MAS Hilton Chap06
MAS Hilton Chap06
Activity Analysis,
Cost Behavior,
and Cost
Estimation
Copyright 2014 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.
Introduction
6-2
Total Variable Cost Example
Your total Pay Per View bill is based on how
many Pay Per View shows that you watch.
Total Pay Per View Bill
Cost
Activity
6-5
Step-Variable Costs
Total cost increases to a
new higher cost for the
next higher range of
activity.
Cost
Activity
6-6
Total Fixed Cost Example
Your monthly basic cable TV bill probably does
not change no matter how many hours you
watch.
Monthly Basic
Cable Bill
90
Thousands of Dollars
Rent Cost in
60
30
A semivariable
cost is partly
fixed and
partly
Consider the
variable. following
example:.
6-10
Semivariable Cost
The slope is
the variable
cost per unit
of activity.
Total Lease Cost
ost
c
ble
aria Variable Lease
iv
sem
ta l Charge Per Hour
To
Fixed Monthly
Rental Charge
Rental Charge Per Hour
6-11
Curvilinear Cost Curvilinear
Cost Function
Total Cost
A straight-line
(constant unit
variable cost) closely
approximates a
curvilinear line within
Relevant Range the relevant range.
Activity
6-12
Curvilinear Cost Curvilinear
Cost Function
Total Cost
A straight-Line
(constant unit
variable cost) closely
approximates a
curvilinear line within
Relevant Range the relevant range.
Activity
6-13
Engineered, Committed, and
Discretionary Costs
Committed Discretionary
Long-term, cannot be May be altered in the
reduced in the short short term by current
term. managerial decisions.
Engineered
Physical relationship
with activity measure.
6-15
Visual-Fit Method
Plot the data points on a
graph (total cost vs. activity).
20
1,000s of Dollars
* ** *
Total Cost in
* *
**
10 * *
0
0 1 2 3 4
Activity, 1,000s of Units Produced
6-16
Visual-Fit Method
Draw a line through the plotted data points so that about
equal numbers of points fall above and below the line.
20
1,000s of Dollars
* ** *
Total Cost in
* *
**
10 * *
0
0 1 2 3 4
Activity, 1,000s of Units Produced
6-17
Visual-Fit Method
* ** *
Total Cost in
* *
** Vertical distance
10 * * is total cost,
approximately
$16,000.
0
0 1 2 3 4
Activity, 1,000s of Units Produced
6-18
The High-Low Method
Owl Co recorded the following production activity &
maintenance costs for two months:
6-20
The High-Low Method
Units Cost
High activity level 9,000 $ 9,700
Low activity level 5,000 6,100
Change 4,000 $ 3,600
6-21
The High-Low Method
Units Cost
High activity level 9,000 $ 9,700
Low activity level 5,000 6,100
Change 4,000 $ 3,600
6-22
The High-Low Method
Units Cost
High activity level 9,000 $ 9,700
Low activity level 5,000 6,100
Change 4,000 $ 3,600
6-23
The High-Low Method
Units Cost
High activity level 9,000 $ 9,700
Low activity level 5,000 6,100
Change 4,000 $ 3,600
6-24
The High-Low Method
Units Cost
High activity level 9,000 $ 9,700
Low activity level 5,000 6,100
Change 4,000 $ 3,600
6-25
Least-Squares Regression
Method
Regression is a statistical procedure used
to determine the relationship between
variables such as activity and cost.
Total Cost
The objective of
the regression
method is the
general cost equation:
Y = a + bX
Activity
6-26
Equation Form of Least-Squares
Regression Line
Y = a + bX
6-28
Multiple Regression
Multiple regression includes two or more
independent variables:
Y = a + b1X1 + b2X2
6-29
Engineering Method
of Cost Estimation
6-30
Effect of Learning
on Cost Behavior
Ive noticed the same
As I make more of these
things it takes me less thing. And if you
time for each one. It must include all the variable
be the learning curve effect overhead costs that are
that the boss was also declining, that must
talking about. be the experience curve.
6-31
Learning Curve
Learning effects
are large initially.
Average Labor
Time per Unit
Learning effects
become smaller, eventually
reaching steady state.