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(كور كونسيبتس)ملخص الوحدة 3 مفاهيم التكاليف من كتاب جليم cma
[justify] Cost Management Terminology .A cost object is any entity to which costs can be attached. A cost driver is the basis used to assign costs to a cost object. The cost driver is the cause of the cost. • The [gdwl]costs of manufacturing [/gdwl]a product can be classified as one of three types: direct materials, direct labor, and manufacturing overhead. Overhead typically consists of indirect materials, indirect labor, and factory operating costs. • Manufacturing costs are often grouped as either prime costs (direct materials plus direct labor) or conversion costs (direct labor plus manufacturing overhead). • Operating a manufacturing concern also requires the incurrence of non manufacturing costs, consisting of selling (marketing) costs and administrative expenses. • Product costs (also called inventoriable costs) are capitalized as part of finished goods inventory. They eventually become a component of cost of goods sold. Period costs are expensed as incurred, i.e., they are not capitalized in finished goods inventory and are thus [gdwl]excluded from cost of goods sold[/gdwl].· . • For external reporting, all manufacturing costs (direct materials, direct labor, variable overhead, and fixed overhead) must be treated as product costs, and all selling and administrative (S&A) costs must be treated as period costs. This approach is called absorption costing (also called full costing). • For internal reporting, only variable manufacturing costs are capitalized as product costs. All other costs (variable S&A and the fixed portion of both production and S&A expenses) are treated as period costs. This approach is called variable costing (also called direct costing). • Direct costs are ones that can be associated with a particular cost object in an economically feasible way, i.e., they can be traced to that object. Indirect costs are ones that cannot be associated with a particular cost object in an economically feasible way and thus must be allocated to that object. • To simplify the allocation process, indirect costs are often collected in cost pools. A cost pool is an account into which a variety of similar cost elements with a common cause are accumulated. Manufacturing overhead is a commonly used example. Cost Behavior and Relevant Range • The relevant range defines the limits within which per-unit variable costs remain constant and fixed costs are not changeable. It is synonymous with the short run. • Variable cost per unit remains constant in the short run regardless of the level of production. Variable costs in total, on the other hand, vary directly and proportionally with changes in volume. • Fixed costs in total remain unchanged in the short run regardless of production level. Fixed cost per unit, on the other hand, varies indirectly with the activity level. • Mixed (semivariable) costs combine fixed and variable elements. • Marginal cost is the cost incurred by a one-unit increase in the activity level of a particular cost driver. Necessarily then, marginal cost remains constant across the relevant range. Cost Classification Cost of goods sold is a straightforward computation for a retailer because retailers have only a single class of inventory. The calculation is more complex for a manufacturer because manufacturers have three distinct classes of inventory. The manufacturer's cost of goods manufactured is analogous to the retailer's purchases account. Costs can be defined in conceptual groupings. [hr]#bd3838[/hr] Controllable vs. noncontrollable costs Avoidable vs. committed costs Incremental vs. differential cost Engineered vs. discretionary costs Outlay vs. opportunity cost (explicit vs. implicit) Economic vs. imputed cost Relevant vs. sunk costs (historical cost is a sunk cost) Manufacturing processes their own particular cost groups. Joint costs, separable costs, and by-products Normal vs. abnormal spoilage Rework, scrap, and waste Costing Techniques • Absorption vs. Variable Costing • • • • Absorption costing treats all manufacturing costs as product costs. The inventoried cost of the product thus includes all production costs, whether variable or fixed. This technique is required under GAAP. • Variable costing considers only variable manufacturing costs to be product costs, i.e., inventoriable. Fixed manufacturing costs are considered period costs and are thus expensed as incurred. This technique is permitted for internal reporting only. • Normalized Costing • Actual costing is the most accurate, but also the least timely and most volatile, method of accumulating costs. • Normal costing charges actual direct materials and direct labor to a cost object, but applies overhead on the basis of budgeted (normalized) rates. • Extended normal costing extends the use of normalized rates to manufacturing overhead so that ail three major input categories use normalized rates. • Cost Accumulation Systems Job-order costing for manufacturing customized products Process costing for mass production Activity-based costing (ABC) when overhead is a high proportion of the total cost life-cycle costing to ,track a product's lifetime costs • Standard costing is a system designed to alert management when the actual costs of production differ significantly from target ("standard") costs. Standard costs are predetermined, attainable unit costs. • Four methods for allocating joint costs are Physical unit method Sales-value at split-off method ' Estimated net realizable value (NRV) method Constant gross-margin percentage NRV method • Three methods for allocating service department costs are in common use: Direct method Step-down method Reciprocal method [/justify] |
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