Uniit 1.1 Costing Systems
Uniit 1.1 Costing Systems
2: Costing Systems
Rule of thumb
- There are few production (or a single product) that are relatively
standardised and so accurate costing wont differ much to a less
accurate systems that makes more assumptions
- There are a low proportion of indirect costs vs direct costs and so
you have less of a need to understand your indirect costs more
accurately, as they are not a large part of your overall costs
- The cost of an inaccurate system is low, for example, you operate in
an uncompetitive environment, or you are the only person making
and selling the products
Use ACTUAL
Direct costs costs
Traditional
costing
systems
Cost Object
Cost allocation Use (product)
ABC systems
Direct costs are traceable to the object, so they are simpler to identify and
accurately include in the cost of the product. Indirect costs are not
traceable to the object, and as a result the primary challenge with any
costing system it how to include the indirect costs in the cost of the
product as there is no direct link between the cost and the product.
Illustrative example 1
Solution
Step 2 – determine variable costs and allocated fixed costs for inventory/
COS
IFRS – IAS 2
- Costs to include
- Costs of conversion
o Including systematic allocation of production overheads
- Other costs bringing into present location and condition
- Costs to exclude
o Abnormal waste
Absorption
Costs to include
Allocation base
Allocation base
Maximum capacity
Practical capacity
Variances
Illustrative example 2
Solution
Reconciling profit
ABC activities
What is an activity?
Absorption costing
- Costs are collected by the activities that cause the costs, and
- Assigned to objects (products) based on how the object uses the
activity
- i.e., casual allocation
Cost driver
Absorption costing
- One or two volume based allocation bases
o Labour hours/machine hours/units produced
o Some costs are not volume driven
No cause and effect between cost and volume
E.g., the setup cost for a production run
After setup can produce 100 or 10 000 units – no
change in cost
Increased likelihood of arbitrary allocation bases
Result
Result
Step 1
Step 2
Step 3
Determine the total activity level which caused the total cost in
step 2
- Sometimes you have bought capacity which you may not have used
(fixed)
o i.e., bought a machine which can do 1000 baches (capacity)
and costs R100 000 per year
o I have used only 800 batches and the rest is idle
o The total cost is R100 000 as the cost is fixed
o The activity level relating to the R100 000 is 1000 batches not
800
- Sometimes the level of activity is determined the total cost
(variable)
o i.e., I have 100 setups during the year which resulted in R500
costs
o The activity level relating to the R500 is 1000 setups
o Variable indirect costs vs variable direct costs
- Practical capacity – not normal/budget capacity (if choice)
o Maximum less planned maintenance
o Highlights costs of non-utilised capacity
Step 4
Step 5
Scenario
Popups are much larger and are packed in individual boxed whilst 8
emitters are packed in a single box
Popups Emitters
Variable cost 40 55
Absorption rate 21 21
Total cost 61 76
Cost Driver/activity
Popups Emitters
Raw materials 120 000 240 000
Direct variable overheads 360 000 200 000
Machinery related costs (based on 86 400 38 400
machine hours)
Manual assembly costs (based on 120 000 60 000
labour hours)
Packaging costs (based on boxes) 24 000 2000
Quality control costs (based on 48 000 16 000
inspections)
Total allocated costs 758 400 556 400
Cost per unit 63.20 69.55
Unallocated costs
A key point that you need to take away from this lesson on
activity based costing:
- ABC uses more drivers that are casually connected to the object,
whereas ABS uses fewer, volume based drivers
- The focus of ABC is on decision making and control, whereas ABS
has a focus on financial reporting
- ABC uses practical capacity, whereas ABS uses normal capacity
- ABC will not allocate costs that are facility sustaining costs, whereas
ABS allocates all costs that are considered manufacturing costs