Lecture Notes 1
Lecture Notes 1
Costs are assigned to objects for a variety of purposes including pricing, profitability
studies, and control of spending. A cost object is any thing for which cost data are
desired including products, product lines, customers, jobs, and organizational
subunits. For the purpose of assigning costs to cost objects, costs are classified as
direct cost and indirect cost.
Direct Cost:
Definition and explanation of direct cost:
A direct cost is a cost that can be easily and conveniently traced to the particular
cost object under consideration. A cost object is any thing for which cost data is
required including products, customers jobs and organizational subunits. For
example, if a company is assigning costs to its various regional and national sales
offices, then the salary of the sales manager in its Tokyo office would be a direct cost
of that office.
Indirect Cost:
Definition and explanation of indirect cost:
An indirect cost is a cost that cannot be easily and conveniently traced to the
particular cost object under consideration. For example a soup factory may produce
dozens of verities of canned soups. The factory manager's salary would be an
indirect cost of a particular verity such as chicken noodle soup. The reason is that
the factory manager's salary is not caused by any one variety of soup. To be traced
to a cost object such as a particular product, the cost must be caused by the cost
object. This salary of manger is called common cost of producing the various
products of the factory. A common cost is a cost that is incurred to support a number
of costing objects but cannot be traced to them individually. A common cost is a
particular type of indirect cost.
A particular cost may be direct or indirect, depending on the cost object. While, in
the above example, the soup factory manager's salary is an indirect cost of
manufacturing chicken noodle soup, it is a direct cost of the manufacturing division.
In the first case, the cost object is the chicken noodle soup product. In the second
case, the cost object is the entire manufacturing division.
Definition of cost behavior:
Cost behavior refers to how a cost will react or respond to changes in the level of
business activity. As the level of activity rises and falls, a particular cost may rise
and fall as well--or it may remain constant. Quite frequently, it is necessary to
predict how a certain cost will behave in response to a change in activity. For
planning purposes, a manager must be able to anticipate which of these will happen;
and if a cost can be expected to change, the manager must know by how much it will
change. To help make such distinctions, costs are often characterized as variable or
fixed.
Variable Cost:
Definition and Explanation:
A variable cost is a cost that varies, in total, in direct proportion to changes in the
level of activity. The activity can be expressed in many ways, Such as units
produced, units sold, miles driven, beds occupied, hours worked and so forth. Direct
material is a good example of variable cost.
The cost of direct materials will vary in direct proportions to the number of units
produced. When we speak the term variable cost we mean that the total cost rises
and falls as the activity rises and falls. One interesting aspect of variable cost is that
a variable cost is constant if expressed on a per unit basis. For a cost to be variable,
it must be variable with respect to something. That some thing is its activity base.
An activity base is a measure of whatever causes the incurrence of variable cost. An
activity base is sometimes referred to as cost driver. Some of the most common
activity bases are direct labor hours, machine hours, units produced, and units sold.
Other activity bases (cost drivers) might include the number of miles driven by sales
persons, the number of pounds of laundry cleaned by a hotel, the number of calls
handed by technical support staff at a software company, and the number of beds
occupied in a hospital. To plan and control variable costs, a manger must be well
acquainted with the various activity bases within the firm. .
People some times get the notion that if a cost doesn't vary with production or with
sales, then it is not really a variable cost. This is not correct. As suggested by the
range of bases listed below, costs are caused by many different activities within an
organization. whether a cost is considered to be variable depends on whether it is
caused by the activity under consideration. For example, if a manager is analyzing
the cost of service calls under a product warranty, the relevant activity measure will
be the number of service calls made. Those costs that vary in total with the number
of service calls made are the variable cost of making service calls. Nevertheless,
unless stated otherwise, you can assume that the activity base under consideration
is the total volume of goods and services provided by the organization.
Some of the most frequently encountered variable costs are listed below. This is not
a complete list of all costs that can be considered variable. More, some costs listed
here may behave more like fixed than variable costs in some organizations.
Most Frequently Encountered Variable Costs
Type of organization Costs that are normally variable with respect to volume
of output
Merchandising company Cost of goods (merchandise) sold
Manufacturing company Manufacturing costs:
Direct materials
Direct labor
Variable portion of manufacturing overhead:
Indirect materials
Lubricants
Supplies
Power
Both merchandising and Selling, general and administrative costs:
manufacturing Commissions
companies clerical costs, such as invoicing
Shipping costs
Service organizations Supplies, travel, clerical
Not all variable costs have exactly the same behavior pattern. Some variable costs
behave in a true variable or proportionately variable pattern. Other variable costs
behave in a step-variable pattern.
Step-Variable Cost:
The wages of maintenance workers are often considered to be a variable cost, but
this variable cost does not behave in quite the same way as the cost of direct
materials. unlike direct materials, the time of maintenance workers is obtainable only
in large chunks. More any maintenance time not utilized cannot be stored as
inventory and carried forward to the next period. If the time is not used effectively it
is gone forever. Furthermore, a maintenance crew can work at a fairly leisurely pace
if pressures are light but intensify its efforts if pressures build up. For this reason
small changes in the level of production may have no effect on the number of
maintenance people employed by the company. A resource that is obtained only in
large chunks (such as maintenance workers) and whose costs increase or decrease
only in response to fairly wide changes in activity is known as a step-variable cost.
Fixed Cost:
Definition and Explanation:
A fixed cost is a cost that remains constant, in total, regardless of changes in the
level of activity. Unlike variable costs, fixed costs are not affected by changes in
activity. Consequently, as the activity level rises and falls, the fixed costs remain
constant in total amount unless influenced by some outside forces, such as price
changes. Rent is a good example of fixed cost. Fixed cost can create confusion if
they are expressed on per unit basis. This is because average fixed cost per unit
increases and decreases inversely with changes in activity. Examples of fixed cost
include straight line depreciation, insurance property taxes, rent, supervisory salary
etc.
Fixed costs are some time referred to as capacity costs since they result from out
lays made for building, equipment, skilled professional employees, and other items
indeed to provide the basic capacity for sustained operations. For planning purposes,
fixed costs can be viewed as being either committed or discretionary.
The two key characteristics of committed fixed cost are 1. They are long term in
nature. 2. They cannot be significantly reduced even for short period of time without
seriously impairing the profitability or long run goals of the organization. Even if
operations are interrupted or cut back, the committed fixed costs will still continue
largely unchanged. During a recession, for example, a firm shall not usually
discharge key executives or sell of key facilities.
Since it is difficult to change a committed fixed cost once the commitment has been
made, management should approach these decisions with particular care. Decisions
to acquire major equipment or to take on other committed fixed costs involve a long
planning horizon. Management should make such commitments only after careful
analysis of the available alternatives. Once a decision is made to build a certain size
facility, a firm becomes locked into that decision for many years to come.
While not much can be done about committed fixed costs in the short run,
management is concerned about how these resources are utilized. The strategy of
management must be to utilize the capacity of the organization as effectively as
possible.
Y = a + bX
In this equation,
The equation makes it very easy to calculate what the total mixed cost would be for
any level of activity within the relevant range For example, Suppose that the
company expects to produce 800 units and company has to pay a fixed cost of
$25,000 and a variable manufacturing cost is $3.00 per unit. The total mixed cost
would be calculated as follows:
Y = a + bX
Y = $25,000 + ($3.00 × 800 units)
= $27,400
The fixed portion of the mixed cost represents the basic, minimum cost of just
having a service available for use. The variable portion represents the cost incurred
for actual consumption of the service. The variable element varies in proportion to
the amount of service that is consumed .
Therefore, when high and low point method is used, the variable cost is estimated by
dividing the difference in cost between the high and low activity levels by the change
in activity between those two points. We can apply high and low point method on the
following data to spare fixed and variable costs.
Using the high and low point method we first identify the period with the highest and
lowest activity-in the following data June and March. We then use the activity and
cost data from these two periods to estimate the variable cost component as follows:
= $3,400
Both the elements, variable and fixed , have now been isolated. The cost of
maintenance can now be expressed as $3,400 per month plus $0.80 per hour. The
cost of maintenance can also be expressed in terms of the equation for a straight line
as follows:
Y = $3,400 + $0.80X
Some times the high and low levels of activity don't coincide with the high and low
amounts of cost. For example, the period that has the highest level of activity may
not have the highest amount of cost. Nevertheless, the highest and lowest levels of
activity are always used to analyze a mixed cost under the high and low point
method. the reason is that the analyst would like to use data that reflect the greatest
possible variation in activity.
The high and low point method is easy to apply and its simplicity is its main
advantage, but it suffers from a major defect. It utilizes only two points and
generally two points are not enough to produce accurate results in cost analysis
work. Additionally, Periods in which the activity level is unusually low or unusually
high will tend to produce inaccurate results. A cost formula that is estimated solely
using data from these unusual periods may seriously misrepresent the true cost
relationship that holds during normal periods.