The Importance of Process Costing
The Importance of Process Costing
The Importance of Process Costing
Costing is an important process that many companies engage in to keep track of where their money
is being spent in the production and distribution processes. Understanding these costs is the first
step in being able to control them. It is very important that a company chooses the appropriate type
of costing system for their product type and industry. One type of costing system that is used in
certain industries is process costing that varies from other types of costing (such as job costing) in
some ways. In process costing unit costs are more like averages, the process-costing system
requires less bookkeeping than does a job-order costing system. Thus, some companies often
prefer to use the process-costing system.
A company may manufacture thousands or millions of units of product in a given period of time.
Products are manufactured in large quantities, but products may be sold in small quantities,
sometimes one at a time (automobiles, loaves of bread), a dozen or two at a time (eggs,
cookies), etc.
Product costs must be transferred from Finished Goods to Cost of Goods Sold as sales are
made. This requires a correct and accurate accounting of product costs per unit, to have a
proper matching of product costs against related sales revenue.
Managers need to maintain cost control over the manufacturing process. Process costing
provides managers with feedback that can be used to compare similar product costs from one
month to the next, keeping costs in line with projected manufacturing budgets.
A fraction-of-a-cent cost change can represent a large dollar change in overall profitability, when
selling millions of units of product a month. Managers must carefully watch per unit costs on a
daily basis through the production process, while at the same time dealing with materials and
output in huge quantities.
Materials part way through a process (e.g. chemicals) might need to be given a value, process
costing allows for this. By determining what cost the part processed material has incurred such
as labor or overhead an "equivalent unit" relative to the value of a finished process can be
calculated.
e.g.(2) Larney Corporation uses process costing. A number of transactions that occurred in June are
listed below. As follows:
A) Raw materials that cost $38,200 are withdrawn from the storeroom for use in the Mixing
Department. B) Direct labor costs incurred $36,500,in the Mixing Department. C) Manufacturing
overhead of $42,100 is applied in the Mixing Department. D) Units with a carrying cost of $112,400
finish processing in the Mixing Department and are transferred to the Drying Department for further
processing. E) Units with a carrying cost of $143,800 finish processing in the Drying Department, the
final step in the production process, and are transferred to the finished goods warehouse. F)
Finished goods with a carrying cost of $138,500
Required: Prepare journal entries to record items A) through F).
Solution (2):