Management Accounting
Fall Term 2014
Fall Term 2014
Fichier Détails
Cartes-fiches | 68 |
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Langue | English |
Catégorie | Finances |
Niveau | Université |
Crée / Actualisé | 15.10.2014 / 13.03.2015 |
Lien de web |
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1: Introduction to Cost Management
1.1 Financial vs. Management Accounting
Accounting Information System
- Consists of ....
- Uses processes such as .... to ....
- Has two major systems: ... and .... (what is the main difference?
- ...interrelated manual and computer parts
- ...collecting, recording, summarizing, analyzing and managing data to... transform inputs into information provided to users
- a) Financial Accounting information system (external)
b) Cost Management Accounting information system (internal)
-> main difference: targeted user
1: Introduction to Cost Management
1.1 Financial vs. Management Accounting
Financial Accounting information system
- Produces output for ...
- What kind of output does it produce?
- external users
- e.g. financial statements
-> Follows rules and conventions set by the regulators and standard setters. Companies have to become comparable.
1: Introduction to Cost Management
1.1 Financial vs. Management Accounting
Cost Management information system
- Produces output for...
- Provides information for which 3 broad objectives?
- internal users
- a) Costing out services, products, and other objects of interest to management
b) planning and control (forward-looking and checking if target is achieved)
c) decision making
-> criteria and formats are set internally (e.g. they decide for themselves how they account for inventory because some specific information might be needed....)
1: Introduction to Cost Management
1.1 Financial vs. Management Accounting
Cost Management information system
is divided into which two subsystems and what are their characteristics?
Cost Accounting information system (satisfies objective 1, costing out services, products, and other objects of interest to management)
- Assigns costs to individual products and services
- Assists external financial reporting
- Conforms to the rules and conventions set by regulators and standard setters
Operational Control information system (satisfies objective 2, planning and control)
- provides accurate and timely feedback concerning the performance of managers and others
- concerned with what activities should be performed and assessing how well they are performed
- increases profit by increasing customer value
- purely internal
1: Introduction to Cost Management
1.2 Factors affecting Cost Management
What are the 9 factors affecting Cost Management?
1. Global Competition
2. Growth of the Service Industry (and thus increased competition)
3. Advances in Information Technology (computers to control operations, ERP systems, e-commerce...)
4. Advances in the Manufacturing Environment (e.g. theory of constraints, just-in-time manufacturing, lean manufacturing, computer-integrated manufacturing...)
5. Customer Orientation
6. New Product Development (demand for more sophisticated cost mgmt procedures such as target costing and activity-based management)
7. Toal Quality Management (Continuous improvement and elimination of waste)
8. Time as a competitive element (correlation between cost and time; decrease non-value-added time)
9. Efficiency (cost is a critical measure of efficiency)
1: Introduction to Cost Management
1.3 The Role of the Management Accountant
Line Position
Definition?
Staff Position
Definition?
1: Introduction to Cost Management
1.3 The Role of the Management Accountant
Explain the two staff positions:
Controller
Trasurer
Controller (Chief Accounting Officer)
- Supervises all accounting departments
- Participates in planning, controlling, and decision making activities
- Responsible for both internal and external accounting requirements
Treasurer
- Responsible for finance function
- Raises capital, manages cash, investment, and Investor Relations
- In charge of credit and collections as well as insurance
1: Introduction to Cost Management
1.3 The Role of the Management Accountant
Cost and Management Accountants are responsible for collecting, processing, and reporting information that will help managers in 4 activities
Name and explain them!
Planning
- detailed formulation of future actions to achieve a particular end
- requires setting objectives and identifying methods to achieve those objectives
Controlling
- a managerial activity of monitoring a plan’s implementation and taking corrective action
- achieved with the use of feedback
Continuous Improvement
- relentless pursuit of improvement in the delivery of value to customer
- required to remain competitive or to establish a competitive advantage
Decision Making
- process of choosing among competing alternatives
2: Basic cost management concepts
2.1: A systems framework
What are the main differences btw. Financial Accounting and Cost Management Information Systems concerning...
- Inputs
- Processes
- Outputs
Inputs:
FINACC: Well-specified economic events
CMGMT: Set by management
Processes:
FINACC: Rules and conventions established by the SEC, FASB, IASB...
CMGMT: Not bound by externally imposed criteria
Outputs:
FINACC: Financial statements for external users
CMGMT: Information for 3 broad objectives:
1. Costing out services, products, and other objects of interest to management
2. Planning and control
3. Decision making
2: Basic cost management concepts
2.2: Cost Assignment
Explain the following terms:
Cost
a) Expenses
b) Loss
c) Assets
Cost
Cash or cash equivalent value sacrificed for goods and services that are expected to bring a current or future benefit (e.g. workers in the assembly line)
Expenses
Expired (used up) costs that are deducted from revenues to calculate income (e.g. salaries, they are gone after)
Loss
Cost that expires without producing any revenue benefits (e.g. cost of uninsured inventory destroyed by a flood)
Assets
Unexpired costs that appear on the balance sheet (e.g. machines)
-> The main difference between a cost being classified as an expense or as an asset is timing!!
2: Basic cost management concepts
2.2: Cost Assignment
Explain the term cost objects
Cost Objects
- Things for which costs are measured and assigned (here, acuraccy is crucial!)
- Includes products, customers, departments, projects, activities, etc.
2: Basic cost management concepts
2.2: Cost Assignment
Explain Traceability,
and the 2 Methods of Tracing
Traceability
Ability to assign a cost directly to a cost object in an economically feasible way by means of a causal relationship
a) Direct Tracing
Process of identifying and assigning costs to a cost object that are specifically or physically associated with the cost object. Direct tracing is most often accomplished by physical observation.
b) Driver Tracing
Use of drivers to assign costs to cost objects (e.g. machine hours)
(Drivers are factors that cause changes in resource usage, activity usage, costs, and revenue. They can be observed and measure a cost object’s resource consumption)
2: Basic cost management concepts
2.2: Cost Assignment
How are indirect costs assigned?
- Indirect costs cannot be traced to cost objects
- Assignment of indirect costs (e.g. lighting of a plant) is called allocation
(Since no causal relationship exists, allocating indirect costs is based on convenience or some assumed linkage... not very accurate but e.g. required for external reporting)
2: Basic cost management concepts
2.3: Product and Service Costs
Explain Tangible Products and Services and how they differ
Tangible Products:
Goods produced by converting raw materials into finished products
Services:
Tasks or activities performed for a customer or activity performed by a customer using an organization's products or facilities
Dimensions that differ services from tangible products:
- Intangibility
- Perishability (Vergänglichkeit)
- Inseparability
2: Basic cost management concepts
2.3: Product and Service Costs
Explain the following terms:
Production (or product) costs
Nonproduction costs
Production (or product) costs
Costs associated with manufacturing goods or providing services
Nonproduction costs
Costs associated with the functions of selling and administration
2: Basic cost management concepts
2.3: Product and Service Costs
Name and explain the three classifications of production costs
Direct materials
Materials traceable to the goods or services being produced (e.g. cost of wood in furniture)
Direct labor
Labor traceable to the goods or services being produced (e.g. wage of assembly line workers / pilots...)
Overhead
Production costs OTHER than direct material and direct labor (e.g. plant depreciation, utilities, property taxes, indirect materials, indirect labor etc.)
2: Basic cost management concepts
2.3: Product and Service Costs
Explain the following terms:
Prime cost
Conversion cost
2: Basic cost management concepts
2.3: Product and Service Costs
Name and explain the two classifications of Nonproduction costs
Explain what's special about these costs
Marketing (selling) costs
Costs necessary to market and distribute a product or service (e.g. advertising, storage, freight-out)
Administrative costs
Costs that cannot be reasonably assigned to either marketing or production (e.g. salaries, legal fee, R&D)
-> Marketing and administrative costs are NOT inventoried and are called Period Costs. That means they are expensed in the period in which they are incurred.
2: Basic cost management concepts
2.4: External Financial Statements
Briefly describe
Income Statement
Cost of goods manufactured
Cost of goods sold
Income Statement
- Follows the standard format (for external parties)
- Referred to as absorbtion-costing income or full-costing income cause all manufacturing costs are fully assigned to the product
- Expenses are separated according to function and then deducted from revenues to arrive at income
- Two major functional categories: Cost of goods sold and operating expenses
Cost of goods manufactured (needed to calculate CoGS)
- total manufacturing cost of goods completed during the current period (only of direct materials, direct
labor, and overhead)
Cost of goods sold
- manufacturing cost of the units that were sold during the period.
(It is important to remember that the cost of goods sold may or may not equal the cost of goods manufactured. In addition, we must remember that the cost of goods sold is an expense, and it belongs on the income statement)
------> SEE CORNERSTONE 2.2 AND 2.3
2: Basic cost management concepts
2.5: Traditional and Activity-based Cost Management Systems
Explain Traditional Cost Accounting and Traditional Cost Control
Traditional Cost Accounting
- Assumes that all cost can be classified as fixed or variable
- Uses only unit-based activity drivers to assign costs (e.g. direct labor hours or machine hours)
Traditional Cost Control
- Assigns costs to organizational units
- Holds organizational unit manager responsible for controlling the assigned costs (Performance is measured by comparing actual outcomes with standard or budgeted outcomes)
- Traces costs to individuals who are responsible for costs
2: Basic cost management concepts
2.5: Traditional and Activity-based Cost Management Systems
Explain Activity-Based Cost Accounting and Activity-Based Cost Control
(also show the ACM-Model)
Activity-Based Cost Accounting
- Emphasizes tracing over allocation
- Uses both unit- and non-unit-based activity drivers (e.g. "moving materials"...)
Activity-Based Cost Control
- Focuses on accountability for activities rather than for costs
- Activity-based management (ABM) focuses on improving customer value (and the profit the company as a whole (!) makes through this improvement)
3: Cost Behavior
3.1: Fixed Costs, Variable Costs, Mixed Costs
Explain the following terms:
Cost Behavior
Cost Object
Measures of Output
Cost Behavior
- Term to describe whether a cost changes when the level of output changes
- Fixed: cost does not change
- Variable: cost does change
Cost Object
- Item for which managers want cost information
- Tangible products or services (depending on the firm)
Measures of Output
- Activity drivers explain changes in activity costs by measuring changes in activity output (usage)
- 2 Categories:
a) Unit-level drivers (more costs per unit produced)
b) Non-unit level drivers (e.g. inspection hours; not affected by no. of units produced)
3: Cost Behavior
3.2: Resources, Activities and Cost Behavior
Explain the following terms:
Resources
a) Flexible Resources
b) Committed Resources
Resources
- Economic elements that enable one to perform activities
- Resources needed to perform an activity: Activity capacity
- Practical capacity is activity level where activity is performed efficiently
a) Flexible Resources
- Supplied as needed and used
- Quantity supplied = quantity demanded
- No unused capacity (JIT)
e.g. using kilowatt-hours as the driver, as the demand for power increases, the cost of power increases.
b) Committed Resources
- Supplied in advance of usage
- A given quantity is obtained, whether or not that full amount is used
- Unused capacity is possible
e.g. employees
3: Cost Behavior
3.2: Resources, Activities and Cost Behavior
Explain the following terms:
Step-Cost Behavior
a) Step-variable costs
b) Step-fixed costs
Step-Cost Behavior
A step cost function displays a constant level of cost for a range of output and then jumps to a higher level of cost at some point
a) Step-variable costs
- Follow a step-cost behavior with narrow steps (pretty much variable costs themselves...)
b) Step-fixed costs
- Follow a cost-step function
- Once a relevant range is exceeded, the costs increase "one step"
----> SEE CORNERSTONE 3.2
3: Cost Behavior
3.2: Resources, Activities and Cost Behavior
Explain Mixed Cost Behavior
Mixed Cost Behavior
Many activities have characteristics of both flexible and committed resources
e.g. power department aquires long-term capacity by investing in a building and equipment but it also aquires fuel to produce power on an as-needed basis
Cost Separation
3: Cost Behavior
3.3: Methods of Determining Cost Behavior
Sometimes it is easy to spot the variable and the fixed portion of a cost, othertimes it's not. Then we need a method to separate costs into their fixed and variable components.
Explain the following methods:
The Industrial Engineering Method
The Account Analysis Method
The Industrial Engineering Method
A forward‐looking method of determining, through physical observation and analysis, just what activities, in what amounts, are needed to complete a process (e.g. Zeit im Excel eintragen...)
The Account Analysis Method
Used to estimate costs by classifying accounts in the general ledger as fixed, variable, or mixed (by judgement and experience)
3: Cost Behavior
3.3: Methods of Determining Cost Behavior
Sometimes it is easy to spot the variable and the fixed portion of a cost, othertimes it's not. Then we need a method to separate costs into their fixed and variable components.
-> Quantitative Methods where Y=F+VX
Explain:
the High-Low Method
and it's Advantages and Disadvantages
High-Low Method
Take two points (the high and the low by volume of activity) and determine the slope and intercept
• Slope is variable rate
• Intercept is fixed cost
Advantages
• objective
• simple to calculate
Disadvantages
• high and low points may be “outliers”
• Other pairs of points may clearly be more representative
---> SEE CORNERSTONE 3.4
3: Cost Behavior
3.3: Methods of Determining Cost Behavior
Sometimes it is easy to spot the variable and the fixed portion of a cost, othertimes it's not. Then we need a method to separate costs into their fixed and variable components.
-> Quantitative Methods where Y=F+VX
Explain:
the Scatterplot Method
and it's Advantages and Disadvantages
Scatterplot Method
Uses a scattergraph to visually assess the relationship between cost and output
– Intercept is fixed cost
– Slope is variable rate
Advantages
• Allows for visual inspection of the data
• Identifies nonlinearity, outliers, and shifts in the cost relationship
Disadvantages
• subjective
3: Cost Behavior
3.4: Learning Curve and Nonlinear Cost Behavior
Explain the following terms:
Learning Curve
Experience Curve
Learning Curve
Shows how labor hours per unit decrease as units produced increase
Experience Curve
Relates cost to increased efficiency: the more you perform a task the lower the cost of doing it
Cumulative Average-Time Learning Curve (focus!)
States that the cumulative average time per unit decreases by a constant percentage
• The learning rate is expressed as a percent
-----> SEE CORNERSTONE 3.8
Incremental Unit-Time Learning Curve
The incremental unit‐time learning curve model decreases by a constant percentage each time the cumulative quantity of units produced doubles
3: Cost Behavior
3.5: Managerial Judgement
Explain Managerial Judgement
Managerial Judgement
The most widely used method in practice
• Managers may just use their experiences and observations to determine fixed and variable costs
• Managers may identify mixed costs and use experience to determine what part is fixed – thus denoting the rest as variable
• This is a simple method and can yield good results when the manager has a good understanding of the processes
– However poor judgment yields poor results
4: Activity-Based Costing
4.1: Unit-level product costing
Show the Unit-based product costing model and explain briefly how it works
4: Activity-Based Costing
4.1: Unit-level product costing
- Show how to calculate the predetermined overhead rate and the applied overhead
Predetermined Overhead Rate
Budgeted annual overhead
Budgedet annual driver level (e.g. machine hours...)
Applied Overhead
Overhead rate x actual driver usage
4: Activity-Based Costing
4.1: Unit-level product costing
Explain the 2 Stages of using plantwide rates