Cost Concepts and Terminologies
Cost Concepts and Terminologies
Cost Concepts and Terminologies
Cost Categories:
1. Association with cost object
Cost object is anything for which management wants to collect or
accumulate costs
Direct—traceable to a cost object
Indirect—not conveniently or practically traceable to a cost object
o Treated as overhead
o Allocated
Semi-variable/mixed cost
Cost with fixed and variable components.
A base-level cost is always incurred regardless of the volume, as
well as an additional cost that is based only on volume.
Ex: electricity cost with basic minimum charge plus a specified
cost per kilowatt hour
Total Fixed Cost
Your monthly basic telephone bill probably does not change when
you make more local calls.
Fixed Cost Per Unit
The average cost per local call decreases as more local calls are
made.
Total Variable Cost
Your total long distance telephone bill is based on how many
minutes you talk.
Variable Cost Per Unit
The cost per long distance minute talked is constant. For
example, 10 cents per minute.
Period costs
Selling and administrative costs
Distribution costs
o Cost to warehouse, transport, and/or deliver a product or
service
o Major impact on managerial decision making
Appear on the income statement when incurred
Expensed when incurred
The Conversion Process
Change inputs into outputs
Degrees of Conversion
1. Low
o Department stores
o Gas stations
o Jewelry stores
o Travel agencies
2. Moderate
Florists
Meat markets
Oil-change businesses
3. High
Manufacturing
Construction
Agriculture
Architecture
Auditing
Mining
Printing
Restaurants
Manufacturing Costs
1. Direct Materials
Those materials that become an integral part of the product
and that can be conveniently traced directly to it.
2. Direct Labor
Those labor costs that can be easily traced to individual units of
product.
3. Manufacturing Overhead
Manufacturing costs that cannot be traced directly to specific
units produced.
Nonmanufacturing Costs
1. Marketing and selling costs . . .
Costs necessary to get the order and deliver the product.
2. Administrative costs . . .
All executive, organizational, and clerical costs.
PRODUCT COST
1. Product Cost—Direct
a. Direct Material
o Conveniently and economically traced to cost object
b. Direct Labor
o To manufacture a product or perform a service
o Includes wages paid to direct labor employees, production
bonuses, payroll taxes
o May include holiday and vacation pay, insurance, retirement
benefits
2. Product Cost—Indirect
a. Overhead—indirect production costs
o Fringe benefits, if cannot be easily traced to product
o Overtime, if due to random scheduling
o Cost of quality
o Prevention costs-training programs, researching
customer needs, acquiring improved production
equipment
o Appraisal costs- to find mistakes (monitoring and
inspecting)
o Failure costs – scrap & rework (internal); product
returncosts caused by quality problems, warranty costs,
and complaint department costs
Income Statement
Revenue XXXX
Cost of Goods Sold <1,054,000>
Gross Profit XXXX
Operating Expenses <XXXX>
Operating Income XXXX
Standard Costs
o Predetermined costs for direct materials, direct labor, and factory
overhead.
o They are established by using information accumulated from past
experience and data secured from research studies.
Controllable and Noncontrollable Costs
o A cost is considered to be a controllable cost at a particular level
of management if that level has power to authorize the cost.
o Ex: Entertainment expense by a sales manager.
Direct costs
o Costs that can be easily and conveniently traced to a unit of
product or other cost objective.
o Examples: direct material and direct labor
Indirect costs
o Costs cannot be easily and conveniently traced to a unit of
product or other cost object.
o Example: manufacturing overhead
Differential Costs and Revenues
o Costs and revenues that differ among alternatives.
Opportunity Costs
o The potential benefit that is given up when one alternative is
selected over another.
RELEVANT COST
o A future cost that changes across the alternatives.
Sunk Costs
o Sunk costs is a cost for which an outlay has already been made
and it cannot be changed by any decision. They are not
differential costs and should be ignored when making decisions.
Common Cost
o Cost of facilities or services employed in two or more accounting
periods, operations, commodities, or services.
o Subject to allocation.
o Ex: Salary of the general counsel of the entire business,
depreciation cost of machines shared by several departments
Joint Cost
o Costs of materials, labor and overhead incurred in the
manufacture of two or more products at the same time.
o Indivisible costs and not specifically identifiable with any of the
products being simultaneously produced
o Subject to allocation
o Ex: cost of growing corn is a joint cost if after harvesting, the corn
is used in different ways such as a popcorn and a corn flour.
Capital Expenditure
o Expenditure intended to benefit more than one accounting period
and is recorded as an asset.
o Ex: Purchase of machinery
o Cost allocation to different periods
o Depreciation – fixed tangible assets
o Amortization – intangible assets
o Depletion – wasting assets
Revenue Expenditure
o Expenditure that will benefit current period only and is recorded
as an expense
o Ex: Salary of the administrative staff of the company