pay for. In activity-based
costing, an attempt is made to trace these costs directly to the products that cause them.
Rather than a single allocation base such as direct labor-hours or machine-hours, in
activity-based costing a company uses a number of allocation bases for assigning costs to
products. Each allocation base in an activity-based costing system represents a major activity that causes overhead costs. An activity in activity-based costing is an event that
causes the consumption of overhead resources. Examples of activities in various organizations include the following:
Setting up machines.
Admitting patients to a hospital.
Scheduling production.
Performing blood tests at a clinic.
Billing customers.
Maintaining equipment.
Ordering materials or supplies.
Stocking shelves at a store.
Meeting with clients at a law firm.
Preparing shipments.
Inspecting materials for defects.
Opening an account at a bank.
Activity-based costing focuses on these activities. Each major activity has its own
overhead cost pool (also known as an activity cost pool), its own activity measure, and its
own predetermined overhead rate (also known as an activity rate). An activity cost pool
is a cost bucket in which costs related to a particular activity measure are accumulated.
The activity measure expresses how much of the activity is carried out and it is used as
the allocation basis for applying overhead costs to products and services. For example, the
number of patients admitted is a natural choice of an activity measure for the activity admitting patients to the hospital. An activity rate is a predetermined overhead rate in an
activity-based costing system. Each activity has its own activity rate that is used to apply
overhead costs.
For example, the activity setting up machines to process a batch would have its own
activity cost pool. Products are ordinarily processed in batches. And since each product
has its own machine settings, machines must be set up when changing over from a batch
of one product to another. If the total cost in this activity cost pool is $150,000 and the total expected activity is 1,000 machine setups, the predetermined overhead rate (i.e., activity rate) for this activity would be $150 per machine setup ($150,000 1,000 machine
setups $150 per machine setup). Each product that requires a machine setup would be
charged $150. Note that this charge does not depend on how many units are produced after the machine is set up. A small job requiring a machine setup would be charged $150
just the same as a large job.
Taking each activity in isolation, this system works exactly like the job-order costing
system described in the last chapter. A predetermined overhead rate is computed for each
activity and then applied to jobs and products based on the amount of activity required by
the job or product.
bre17879_ch03.qxd
9/16/03
9:23 AM
Page 131
LE
ED
SC
Scheduling
Sewing
Inspection
Shipping
Activities Consume:
Resources
STOREROOM
Labor
Equipment
Energy
Supplies
Account Title
Dr.
Salary Expense
Depreciation
Cr.
Account Title
Dr.
XX
Utilities Expense
XX
XX
Supplies Expense
XX
Cr.
131
bre17879_ch03.qxd
9/16/03
9:23 AM
132
IN BUSINESS
Page 132
Chapter 3
For example, the activity merchandise inventory selection and management involves
scanning, describing, classifying, and linking each inventory item to search options.
Staff must carefully manage each change to the database, which is similar to adding and
removing inventory items from the shelf of a store. They annotate added inventory items
and upload them into the system, as well as remove obsolete and discontinued items . . .
The number of inventory items for an e-tailer is typically much greater than for a brickand-mortar [store], which is a competitive advantage, but experience shows managing a
large inventory consumes substantial resources.
Source: Thomas L. Zeller, David R. Kublank, and Philip G. Makris, How art.com Uses ABC
to Succeed, Strategic Finance, March 2001, pp. 2531. Reprinted with permission from the
IMA, Montvale, NJ, USA, www.imanet.org.
bre17879_ch03.qxd
9/16/03
9:23 AM
Page 133
Level
Activities
Activity Measures
Unit-level
Machine-hours
Direct labor-hours
Units produced
Purchase orders processed
Production orders processed
Number of setups; setup hours
Pounds of material handled; number
of times material moved
Hours of testing time
Number of part types
Hours of design time
Direct labor-hours*
Direct labor-hours*
Batch-level
Product-level
Facility-level
133
EXHIBIT 32
Examples of Activities and
Activity Measures in
Manufacturing Companies
Hierarchy of Activities
Unit-level activities are performed each time a unit is produced. The costs of unit-level
activities should be proportional to the number of units produced. For example, providing
power to run processing equipment would be a unit-level activity since power tends to be
consumed in proportion to the number of units produced.
Batch-level activities consist of tasks that are performed each time a batch is
processed, such as processing purchase orders, setting up equipment, packing shipments
to customers, and handling material. Costs at the batch level depend on the number of
batches processed rather than on the number of units produced. For example, the cost of
processing a purchase order is the same no matter how many units of an item are ordered.
Thus, the total cost of a batch-level activity such as purchasing is a function of the number of orders placed.
Product-level activities (sometimes called product-sustaining activities) relate to
specific products and typically must be carried out regardless of how many batches or
units of the product are manufactured. Product-level activities include maintaining inventories of parts for a product, issuing engineering change notices to modify a product
to meet a customers specifications, and developing special test routines when a product
is first placed into production.
IN BUSINESS
bre17879_ch03.qxd
9/16/03
9:23 AM
IN BUSINESS
(continued)
Page 134
Activity Description
Activity Measure
Since the independent sales brokers are paid a flat 5% commission on sales, they have little incentive to make sure that the sales are actually profitable to Super Bakery. The brokers will slash prices if that is necessary to make a sale. Consequently, Super Bakerys
regional sales managers must approve all price discounts and they use the ABC data to
evaluate the profitability of the deals proposed by the brokers.
Source: Tim R. V. Davis and Bruce L. Darling, ABC in a Virtual Corporation, Management Accounting, October 1996, pp. 1826.
bre17879_ch03.qxd
9/16/03
9:23 AM
Page 135
135
Activity
cost pools
Second-stage
allocations
Laborrelated
pool
Machinerelated
pool
Machine
setup
pool
Production
order
pool
$/DLH
$/MH
$/Setup
$/Order
Product
testing
pool*
Material
receipts
pool
Parts
admin.
pool
General
factory
pool
$/Test
$/Receipt
$/Part type
$/MH
Products
Unit-level
activities
Batch-level
activities
Product-level
activities
Facility-level
activities
* Standard tests are performed on a few randomly selected units in each batch.
1. Which of the following statements is false? (You may select more than one answer.)
a. In recent years, most companies have experienced increasing manufacturing
overhead costs in relation to direct labor costs.
b. Activity-based costing systems may use direct labor-hours and/or machinehours to assign unit-level costs to products.
c. Facility-level costs are not caused by particular products.
d. Product-level costs are larger for high-volume products than for low-volume
products.
CONCEPT
CHECK
Comtek Sound, Inc., makes two products, a radio with a built-in CD player (called a CD
unit) and a radio with a built-in DVD player (called a DVD unit). Both of these products
are sold to automobile manufacturers for installation in new vehicles. The president of the
company, Sarah Kastler, recently returned from a management conference at which
activity-based costing was discussed. Following the conference, she called a meeting of
the top managers in the company to discuss what she had learned. Attending the meeting
MANAGERIAL
ACCOUNTING
IN ACTION
The Issue
comtek
SOUND, INC.
bre17879_ch03.qxd
136
9/16/03
9:23 AM
Page 136
Chapter 3
were the production manager, Frank Hines; the marketing manager, Nicole Sermone; and
the accounting manager, Tom Frazier.
Sarah: I learned some things at the conference I just attended that may help resolve
some long-standing puzzles here at Comtek Sound.
Frank: Did anyone at the conference explain why my equipment always breaks down
at the worst possible moment?
Sarah: Sorry, Frank, I guess it must be bad karma or something.
Nicole: Did they tell you why weve been losing all those bids lately on our breadand-butter CD units and winning every bid on our specialty DVD units?
Sarah: Nicole, you probably werent expecting this answer, but yes, there may be a
simple explanation. We may have been shooting ourselves in the foot.
Nicole: How so? I dont know about anyone else, but we have been hustling like
crazy to get more business for the company.
Frank: Wait a minute, Nicole, my production people have been turning in tremendous
improvements in defect rates, on-time delivery, you name it.
Sarah: Whoa, everybody. Calm down. I dont think anyone is to blame for us losing
so many bids on our high-volume bread-and-butter product. Nicole, when you talk
with our customers, what reasons do they give for taking their CD unit business to
our competitors? Is it a problem with quality or on-time delivery?
Nicole: No, our customers readily admit that were among the best in the business.
Sarah: Then whats the problem?
Nicole: Price. The competition is undercutting our price on the CD units and then bidding high on the DVD units. As a result, theyre stealing our high-volume CD business and leaving us with just the low-volume DVD business.
Sarah: Why is our price so high for the CD units that the competition is able to undercut us?
Nicole: Our price isnt too high. Theirs is too low. Our competitors must be pricing
below their costs on the CD units.
Sarah: Why do you think that?
Nicole: Well, if we charged the prices for our CD units that our competitors are quoting,
wed be pricing below our cost, and I know were just as efficient as any competitor.
Frank: Nicole, why would our competitors price below their cost?
Nicole: Theyre out to grab market share.
Frank: Does that make any sense? What good does more market share do them if
theyre pricing below their cost?
Sarah: I think Frank has a point. Tom, youre the expert with the numbers. Can you
suggest another explanation?
Tom: I was hoping youd ask that. Those product cost figures my department reports
to you are primarily intended to be used to value inventories and determine cost of
goods sold for our external financial statements. I am awfully uncomfortable about
using them for bidding. In fact, I have mentioned this several times, but no one was
interested.
Sarah: Now Im interested. Tom, are you telling us that the product cost figures we
have been using for bidding may be wrong? Are you suggesting that we really dont
know what the manufacturing cost is for either the CD units or the DVD units?
Tom: Yes, that could be the problem. Our cost system isnt designed to recognize that
our two products place different demands on our resources. The CD units are simple to manufacture, and the DVD units are more complex. For example, both products take the same amount of labor time for assembly, but the more complex DVD
units take a disproportionate amount of machine and testing time. We need a cost
system that recognizes this difference in demand on resources.
Sarah: Thats exactly the point made at the conference. The conference speakers suggested we recost our products using something called activity-based costing. Tom,
can we do this?
Tom: You bet! But we need to do it as a team. Can each person in the room appoint
one of their top people to work with me?
bre17879_ch03.qxd
9/16/03
9:23 AM
Page 137
Sarah: Lets do it! Id like the special ABC team to report back to this group as soon
as possible. If theres a problem with our costs, we need to know it before the competition plows us under.
Costs for materials and labor for one unit of each product are given below:
DVD Units
Direct materials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Direct labor (at $10 per DLH) . . . . . . .
CD Units
$90
$20
$50
$20
The companys estimated manufacturing overhead costs for the current year total
$10,000,000. The ABC team discovered that although the same amount of direct labor
time is required for each product, the more complex DVD units require more machine
time, more machine setups, and more testing than the CD units. Also, the team found that
it is necessary to manufacture the DVD units in smaller lots, so they require a relatively
large number of production orders as compared to the CD units.
The company has always used direct labor-hours as the base for assigning overhead
costs to its products.
With this data in hand, the ABC team was prepared to begin the design of the new
activity-based costing system. But first, they wanted to compute the cost of each product
using the companys existing cost system.
$10,000,000
$20 per DLH
500,000 DLHs
Using this rate, the ABC team then computed the unit product costs as given below:
DVD Units
CD Units
$ 90
20
40
$150
$ 50
20
40
$110
137
bre17879_ch03.qxd
9/16/03
9:23 AM
138
Page 138
Chapter 3
Tom Frazier explained to the ABC team that the problem with this costing approach
is that it relies entirely on labor time in assigning overhead cost to products and does not
consider the impact of other factorssuch as setups and testingon the overhead costs
of the company. Since these other factors are being ignored and the two products require
equal amounts of labor time, they are assigned equal amounts of overhead cost.
Tom explained that while this method of computing costs is fast and simple, it is accurate only in those situations where other factors affecting overhead costs are not significant. Tom stated that he believed these other factors are significant in the case of Comtek
Sound, Inc., and he was anxious for the team to analyze the various activities of the company to see what impact they have on costs.
Concept 32
The ABC team then analyzed Comtek Sound, Inc.s operations and identified eight major
activities to be included in the new activity-based costing system. (These eight activities
are identical to those illustrated earlier in Exhibit 33.) Cost and other data relating to the
activities are presented in Exhibit 34.
As shown in the Basic Data at the top of Exhibit 34, the ABC team estimated the
amount of overhead cost for each activity cost pool, along with the expected amount of
activity for the current year. The machine setups activity cost pool, for example, was assigned $1,600,000 in overhead cost. The company expects to complete 4,000 setups during the year, of which 3,000 will be for DVD units and 1,000 will be for CD units. Data
for other activities are also shown in the exhibit.
The ABC team then computed an activity rate for each activity. (See the middle panel
in Exhibit 34.) The rate for machine setups, for example, was computed by dividing the
total estimated overhead cost in the activity cost pool, $1,600,000, by the expected
amount of activity, 4,000 setups. The result was the activity rate of $400 per setup. This
process was repeated for each of the other activities in the activity-based costing system.
Once the activity rates were determined, it was then an easy matter to compute the overhead cost that would be allocated to each product. (See the bottom panel of Exhibit 34.)
For example, the amount of machine setup cost allocated to DVD units was determined
by multiplying the activity rate of $400 per setup by the 3,000 expected setups for DVD
units during the year. This yielded a total of $1,200,000 in machine setup costs to be assigned to the DVD units.
Note from the exhibit that the use of an activity approach has resulted in $93.20 in
overhead cost being assigned to each DVD unit and $26.70 to each CD unit. The ABC
team then used these amounts to determine unit product costs under activity-based costing, as presented in the table below. For comparison, the table also shows the unit costs
derived earlier when direct labor was used as the base for assigning overhead costs to the
products.
Activity-Based
Costing
Direct materials . . . . . . . . . . .
Direct labor . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Manufacturing overhead . . . . .
Unit product cost . . . . . . . . . .
Direct-Labor
Based Costing
DVD Units
CD Units
DVD Units
CD Units
$ 90.00
20.00
93.20
$203.20
$50.00
20.00
26.70
$96.70
$ 90.00
20.00
40.00
$150.00
$ 50.00
20.00
40.00
$110.00
bre17879_ch03.qxd
9/16/03
9:23 AM
Page 139
139
Estimated
Overhead
Cost
Expected Activity
Total
DVD Units
CD Units
500,000
1,000,000
4,000
1,200
20,000
5,000
700
1,000,000
100,000
300,000
3,000
400
16,000
1,800
400
300,000
400,000
700,000
1,000
800
4,000
3,200
300
700,000
Activities
(a)
Estimated
Overhead
Cost
Labor related . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Machine related . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Machine setups . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Production orders . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Product testing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Material receipts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Parts administration. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
General factory . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
$800,000
$2,100,000
$1,600,000
$450,000
$1,700,000
$1,000,000
$350,000
$2,000,000
(b)
Total
Expected
Activity
(a) (b)
Activity
Rate
500,000 DLHs
1,000,000 MHs
4,000 setups
1,200 orders
20,000 tests
5,000 receipts
700 part types
1,000,000 MHs
Expected
Activity
100,000
300,000
3,000
400
16,000
1,800
400
300,000
CD Units
Amount
$ 160,000
630,000
1,200,000
150,000
1,360,000
360,000
200,000
600,000
$4,660,000
Expected
Activity
400,000
700,000
1,000
800
4,000
3,200
300
700,000
Amount
$ 640,000
1,470,000
400,000
300,000
340,000
640,000
150,000
1,400,000
$5,340,000
50,000
200,000
$93.20
$26.70
The ABC team members were shocked by their findings, which Tom Frazier summarized
as follows in the teams report:
In the past, the company has been charging $40.00 in overhead cost to a unit of either product, whereas it should have been charging $93.20 in overhead cost to each
DVD unit and only $26.70 to each CD unit. Thus, as a result of using direct labor as
bre17879_ch03.qxd
9/16/03
9:23 AM
140
Page 140
Chapter 3
the base for overhead costing, unit product costs had been badly distorted. The
company may even have been suffering a loss on the DVD units without knowing it
because the cost of these units has been so vastly understated. Through activitybased costing, we have been able to better identify the overhead costs of each product and thus derive more accurate cost data.
The pattern of cost distortion shown by the ABC teams findings is quite common.
Such distortion can happen in any company that relies on direct labor-hours or machinehours in assigning overhead cost to products and ignores other significant factors affecting overhead cost incurrence.
MANAGERIAL
ACCOUNTING
IN ACTION
Wrap-Up
comtek
SOUND, INC.
The ABC team presented the results of its work in a meeting attended by all of the top
managers of Comtek Sound including the president, Sarah Kastler; the production manager, Frank Hines; the marketing manager, Nicole Sermone; and the accounting manager,
Tom Frazier. After the formal presentation by the ABC team, the following discussion
took place:
Sarah: I would like to personally thank the ABC team for all the work they have
done. I am now beginning to wonder about some of the decisions we have made in
the past using our old cost accounting system.
Tom: I hope I dont have to remind anyone that I have been warning people about this
problem for quite some time.
Sarah: No, you dont have to remind us, Tom. I guess we just didnt understand the
problem before.
Nicole: Its obvious from this activity-based costing information that we had everything backwards. We thought the competition was pricing below cost on the CD
units, but in fact we were overcharging for these units because our costs were overstated. And we thought the competition was overpricing DVD units, but in fact our
prices were way too low because our costs for these units were understated. Ill bet
the competition has really been laughing behind our backs!
Sarah: You can bet they wont be laughing when they see our next bids.
When a company implements activity-based costing, overhead cost often shifts from
high-volume products to low-volume products, with a higher unit product cost resulting
for the low-volume products. We saw this happen in the example above, where overhead
cost was shifted to the DVD unitsthe low-volume productand their unit product cost
increased from $150.00 to $203.20 per unit. This results from the existence of batch-level
and product-level costs. When these costs are spread across lower volumes, higher average costs result. For example, consider the cost of issuing production orders, which is a
batch activity. As shown in Exhibit 34, the average cost to Comtek Sound to issue a single production order is $375. This cost is assigned to a production order regardless of how
many units are to be processed under that product order. The key here is to realize that
fewer DVD units (the low-volume product) are processed per production order than CD
units:
DVD Units
CD Units
50,000
400
125
200,000
800
250
If the $375 cost to issue a production order is spread over the number of units processed
per order, we get the following average cost per unit:
bre17879_ch03.qxd
9/16/03
9:23 AM
Page 141
DVD Units
Cost to issue a production order (a) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Number of units processed per production order (above) (b) . . .
Production order cost per unit (a) (b). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
$375
125
$3.00
141
CD Units
$375
250
$1.50
Thus, the production order cost for a DVD unit (the low-volume product) is $3, which is
double the $1.50 cost for a CD unit.
Product-level costssuch as parts administrationhave a similar impact. In a conventional costing system, these costs are spread more or less uniformly across all units
that are produced. In an activity-based costing system, these costs are assigned more appropriately to products. Since product-level costs are fixed with respect to the number of
units that are processed, the average cost per unit of something like parts administration
will be higher for low-volume products than for high-volume products.
Dan Swenson, The Benefits of Activity-Based Cost Management to the Manufacturing Industry,
Journal of Management Accounting Research 7 (Fall 1995), pp. 167180.
3
Kambiz Foroohar, Rx: software, Forbes, April 7, 1997, p. 114.
IN BUSINESS
bre17879_ch03.qxd
9/16/03
9:23 AM
IN BUSINESS
(continued)
Activity
Processing accounts
receivable
Processing accounts
payable
Processing payroll
checks
Managing customer
credit
Page 142
used: (1) a sample of Fortune 100 companies, which are the largest 100 companies in the
United States and (2) world class companies that had been identified by a consultant as
having the best accounting practices in the world. These comparisons appear below:
Activity Measure
Number of invoices
processed
Number of invoices
processed
Number of checks
processed
Number of customer
accounts
Qwest Activity
Rate
Fortune 100
Benchmark
World Class
Benchmark
It is clear from this analysis that Qwest does a good job of processing accounts receivables. Its average cost per invoice is $3.80, whereas the cost in other companies that
are considered world class is even higher$4.60 per invoice. On the other hand, the cost
of processing payroll checks is significantly higher at Qwest than at benchmark companies. The cost per payroll check at Qwest is $7.30 versus $5.00 at Fortune 100 companies
and $1.72 at world-class companies. This suggests that it may be possible to wring waste
out of this activity. As a consequence, the payroll processing activity may be targeted for
a TQM effort or for process reengineering.
Source: Steve Coburn, Hugh Grove, and Cynthia Fukami, Benchmarking with ABCM, Management Accounting, January 1995, pp. 5660. Reprinted with permission from the IMA, Montvale, NJ, USA, www.imanet.org.
142
Activity-based costing improves the accuracy of product costs in three ways. First,
activity-based costing usually increases the number of cost pools used to accumulate
overhead costs. Rather than accumulating all overhead costs in a single, plantwide pool,
or accumulating them in departmental pools, the company accumulates costs for each major activity. Second, the activity cost pools are more homogeneous than departmental cost
pools. In principle, all of the costs in an activity cost pool pertain to a single activity. In
contrast, departmental cost pools contain the costs of many different activities carried out
in the department. Third, activity-based costing changes the bases used to assign overhead
costs to products. Rather than assign costs on the basis of direct labor or some other measure of volume, managers assign costs on the basis of the activities that cause overhead
costs.
In a traditional costing system, overhead is typically applied to products on the basis
of direct labor-hours. As a consequence, it may appear that overhead costs are caused by
direct labor-hours. In activity-based costing, managers see that batch setups, engineering
change orders, and other activities cause overhead costs rather than just direct labor. Better understanding can lead to better decisions and better control over overhead costs.
bre17879_ch03.qxd
9/16/03
9:23 AM
Page 143
143
Finally, activity-based costing can be used as part of a program to improve the overall
operations in an organization. It can provide valuable clues concerning the activities that
could benefit most from TQM, process reengineering, and other improvement initiatives.
Products differ substantially in volume, lot size, and in the activities they require.
Conditions have changed substantially since the existing cost system was established.
Overhead costs are high and increasing and no one seems to understand why.
Management does not trust the existing cost system and ignores cost data from the
system when making decisions.
Eric Noreen, Conditions under Which Activity-Based Cost Systems Provide Relevant Costs, Journal of Management Accounting Research, Fall 1991, pp. 159168.
5
Eric Noreen and Naomi Soderstrom, The Accuracy of Proportional Cost Models: Evidence from
Hospital Service Departments, Review of Accounting Studies 2, 1997; and Eric Noreen and Naomi
Soderstrom, Are Overhead Costs Proportional to Activity? Evidence from Hospital Service Departments, Journal of Accounting and Economics, January 1994, pp. 253278.
Bakery Owner
You are the owner of a bakery that makes a complete line of specialty breads, pastries,
cakes, and pies for the retail and wholesale markets. A summer intern has just completed
YOU
DECIDE
bre17879_ch03.qxd
9/16/03
9:23 AM
YOU
DECIDE
(continued)
Page 144
an activity-based costing study that concluded, among other things, that one of your
largest recurring jobs is losing money. A local luxury hotel orders the same assortment of
desserts every week for its Sunday brunch buffet for a fixed price of $975 per week. The
hotel is quite happy with the quality of the desserts the bakery has been providing, but it
would seek bids from other local bakeries if the price were increased.
The activity-based costing study conducted by the intern revealed that the cost to the
bakery of providing these desserts is $1,034 per week, resulting in an apparent loss of $59
per week or over $3,000 per year. Scrutinizing the interns report, you find that the weekly
cost of $1,034 includes facility-level costs of $329. These facility-level costs include portions of the rent on the bakerys building, your salary, depreciation on the office personal
computer, and so on. The facility-level costs were arbitrarily allocated to the Sunday
brunch job on the basis of the direct labor-hours in the bakery required to produce the
desserts.
Should you demand an increase in price from the luxury hotel for the Sunday brunch
desserts to at least $1,034? If an increase is not forthcoming, should you withdraw from
the agreement and discontinue providing the desserts?
Modifying the ABC Model The discussion in this chapter has assumed that the
primary purpose of the activity-based costing system is to provide more accurate product
costs for external reports. If the product costs are to be used by managers for internal decisions, some modifications should be made. For example, for decision-making purposes,
the distinction between manufacturing costs on the one hand and selling and general administrative expenses on the other hand is unimportant. Managers need to know what
costs a product causes, and it doesnt matter whether the costs are manufacturing costs or
selling and general administrative expenses. Consequently, for decision-making purposes,
some selling and general administrative expenses should be assigned to products as well
as manufacturing costs. Moreover, as mentioned above, facility-level costs should be removed from product costs when making decisions. Nevertheless, the techniques covered
in this chapter provide a good basis for understanding the mechanics of activity-based
costing. For a more complete coverage of the use of activity-based costing in decisions,
see more advanced texts.6
IN BUSINESS
144
bre17879_ch03.qxd
9/16/03
9:23 AM
Page 145
145
provides. Activity-based costing has been implemented in a wide variety of service industries including railroads, hospitals, banks, and data services companies.
IN BUSINESS
Robin Cooper and Robert S. Kaplan report that: The U.S. Veterans Affairs Department has
identified the cost of the 10 activities performed to process death benefits and uses this information to monitor and improve the underlying cost structure for performing this function.
The U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) uses its ABC cost information to set
fees for all its outputs, including administering citizenship exams and issuing permanent
work permits (green cards). The City of Indianapolis made ABC a cornerstone of its privatization efforts and its drive to provide more services at lower cost to citizens. As the
mayor of the city, Stephen Goldsmith, explained: Introducing competition and privatization to government services requires real cost information. You cant compete out if you are
using fake money. When city workers became aware of the costs of carrying out activities
such as filling potholes in streets and were faced with the possible transfer of such tasks to
the private sector, they became highly motivated to reduce costs. Instead of going out to fill
potholes with a five- or six-man repair crew, plus a supervisor, they started doing the same
job with a three- or four-man crew without a supervisor. The number of politically appointed supervisors, which had stood at 36 for 75 employees, was slashed by half.
Source: Robert S. Kaplan and Robin Cooper, Cost & Effect: Using Integrated Cost Systems to
Drive Profitability and Performance, Harvard Business School Press, Boston, 1998, pp. 245250.
2. Which of the following statements is false? (You may select more than one answer.)
a. Activity-based costing systems usually shift costs from low-volume products to
high-volume products.
b. Benchmarking can be used to identify activities with the greatest potential for
improvement.
c. Activity-based costing is most valuable to companies that manufacture products
that are similar in terms of their volume of production, lot size, and complexity.
d. Activity-based costing systems are based on the assumption that the costs included in each activity cost pool are strictly proportional to the cost pools activity measure.
DECISION
MAKER
CONCEPT
CHECK
bre17879_ch03.qxd
9/16/03
9:23 AM
Page 146
3. A company manufactures and sells 10,000 units of A and 5,000 units of B. The average batch sizes for A and B are 1,000 and 250 units, respectively. Which of the
following statements is false? (You may select more than one answer.)
a. A costing system that relies solely on a unit-level activity measure to assign all
manufacturing overhead to products will overcost product A.
b. A costing system that relies solely on a unit-level activity measure to assign
manufacturing overhead to products will overcost product B.
c. An activity-based costing system would assign 67 percent of the batch-level
overhead costs to product B.
d. An activity-based costing system would assign 67 percent of the unit-level
overhead costs to product A.
CONCEPT
CHECK
(continued)
In Chapter 2, we discussed the flow of costs in a job-order costing system. The flow of costs
through Raw Materials, Work in Process, and other accounts is the same under activitybased costing. The only difference in activity-based costing is that more than one predetermined overhead rate is used to apply overhead costs to products. Our purpose in this section
is to provide a detailed example of cost flows in an activity-based costing system.
Basic Data Sarvik Company uses activity-based costing for its external financial reports. The company has five activity cost pools, which are listed below along with relevant data for the coming year.
Activity
Cost Pool
Activity Measure
Estimated
Overhead Cost
Expected Activity
Machine related . . . .
Purchase orders . . . .
Machine setups . . . . .
Product testing . . . . .
General factory. . . . .
Machine-hours
Number of orders
Number of setups
Number of tests
Direct labor-hours
$175,000
$63,000
$92,000
$160,000
$300,000
5,000 MHs
700 orders
460 setups
200 tests
25,000 DLHs
At the beginning of the year, the company had inventory balances as follows:
Raw materials . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Work in process . . . . . . . . . . . .
Finished goods . . . . . . . . . . . . .
$3,000
$4,000
$0
Selected transactions recorded by the company during the year are given below:
146
bre17879_ch03.qxd
9/16/03
9:23 AM
Page 147
147
Actual Activity
Machine related . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Purchase orders . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Machine setups . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Product testing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
General factory. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
4,600 MHs
800 orders
500 setups
190 tests
23,000 DLHs
Tracking the Flow of Costs The predetermined overhead rates (i.e., activity rates)
for the activity cost pools would be computed as follows:
(a)
Estimated
Overhead
Cost
(b)
Total
Expected
Activity
(a) (b)
Activity
Rate
$175,000
$63,000
$92,000
$160,000
$300,000
5,000 machine-hours
700 orders
460 setups
200 tests
25,000 direct labor-hours
The following journal entries would be used to record transactions (a) through (g) above:
a. Raw Materials. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Accounts Payable . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
b. Work in Process . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Manufacturing Overhead . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Raw Materials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
c. Work in Process . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Manufacturing Overhead . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Salaries and Wages Payable . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
d. Manufacturing Overhead . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Accumulated Depreciation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
e. Manufacturing Overhead . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Accounts Payable . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
915,000
915,000
810,000
90,000
900,000
95,000
275,000
370,000
180,000
180,000
230,000
230,000
Recall from Chapter 2 the formula for computing applied overhead cost, which is:
Predetermined overhead rate Actual activity Applied overhead cost
In activity-based costing, this formula is applied for each activity cost pool using its own
predetermined overhead rate (i.e., activity rate). The computations are as follows:
Activities
(1)
Activity
Rate
(2)
Actual
Activity
4,600 MHs
800 orders
500 setups
190 tests
23,000 DLHs
(1) (2)
Applied
Overhead
Cost
$161,000
72,000
100,000
152,000
276,000
$761,000
bre17879_ch03.qxd
9/16/03
9:23 AM
Page 148
148
Chapter 3
By totaling these five applied overhead cost figures, we find that the company applied
$761,000 in overhead cost to products during the year. The following entry would be used
to record this application of overhead cost:
f. Work in Process . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Manufacturing Overhead . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
761,000
761,000
Finally, the following journal entry would be used to record the completion of work in
process as described in transaction (g) above:
g. Finished Goods . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Work in Process . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
1,650,000
1,650,000
3,000
915,000
18,000
Work in Process
900,000
(b)
Accumulated Depreciation
180,000
Bal.
(b)
(c)
(f)
Bal.
4,000
810,000
95,000
761,000
20,000
1,650,000
Finished Goods
(g)
Accounts Payable
(d)
915,000
230,000
Bal.
(g)
0
1,650,000
370,000
(c)
Manufacturing Overhead
(b)
(c)
(d)
(e)
Bal.
90,000
275,000
180,000
230,000
775,000
14,000
761,000
(f)
761,000
SUMMARY
LO1 Understand the basic approach in activity-based costing and how it differs from
conventional costing.
Activity-based costing was developed as a way of more accurately assigning overhead to products.
Activity-based costing differs from conventional costing as described in Chapter 2 in two major ways.
First, in activity-based costing, each major activity that consumes overhead resources has its own cost pool
and its own activity rate, whereas in Chapter 2 there was only a single overhead cost pool and a single predetermined overhead rate. Second, the allocation bases (or activity measures) in activity-based costing are
bre17879_ch03.qxd
9/16/03
9:23 AM
Page 149
149
diverse. They may include machine setups, purchase orders, engineering change orders, and so on, in addition to direct labor-hours or machine-hours. Nevertheless, within each activity cost pool, the mechanics
of computing overhead rates and of applying overhead to products are the same as described in Chapter 2.
However, the increase in the number of cost pools and the use of better measures of activity generally result in more accurate product costs.
LO2 Compute activity rates for an activity-based costing system.
Each activity in an activity-based costing system has its own cost pool and its own measure of activity. The
activity rate for a particular activity is computed by dividing the total cost in the activitys cost pool by the
total amount of activity.
LO3 Compute product costs using activity-based costing.
Product costs in activity-based costing, as in conventional costing systems, consist of direct materials, direct labor, and overhead. In both systems, overhead is applied to products using predetermined overhead
rates. In the case of an activity-based costing system, each activity has its own predetermined overhead rate
(i.e., activity rate). The activities required by a product are multiplied by their respective activity rates to
determine the amount of overhead that is applied to the product.
LO4 Contrast the product costs computed under activity-based costing and conventional costing
methods.
Under conventional costing methods, overhead costs are allocated to products on the basis of some measure of volume such as direct labor-hours or machine-hours. This results in most of the overhead cost being allocated to high-volume products. In contrast, under activity-based costing, some overhead costs are
allocated on the basis of batch-level or product-level activities. This change in allocation bases results in
shifting overhead costs from the high-volume products to low-volume products. Accordingly, product costs
for high-volume products are commonly lower under activity-based costing than under conventional costing methods, and product costs for low-volume products are higher.
LO5 Record the flow of costs in an activity-based costing system.
The journal entries and general flow of costs in an activity-based costing system are the same as they are
in a conventional costing system. The only difference is the use of more than one predetermined overhead
rate (i.e., activity rate) to apply overhead to products.
The bakery really isnt losing money on the weekly order of desserts from the luxury hotel. By definition,
facility-level costs are not affected by individual products and jobsthese costs would continue unchanged
even if the weekly order were dropped. Recalling the discussion in Chapter 1 concerning decision making,
only those costs and benefits that differ between alternatives in a decision are relevant. Since the facilitylevel costs would be the same whether the dessert order is kept or dropped, they are not relevant in this decision and should be ignored. Hence, the real cost of the job is $705 ($1,034 $329), which reveals that
the job actually yields a weekly profit of $270 ($975 $705) rather than a loss.
No, the bakery owner should not press for a price increaseparticularly if that would result in the hotel seeking bids from competitors. And no, the bakery owner certainly should not withdraw from the agreement to provide the desserts.
Legal Firm Business Manager (p. 145)
The recent problems the firm has been facing can probably be traced to its simplified system for billing for
work. Rather than carefully tracing costs to clients, costs are arbitrarily allocated to clients on the basis of
attorney hours. Large, demanding clients require much more overhead resources than smaller clients, but
the costs of these overhead resources are arbitrarily allocated to all clients on the basis of attorney hours.
This results in shifting overhead costs to the smaller, less demanding clients and increasing their charges.
It also results in undercharging larger, more demanding clients. Consequently, the firm has been losing
smaller clients to competitors and has been attracting larger, demanding clients. Unfortunately, this change
in the mix of clients leads to much higher costs and reduced profits.
The situation can be improved by using activity-based costing to trace more costs directly to clients.
This should result in shifting costs from the smaller, less demanding clients to the larger, more demanding
clients that cause those costs. Smaller clients will face lower charges and hence will be more likely to stay
with the firm. Larger, more demanding clients will face higher charges that will fully cover the costs they
impose on the firm.
bre17879_ch03.qxd
9/16/03
150
9:23 AM
Page 150
Chapter 3
1. Choice d. Product-level costs are unrelated to the amount of a product that is made.
2. Choices a and c. Activity-based costing systems usually shift costs from high-volume products to
low-volume products. Activity-based costing is most valuable for companies with highly diverse
products rather than with similar products.
3. Choice b. Relying solely on a unit-level activity measure will result in 33% of the total overhead
costs being assigned to product B. While product B should be assigned 33% of the unit-level overhead costs, it should be assigned 67% of the batch-level overhead costs.
Total Hours
Deluxe deck chair: 2,000 units 5 DLHs per unit . . . . . . . . . . .
Tourist deck chair: 10,000 units 4 DLHs per unit . . . . . . . . . .
Total direct labor-hours . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
10,000
40,000
50,000
Costs for materials and labor for one unit of each product are given below:
Direct materials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Direct labor (at $12 per DLH). . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Deluxe
Tourist
$25
$60
$17
$48
Manufacturing overhead costs total $800,000 each year. The breakdown of these costs among the companys six activity cost pools is given below. The activity measures are shown in parentheses.
Estimated
Overhead
Cost
$ 80,000
150,000
160,000
70,000
90,000
250,000
$800,000
Expected Activity
Total
Deluxe
Tourist
50,000
5,000
80
400
750
40,000
10,000
3,000
50
100
150
12,000
40,000
2,000
30
300
600
28,000
Required:
bre17879_ch03.qxd
9/16/03
9:23 AM
Page 151
c.
151
Determine the unit product cost of each product and compare this cost to the cost computed in
(2)(b) above.
1.
Type of Activity
Labor related . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Machine setups . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Parts administration. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Production orders . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Material receipts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
General factory . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Unit level
Batch level
Product level
Batch level
Batch level
Facility level
2. a.
Predetermined
Estimated total manufacturing overhead
$800,000
overhead rate Estimated total direct labor-hours (DLHs) 50,000 DLHs $16 per DLH
b.
Direct materials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Direct labor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Manufacturing overhead applied:
Deluxe: 5 DLHs $16 per DLH . . . . . . . . . .
Tourist: 4 DLHs $16 per DLH. . . . . . . . . . .
Unit product cost. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Deluxe
Tourist
$ 25
60
$ 17
48
80
$165
64
$129
3. a.
Activities
Labor related . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Machine setups . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Parts administration. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Production orders . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Material receipts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
General factory . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
(a)
Estimated
Overhead
Cost
(b)
Total
Expected
Activity
$80,000
$150,000
$160,000
$70,000
$90,000
$250,000
(a) (b)
Activity
Rate
50,000 DLHs
5,000 setups
80 parts
400 orders
750 receipts
40,000 MHs
b.
Deluxe
Activities and Activity Rates
Labor related, at $1.60 per DLH. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Machine setups, at $30 per setup . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Parts administration, at $2,000 per part . . . . . . . . . .
Production orders, at $175 per order . . . . . . . . . . .
Material receipts, at $120 per receipt . . . . . . . . . . . .
General factory, at $6.25 per MH . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Total overhead cost assigned (a) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Expected
Activity
10,000
3,000
50
100
150
12,000
Tourist
Amount
$ 16,000
90,000
100,000
17,500
18,000
75,000
$316,500
Expected
Activity
40,000
2,000
30
300
600
28,000
Amount
$ 64,000
60,000
60,000
52,500
72,000
175,000
$483,500
2,000
10,000
$158.25
$48.35
bre17879_ch03.qxd
9/16/03
152
9:23 AM
Page 152
Chapter 3
c.
Direct materials. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Direct labor. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Manufacturing overhead (see above) . . . . . . .
Unit product cost . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Deluxe
Tourist
$ 25.00
60.00
158.25
$243.25
$ 17.00
48.00
48.35
$113.35
Under activity-based costing, the unit product cost of the Deluxe deck chair is much greater than the cost
computed in (2)(b) above, and the unit product cost of the Tourist deck chair is much less. Using volume
(direct labor-hours) in (2)(b) as a basis for applying overhead cost to products has resulted in too little overhead cost being applied to the Deluxe deck chair (the low-volume product) and too much overhead cost being applied to the Tourist deck chair (the high-volume product).
GLOSSARY
Activity An event that causes the consumption of overhead resources in an organization. (p. 130)
Activity-based costing (ABC) A two-stage costing method in which overhead costs are assigned to
products on the basis of the activities they require. (p. 130)
Activity-based management A management approach that focuses on managing activities as a way of
eliminating waste and reducing delays and defects. (p. 141)
Activity cost pool A bucket in which costs are accumulated that relate to a single activity measure in
the activity-based costing system. (p. 130)
Activity measure An allocation base in an activity-based costing system; ideally, a measure of whatever causes the costs in an activity cost pool. (p. 130)
Activity rate A predetermined overhead rate in activity-based costing. Each activity cost pool has its
own activity rate which is used to apply overhead to products and services. (p. 130)
Batch-level activities Activities that are performed each time a batch of goods is handled or processed,
regardless of how many units are in a batch. The amount of resources consumed depends on the
number of batches run rather than on the number of units in the batch. (p. 133)
Benchmarking A systematic approach to identifying the activities with the greatest room for improvement. It is based on comparing the performance in an organization with the performance of other,
similar organizations known for their outstanding performance. (p. 141)
Facility-level activities Activities that relate to overall production and therefore cant be traced to specific products. Costs associated with these activities pertain to a plants general manufacturing
process. (p. 133)
Product-level activities Activities that relate to specific products that must be carried out regardless of
how many units are produced and sold or batches run. (p. 133)
Unit-level activities Activities that arise as a result of the total volume of goods and services that are
produced, and that are performed each time a unit is produced. (p. 133)
QUESTIONS
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
What are the three common approaches for assigning overhead costs to products?
Why is activity-based costing growing in popularity?
Why do departmental overhead rates sometimes result in inaccurate product costs?
What are the four hierarchical levels of activity discussed in the chapter?
Why is activity-based costing described as a two-stage costing method?
Why do overhead costs often shift from high-volume products to low-volume products when a
company switches from a conventional costing method to activity-based costing?
What are the three major ways in which activity-based costing improves the accuracy of product
costs?
What are the major limitations of activity-based costing?
bre17879_ch03.qxd
9/16/03
9:23 AM
Page 153
Brief Exercises
153
BRIEF EXERCISES
BRIEF EXERCISE 31 ABC Cost Hierarchy (LO1)
The following activities occur at Greenwich Corporation, a company that manufactures a variety of products.
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
f.
g.
h.
Required:
Classify each of the activities above as either a unit-level, batch-level, product-level, or facility-level activity.
BRIEF EXERCISE 32 Compute Activity Rates (LO2)
Estimated
Overhead Cost
Expected
Activity
$52,000
$15,000
$42,000
$18,000
$48,000
$75,000
$108,800
Required:
(LO3)
Larner Corporation is a diversified manufacturer of industrial goods. The companys activity-based costing system has the following six activity cost pools and activity rates:
Activity Rates
Labor related . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
$7.00 per direct labor-hour
Machine related . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
$3.00 per machine-hour
Machine setups. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $40.00 per setup
Production orders . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $160.00 per order
Shipments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $120.00 per shipment
General factory . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
$4.00 per direct labor-hour
Cost and activity data have been supplied for the following products:
J78
Direct materials cost per unit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $6.50
Direct labor cost per unit. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $3.75
Number of units produced per year . . . . . . . . . . . 4,000
B52
$31.00
$6.00
100
bre17879_ch03.qxd
154
9/16/03
9:23 AM
Page 154
Chapter 3
B52
1,000
3,200
5
5
10
40
30
1
1
1
Required:
Compute the unit product cost of each of the products listed above.
BRIEF EXERCISE 34
(LO4)
Pacifica Industrial Products Corporation makes two products, Product H and Product L. Product H is expected to sell 40,000 units next year and Product L is expected to sell 8,000 units. A unit of either product
requires 0.4 direct labor-hours.
The companys total manufacturing overhead for the year is expected to be $1,632,000.
Required:
1. The company currently applies manufacturing overhead to products using direct labor-hours as the
allocation base. If this method is followed, how much overhead cost would be applied to each product? Compute both the overhead cost per unit and the total amount of overhead cost that would be
applied to each product. (In other words, how much overhead cost is applied to a unit of Product H?
Product L? How much overhead cost is applied in total to all the units of Product H? Product L?)
2. Management is considering an activity-based costing system and would like to know what impact
this change might have on product costs. For purposes of discussion, it has been suggested that all of
the manufacturing overhead be treated as a product-level cost. The total manufacturing overhead
would be divided in half between the two products, with $816,000 assigned to Product H and
$816,000 assigned to Product L.
If this suggestion is followed, how much overhead cost per unit would be applied to each product?
3. Explain the impact on unit product costs of the switch in costing systems.
BRIEF EXERCISE 35
Masters Corporation implemented activity-based costing several years ago and uses it for its external financial reports. The company has four activity cost pools, which are listed below.
Activity Rate
Machine related. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Purchase orders . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Machine setups . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
General factory . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
$18 per MH
$78 per order
$63 per setup
$14 per DLH
At the beginning of the year, the company had inventory balances as follows:
Raw materials . . . . . . . . . . .
Work in process . . . . . . . . .
Finished goods . . . . . . . . . .
$25,000
$44,000
$86,000
Selected transactions recorded by the company during the year are given below:
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
f.
bre17879_ch03.qxd
9/16/03
9:23 AM
Page 155
Exercises
Actual Activity
Machine related . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Purchase orders. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Machine setups . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
General factory . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
g.
155
15,000 MHs
900 orders
1,300 setups
12,000 DLHs
Completed products were transferred to the companys finished goods warehouse. According to the
companys costing system, these products cost $1,830,000.
Required:
EXERCISES
EXERCISE 36 Cost Hierarchy and Activity Measures
(LO1)
Listed below are various activities that you have observed at Companhia de Textils, S.A., a manufacturing
company located in Brazil. The company makes a variety of products in its plant outside Sao Paulo.
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
f.
g.
h.
i.
Required:
Kunkel Company makes two products and uses a conventional costing system in which a single plantwide
predetermined overhead rate is computed based on direct labor-hours. Data for the two products for the upcoming year follow:
Mercon
Wurcon
$10.00
$3.00
0.20
10,000
$8.00
$3.75
0.25
40,000
1. The companys manufacturing overhead costs for the year are expected to be $336,000. Using the
companys conventional costing system, compute the unit product costs for the two products.
2. Management is considering an activity-based costing system in which half of the overhead would
continue to be allocated on the basis of direct labor-hours and half would be allocated on the basis of
engineering design time. This time is expected to be distributed as follows during the upcoming year:
bre17879_ch03.qxd
156
9/16/03
9:23 AM
Page 156
Chapter 3
Mercon
Wurcon
Total
4,000
4,000
8,000
Compute the unit product costs for the two products using the proposed ABC system.
3. Explain why the product costs differ between the two systems.
EXERCISE 38
(LO2, LO5)
Sultan Company uses activity-based costing to determine product costs for external financial reports. Some
of the entries have been completed to the Manufacturing Overhead account for the current year, as shown
by entry (a) below:
Manufacturing Overhead
(a)
530,000
Required:
Activity
Measure
Expected
Overhead Cost
Direct labor-hours
Number of orders
Number of part types
Number of boards
Machine-hours
$156,000
$11,000
$80,000
$90,000
$180,000
Expected
Activity
26,000 DLHs
220 orders
100 part types
2,000 boards
20,000 MHs
Compute the activity rate (i.e., predetermined overhead rate) for each of the activity cost pools.
3. During the year, actual activity was recorded as follows:
Actual Activity
(LO3)
Refer to the data in Exercise 38 for Sultan Company. The activities during the year were distributed across
the companys four products as follows:
Actual
Activity
Product
A
Product
B
Product
C
Product
D
6,000
60
30
500
3,000
10,000
30
25
900
8,000
4,000
20
40
400
5,000
5,000
90
15
0
6,000
Required:
Compute the amount of overhead cost applied to each product during the year.
bre17879_ch03.qxd
9/16/03
9:23 AM
Page 157
Problems
EXERCISE 310
157
(LO2, LO3)
Performance Products Corporation makes two products, titanium Rims and Posts. Data regarding the two
products follow:
Rims. . . . . . . . . . .
Posts . . . . . . . . . .
Direct
Labor-Hours
per Unit
Annual
Production
0.40
0.20
20,000 units
80,000 units
Rims require $17 in direct materials per unit, and Posts require $10.
The direct labor wage rate is $16 per hour.
Rims are more complex to manufacture than Posts, and they require special equipment.
The ABC system has the following activity cost pools:
Activity Measure
Estimated
Overhead
Cost
$ 21,600
180,000
288,000
$489,600
Activity
Total
Rims
Posts
180
4,000
24,000
100
4,000
8,000
80
0
16,000
Required:
1. Compute the activity rate (i.e., predetermined overhead rate) for each activity cost pool.
2. Determine the unit product cost of each product.
PROBLEMS
PROBLEM 311
Mitchell Corporation manufactures a variety of products in a single facility. Consultants hired by the company to do an activity-based costing analysis have identified the following activities carried out in the
company on a routine basis:
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
f.
g.
h.
i.
j.
k.
l.
Required:
1. Classify each of the above activities as a unit-level, batch-level, product-level, or facility-level activity.
2. For each of the above activities, suggest an activity measure that could be used to allocate its costs to
products.
PROBLEM 312
Marine, Inc., manufactures a product that is available in both a flexible and a rigid model. The company
has made the rigid model for years; the flexible model was introduced several years ago to tap a new segment of the market. Since introduction of the flexible model, the companys profits have steadily declined,
CHECK FIGURE
(3b) Rigid: $131.70 per unit
bre17879_ch03.qxd
9/16/03
9:23 AM
158
Page 158
Chapter 3
and management has become concerned about the accuracy of its costing system. Sales of the flexible
model have been increasing rapidly.
Overhead is applied to products on the basis of direct labor-hours. At the beginning of the current year,
management estimated that $600,000 in overhead costs would be incurred and the company would produce
and sell 1,000 units of the flexible model and 10,000 units of the rigid model. The flexible model requires
2.0 hours of direct labor time per unit, and the rigid model requires 1.0 hours. Materials and labor costs per
unit are given below:
Flexible
Rigid
$110.00
$30.00
$80.00
$15.00
Required:
1. Compute the predetermined overhead rate using direct labor-hours as the basis for allocating overhead costs to products. Compute the unit product cost for one unit of each model.
2. An intern suggested that the company use activity-based costing to cost its products. A team was
formed to investigate this idea. It came back with the recommendation that four activity cost pools
be used. These cost pools and their associated activities are listed below:
Estimated
Overhead
Cost
$ 20,000
10,000
210,000
360,000
$600,000
Activity
Total
Flexible
Rigid
400
200
2,100
4,000
100
60
900
1,500
300
140
1,200
2,500
Compute the activity rate (i.e., predetermined overhead rate) for each of the activity cost pools.
3. Assume that actual activity is as expected for the year. Using activity-based costing, do the following:
a. Determine the total amount of overhead that would be applied to each model for the year.
b. Compute the unit product cost for one unit of each model.
4. Can you identify a possible explanation for the companys declining profits? If so, what is it?
CHECK FIGURE
(2d) Total overhead overapplied: $6,820
PROBLEM 313
Adria Company uses activity-based costing to determine product costs for external financial reports. At the
beginning of the year, management made the following estimates of cost and activity in the companys five
activity cost pools:
Activity
Measure
Estimated
Overhead
Cost
Direct labor-hours
Number of orders
Number of receipts
Number of relays
Machine-hours
$35,000
$4,000
$10,450
$7,000
$240,000
Expected
Activity
7,000 DLHs
2,000 orders
950 receipts
1,000 relays
40,000 MHs
Required:
1. Compute the activity rate (i.e., predetermined overhead rate) for each of the activity cost pools.
2. During the year, actual overhead cost and activity were recorded as follows:
Actual
Overhead Cost
$ 33,000
3,890
Actual
Activity
6,700 DLHs
1,900 orders
(continued)
bre17879_ch03.qxd
9/16/03
9:23 AM
Page 159
Problems
Actual
Overhead Cost
(concluded)
159
Actual
Activity
8,000
6,800
245,000
$296,690
700 receipts
930 relays
42,000 MHs
a.
Prepare a journal entry to record the incurrence of actual manufacturing overhead cost for the year
(credit Accounts Payable). Post the entry to the companys Manufacturing Overhead T-account.
b. Determine the amount of overhead cost applied to production during the year.
c. Prepare a journal entry to record the application of manufacturing overhead cost to work in
process for the year. Post the entry to the companys Manufacturing Overhead T-account.
d. Determine the amount of underapplied or overapplied manufacturing overhead for the year.
3. The actual activity for the year was distributed among the companys four products as follows:
Actual
Activity
Product
A
2,400
100
400
170
12,000
Product
B
Product
C
500
350
200
400
7,000
3,000
500
100
0
8,000
Product
D
800
950
0
360
15,000
PROBLEM 314
LO4)
(LO2, LO3,
Puget World, Inc., manufactures two models of television sets, the N 800 XL model and the N 500 model.
Data regarding the two products follow:
Annual
Production
Total Direct
Labor-Hours
3.0
1.0
3,000 units
12,000 units
9,000
12,000
21,000
Model N 800 XL requires $75 in direct materials per unit, and Model N 500 requires $25.
The direct labor wage rate is $18 per hour.
The company has always used direct labor-hours as the base for applying manufacturing overhead
cost to products.
Model N 800 XL is more complex to manufacture than Model N 500 and requires the use of special
equipment. Consequently, the company is considering the use of activity-based costing to apply
manufacturing overhead cost to products for external financial reports. Three activity cost pools
have been identified as follows:
Activity
Measure
Estimated
Overhead Cost
$ 360,000
165,000
1,260,000
$1,785,000
CHECK FIGURE
(2b) N 800 XL unit product
cost: $404.00
bre17879_ch03.qxd
9/16/03
9:23 AM
160
Page 160
Chapter 3
Expected Activity
Activity Measure
Model N
800 XL
Model N
500
Total
100
16,500
9,000
200
0
12,000
300
16,500
21,000
Number of setups . . . . . . . . . .
Machine-hours . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Direct labor-hours . . . . . . . . . .
Required:
1. Assume that the company continues to use direct labor-hours as the base for applying overhead cost
to products.
a. Compute the predetermined overhead rate.
b. Compute the unit product cost of each model.
2. Assume that the company decides to use activity-based costing to apply manufacturing overhead
cost to products.
a. Compute the predetermined overhead rate for each activity cost pool and determine the amount
of overhead cost that would be applied to each model using the activity-based costing system.
b. Compute the unit product cost of each model.
3. Explain why manufacturing overhead cost shifts from Model N 500 to Model N 800 XL under
activity-based costing.
CHECK FIGURE
(2d) Total overhead overapplied: $2,450
PROBLEM 315
Rusties Company uses activity-based costing to determine product costs for external financial reports. At
the beginning of the year, management made the following estimates of cost and activity in the companys
five activity cost pools:
Activity
Measure
Direct labor-hours
Number of orders
Number of tests
Number of templates
Machine-hours
Estimated
Overhead
Cost
Expected
Activity
$18,000
$1,050
$3,500
$700
$50,000
2,000 DLHs
525 orders
350 tests
28 templates
10,000 MHs
Required:
1. Compute the activity rate (i.e., predetermined overhead rate) for each of the activity cost pools.
2. During the year, actual overhead cost and activity were recorded as follows:
Actual
Overhead
Cost
$20,000
1,300
3,600
800
58,000
$83,700
Actual
Activity
2,200 DLHs
1,000 orders
360 tests
30 templates
12,000 MHs
Prepare a journal entry to record the incurrence of actual manufacturing overhead cost for
the year (credit Accounts Payable). Post the entry to the companys Manufacturing Overhead
T-account.
b. Determine the amount of overhead cost applied to production during the year.
c. Prepare a journal entry to record the application of manufacturing overhead cost to work in
process for the year. Post the entry to the companys Manufacturing Overhead T-account.
d. Determine the amount of underapplied or overapplied manufacturing overhead for the year.
3. The actual activity for the year was distributed among the companys four products as follows:
bre17879_ch03.qxd
9/16/03
9:23 AM
Page 161
Problems
Actual
Activity
Product
A
Product
B
Product
C
Product
D
500
320
200
0
3,400
300
120
60
14
2,200
700
500
0
10
1,800
700
60
100
6
4,600
PROBLEM 316
Flint Corporation is a manufacturing company that uses activity-based costing for its external financial reports. The companys activity cost pools and associated data for the coming year appear below:
Activity
Measure
Machine-hours
Number of orders
Number of part types
Number of tests
Direct labor-hours
Estimated
Overhead
Cost
Expected
Activity
$52,000
$24,000
$36,000
$63,000
$414,000
13,000 MHs
3,000 orders
60 part types
700 tests
46,000 DLHs
At the beginning of the year, the company had inventory balances as follows:
161
Actual Activity
13,200 MHs
2,950 orders
100 part types
760 tests
47,000 DLHs
Goods were completed and transferred to the finished goods warehouse. According to the companys
activity-based costing system, these finished goods cost $1,007,800 to manufacture.
Goods were sold on account to customers during the year for a total of $1,480,000. According to the
companys activity-based costing system, the goods cost $1,000,000 to manufacture.
CHECK FIGURE
(4) Total overhead overapplied: $6,800
bre17879_ch03.qxd
9/16/03
9:23 AM
162
Page 162
Chapter 3
Required:
1.
2.
3.
4.
Compute the predetermined overhead rate (i.e., activity rate) for each activity cost pool.
Prepare journal entries to record transactions (a) through (j) above.
Post the entries in (2) above to T-accounts.
Compute the underapplied or overapplied manufacturing overhead cost. Prepare a journal entry to
close any balance in the Manufacturing Overhead account to Cost of Goods Sold. Post the entry to
the appropriate T-accounts.
5. Prepare an income statement for the year.
CHECK FIGURE
(3a) LEC 40 overhead cost:
$5.06
PROBLEM 317
For many years, Thomson Company manufactured a single product called a LEC 40. Then three years ago,
the company automated a portion of its plant and at the same time introduced a second product called a
LEC 90 that has become increasingly popular. The LEC 90 is a more complex product, requiring 0.80 hour
of direct labor time per unit to manufacture and extensive machining in the automated portion of the plant.
The LEC 40 requires only 0.40 hour of direct labor time per unit and only a small amount of machining.
Manufacturing overhead costs are currently assigned to products on the basis of direct labor-hours.
Despite the growing popularity of the companys new LEC 90, profits have been declining steadily.
Management is beginning to believe that there may be a problem with the companys costing system. Material and labor costs per unit are as follows:
Direct materials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Direct labor (0.40 hour and 0.80 hour @ $15.00 per hour). . . . . . . . . .
LEC 40
LEC 90
$30.00
$6.00
$50.00
$12.00
Management estimates that the company will incur $912,000 in manufacturing overhead costs during
the current year and 60,000 units of the LEC 40 and 20,000 units of the LEC 90 will be produced and sold.
Required:
1. Compute the predetermined manufacturing overhead rate assuming that the company continues to
apply manufacturing overhead cost on the basis of direct labor-hours. Using this rate and other data
from the problem, determine the unit product cost of each product.
2. Management is considering using activity-based costing to apply manufacturing overhead cost to
products for external financial reports. The activity-based costing system would have the following
four activity cost pools:
Activity
Measure
Estimated
Overhead Cost
$225,000
182,000
45,000
460,000
$912,000
Expected Activity
Activity Measure
Number of part types . . . . . . .
Number of purchase orders . .
Number of tests run . . . . . . . .
Machine-hours . . . . . . . . . . . . .
LEC 40
LEC 90
Total
600
2,000
500
1,600
900
800
1,750
8,400
1,500
2,800
2,250
10,000
Determine the activity rate (i.e., predetermined overhead rate) for each of the four activity cost pools.
3. Using the activity rates you computed in (2) above, do the following:
a. Compute the total amount of manufacturing overhead cost that would be applied to each product using the activity-based costing system. After these totals have been computed, determine
the amount of manufacturing overhead cost per unit of each product.
b. Compute the unit product cost of each product.
bre17879_ch03.qxd
9/16/03
9:23 AM
Page 163
163
4. From the data you have developed in (1) through (3) above, identify factors that may account for the
companys declining profits.
PROBLEM 318 Compute and Use Activity Rates to Determine the Costs of Serving Customers
(LO2, LO3, LO4)
CHECK FIGURE
(3b) $8.65 per diner
Ginos Restaurant is a popular restaurant of Boston, Massachusetts. The owner of the restaurant has been
trying to better understand costs at the restaurant and has hired a student intern to conduct an activity-based
costing study. The intern, in consultation with the owner, identified the following major activities:
Activity Measure
Prior to the activity-based costing study, the owner knew very little about the costs of the restaurant.
She knew that the total cost for the month was $313,600 and that 32,000 diners had been served. Therefore,
the average cost per diner was $9.80 ($313,600 32,000 $9.80).
Required:
Two dollars of gross margin per briefcase? Thats ridiculous! roared Roy Thurmond, president of FirstLine Cases, Inc. Why do we go on producing those standard briefcases when were able to make over $11
* Adapted from Harold P. Roth and Imogene Posey, Management Accounting Case Study: CarryAll Company, Management Accounting Campus Report, Institute of Management Accountants, Fall 1991, p. 9. Used
by permission from the IMA, Montvale, NJ, USA, www.imanet.org.
CHECK FIGURE
(2) Standard briefcase unit
product cost: $20.48
bre17879_ch03.qxd
164
9/16/03
9:23 AM
Page 164
Chapter 3
per unit on our specialty items? Maybe its time to get out of the standard line and focus the whole plant on
specialty work.
Mr. Thurmond was referring to a summary of unit costs and revenues that he had just received from
the companys accounting department:
Standard
Briefcases
Specialty
Briefcases
$26.25
24.25
$ 2.00
$42.50
31.40
$11.10
FirstLine Cases produces briefcases from leather, fabric, and synthetic materials in a single plant. The
basic product is a standard briefcase that is made from leather lined with fabric. The standard briefcase is
a high-quality item and has sold well for many years.
Last year, the company decided to expand its product line and produce specialty briefcases for special
orders. These briefcases differ from the standard in that they vary in size, they contain the finest leather and
synthetic materials, and they are imprinted with the buyers name. To reduce labor costs on the specialty
briefcases, automated machines do most of the cutting and stitching. These machines are used to a much
lesser degree in the production of standard briefcases.
I agree that the specialty business is looking better and better, replied Beth Mersey, the companys
marketing manager. And there seems to be plenty of demand out there, particularly since the competition
hasnt been able to touch our price. Did you know that Velsun Company, our biggest competitor, charges
over $50 a unit for its specialty items? Now thats what I call gouging the customer!
A breakdown of the manufacturing cost for each of FirstLine Cases products is given below:
Standard
Briefcases
Specialty
Briefcases
10,000
2,500
$ 8.00
2.00
0
10.00
6.00
$12.00
1.00
7.00
20.00
4.80
8.25
$24.25
6.60
$31.40
Manufacturing overhead is applied to products on the basis of direct labor-hours. The rate of $16.50 per
hour was determined by dividing the total manufacturing overhead cost for a month by the direct labor-hours:
Predetermined overhead rate
Manufacturing overhead
Direct labor-hours
$99,000
$16.50 per DLH
6,000 DLHs
The following additional information is available about the company and its products:
a.
b.
c.
Standard briefcases are produced in batches of 1,000 units, and specialty briefcases are produced in
batches of 100 units. Thus, the company does 10 setups for the standard items each month and 25
setups for the specialty items. A setup for the standard items requires one hour of time, whereas a
setup for the specialty items requires two hours of time.
All briefcases are inspected to ensure that quality standards are met. A total of 200 hours of inspection time is spent on the standard briefcases and 400 hours of inspection time is spent on the specialty briefcases each month.
A standard briefcase requires 0.5 hour of machine time, and a specialty briefcase requires 1.2 hours
of machine time.
bre17879_ch03.qxd
9/16/03
9:23 AM
Page 165
d.
165
The company is considering the use of activity-based costing as an alternative to its traditional costing system for computing unit product costs. Since these unit product costs will be used for external
financial reporting, all manufacturing overhead costs are to be allocated to products and nonmanufacturing costs are to be excluded from product costs. The activity-based costing system has already
been designed and costs have been allocated to the activity cost pools. The activity cost pools and
activity measures are detailed below:
Activity
Measure
Estimated
Overhead Cost
Number of orders
Number of receipts
Setup-hours
Inspection-hours
Assembly-hours
Machine-hours
$15,000
16,000
6,000
18,000
12,000
32,000
$99,000
Expected Activity
Activity Measure
Number of orders:
Leather . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Fabric. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Synthetic material . . . . . . . . .
Number of receipts:
Leather . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Fabric. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Synthetic material . . . . . . . . .
Setup-hours. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Inspection-hours . . . . . . . . . . . .
Assembly-hours . . . . . . . . . . . .
Machine-hours . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Standard
Briefcases
Specialty
Briefcases
50
70
0
10
20
150
60
90
150
70
85
0
?
200
700
?
10
20
215
?
400
800
?
80
105
215
?
600
1,500
?
Total
Required:
1. Using activity-based costing, determine the amount of manufacturing overhead cost that should be
applied to each standard briefcase and each specialty briefcase.
2. Using the data computed in (1) above and other data from the case as needed, determine the unit
product cost of each product line from the perspective of activity-based costing.
3. Within the limitations of the data that have been provided, evaluate the presidents concern about the
profitability of the two product lines. Would you recommend that the company shift its resources entirely to the production of specialty briefcases? Explain.
4. Beth Mersey stated that the competition hasnt been able to touch our price on specialty business.
Why do you suppose the competition hasnt been able to touch FirstLine Cases price?
CASE (LO2, LO3, LO4)
Coffee Bean, Inc. (CBI), is a processor and distributor of a variety of blends of coffee. The company buys
coffee beans from around the world and roasts, blends, and packages them for resale. CBI currently has 40
different coffees that it offers to gourmet shops in one-pound bags. The major cost of the coffee is raw materials. However, the companys predominantly automated roasting, blending, and packing process requires
a substantial amount of manufacturing overhead. The company uses relatively little direct labor.
Some of CBIs coffees are very popular and sell in large volumes, while a few of the newer blends
have very low volumes. CBI prices its coffee at manufacturing cost plus a markup of 30%. If CBIs prices
for certain coffees are significantly higher than market, adjustments are made to bring CBIs prices more
into alignment with the market since customers are somewhat price conscious.
For the coming year, CBIs budget includes estimated manufacturing overhead cost of $3,000,000.
CBI assigns manufacturing overhead to products on the basis of direct labor-hours. The expected direct labor cost totals $600,000, which represents 50,000 hours of direct labor time. Based on the sales budget and
CHECK FIGURE
(2c) Mona Loa unit
product cost: $4.83
bre17879_ch03.qxd
166
9/16/03
9:23 AM
Page 166
Chapter 3
expected raw materials costs, the company will purchase and use $6,000,000 of raw materials (mostly coffee beans) during the year.
The expected costs for direct materials and direct labor for one-pound bags of two of the companys
coffee products appear below.
Mona Loa
Malaysian
$4.20
0.30
$3.20
0.30
Direct materials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Direct labor (0.025 hours per bag). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
CBIs controller believes that the companys traditional costing system may be providing misleading
cost information. To determine whether or not this is correct, the controller has prepared an analysis of the
years expected manufacturing overhead costs, as shown in the following table:
Activity
Measure
Expected Activity
for the Year
Expected Cost
for the Year
Purchase orders
Number of setups
Number of batches
Roasting hours
Blending hours
Packaging hours
1,710 orders
1,800 setups
600 batches
96,100 roasting hours
33,500 blending hours
26,000 packaging hours
$ 513,000
720,000
144,000
961,000
402,000
260,000
$3,000,000
Data regarding the expected production of Mona Loa and Malaysian coffee are presented below. There
will be no raw materials inventory for either of these coffees at the beginning of the year.
Mona Loa
Expected sales . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Batch size . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Setups . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Purchase order size . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Roasting time per 100 pounds. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Blending time per 100 pounds. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Packaging time per 100 pounds . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
100,000 pounds
10,000 pounds
3 per batch
20,000 pounds
1.0 hour
0.5 hour
0.1 hour
Malaysian
2,000 pounds
500 pounds
3 per batch
500 pounds
1.0 hour
0.5 hour
0.1 hour
Required:
1. Using direct labor-hours as the base for assigning manufacturing overhead cost to products, do the
following:
a. Determine the predetermined overhead rate that will be used during the year.
b. Determine the unit product cost of one pound of the Mona Loa coffee and one pound of the
Malaysian coffee.
c. Determine the selling price of one pound of the Mona Loa coffee and one pound of the
Malaysian coffee using the companys 30% markup.
2. Using activity-based costing as the basis for assigning manufacturing overhead cost to products, do
the following:
a. Determine the total amount of manufacturing overhead cost assigned to the Mona Loa coffee
and to the Malaysian coffee for the year.
b. Using the data developed in (2a) above, compute the amount of manufacturing overhead cost
per pound of the Mona Loa coffee and the Malaysian coffee. Round all computations to the
nearest whole cent.
c. Determine the unit product cost of one pound of the Mona Loa coffee and one pound of the
Malaysian coffee.
3. Write a brief memo to the president of CBI explaining what you have found in (1) and (2) above and
discussing the implications to the company of using direct labor as the base for assigning manufacturing overhead cost to products.
(CMA, adapted)
bre17879_ch03.qxd
9/16/03
9:23 AM
Page 167
Your team should visit and closely observe the operations at a fast food restaurant.
Required:
Identify activities and costs at the restaurant that fall into each of the following categories:
a.
b.
c.
d.
You and your friends go to a restaurant as a group. At the end of the meal, the issue arises of how the bill
for the group should be shared. One alternative is to figure out the cost of what each individual consumed
and divide up the bill accordingly. Another alternative is to split the bill equally among the individuals.
Required:
Which system for dividing the bill is more equitable? Which system is easier to use? How does this issue
relate to the material covered in this chapter?
COMMUNICATING IN PRACTICE (LO1)
You often provide advice to Maria Graham, a client who is interested in diversifying her company. Maria
is considering the purchase of a small manufacturing company that assembles and packages its many products by hand. She plans to automate the factory and her projections indicate that the company will once
again be profitable within two to three years. During her review of the companys records, she discovered
that the company currently uses direct labor-hours to allocate overhead to its products. Because of its simplicity, Maria hopes that this approach can continue to be used.
Required:
Write a memorandum to Maria that addresses whether or not direct labor should continue to be used as an
allocation base for overhead.
TAKING IT TO THE NET
As you know, the World Wide Web is a medium that is constantly evolving. Sites come and go and change
without notice. To enable periodic update of site addresses, this problem has been posted to the textbook
website (www.mhhe.com/bgn2e). After accessing the site, enter the Student Center and select this chapter.
Select and complete the Taking It to the Net problem.
167