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CHAPTER 6 Cost Allocation and ActivityBased Costing Purposes of Cost Allocation Purposes of Cost Allocation To Provide Information for Decision Making Allocated cost should measure the opportunity cost of using a company resource. Difficult to operationalize Provides a useful benchmark Purposes of Cost Allocation To Reduce Frivolous Use of Common Resources Without allocation of costs, resources may be used for nonessential purposes Allocation of cost provides incentive for departments to reduce frivolous use of resource Purposes of Cost Allocation To Encourage Evaluation of Services If costs are not allocated, there is no incentive to evaluate the services With cost allocation, there is a strong incentive to critically evaluate the efficiency and necessity of services Purposes of Cost Allocation To Provide “Full Cost” Information GAAP requires full costing for external reporting purposes Additionally, full cost information needed in areas such as “cost-plus” contracts Process of Cost Allocation Identify the Cost Objectives Form Cost Pools Select an Allocation Base to Relate the Cost Pools to the Cost Objectives Cost-Plus Contracts Process of Cost Allocation Determining the Cost Objective Forming Cost Pools A grouping of individual costs Total is allocated using one allocation base Cost Pool Examples Departments (Maintenance, Personnel) Major Activities (Equipment Setups) Selecting an Allocation Base Should select an allocation base that relates the cost pool to the cost objectives Should be based on cause-and-effect relationship If indirect costs are fixed, cause-andeffect relationships are difficult to establish and other approaches are used Study Break #1 In the cost allocation process, the cost objective is the: a. The allocation base used to allocate the costs b. A grouping of individual costs whose total is allocated using one allocation base c. The product, service or department that is to receive the allocation d. None of the above Answer: c. The product, service or department that is to receive the allocation Study Break #2 In the cost allocation process, an allocation base: a. Must be some characteristic that is common to all of the cost objectives b. Ideally should result in cost being allocated based on a cause-and-effect relationship c. Both a and b d. None of the above Answer: c. Both a and b Fixed Indirect Costs – Other Approaches Relative Benefits Approach to Allocation More costs allocated to those objectives that benefit most from incurring the cost Ability to Bear Costs More costs allocated to those that are more profitable Equity Approach to Allocation Base results in allocations that are perceived to be fair or equitable Allocating Service Department Costs Organizational Units of Manufacturing Firms Production Departments Service Departments Cost Pools Formed by Service Departments Allocated to Production Departments Direct Method of Allocating Service Department Costs Service department costs allocated to production departments but not other service departments Direct Method – Mason Furniture Example Exercise #1 The building maintenance department for Taylor Bath Manufacturing Company budgets annual costs of $3,000,000 based on the expected operating level for the coming year. The costs are allocated to two production departments. Taylor Bath is considering two allocation bases for assignment of costs to departments: (1) square footage and (2) direct labor hours. The following data relate to the potential allocation bases: Square Footage Direct Labor Hours Production Dept. 1 20,000 30,000 Production Dept. 2 30,000 20,000 Calculate the costs allocated to the production departments using each allocation base. Comment on which allocation base is preferable. Example Exercise #1 Solution Square Footage as an Allocation Base Production Department 1 = (20,000/50,000) x $3,000,000 = $1,200,000 Production Department 2 = (30,000/50,000) x $3,000,000 = $1,800,000 Example Exercise #1 Solution Direct Labor Hours as an Allocation Base Production Department 1 = (30,000/50,000) x $3,000,000 = $1,800,000 Production Department 2 = (20,000/50,000) x $3,000,000 = $1,200,000 Example Exercise #1 Solution Which allocation base is preferable? As indicated, the choice of the allocation base greatly affects the allocations of cost. Use of square footage as the allocation base assigns 60% of the cost to department 2 and 40% to department 1. However, use of direct labor hours allocates 60% of the cost to department 1 and only 40% to department 2. Department 1 would prefer to be allocated cost based on square footage and department 2 would prefer direct labor hours as the base. An allocation base that results in a cause and effect allocation is preferred. If maintenance costs are mostly related to building maintenance, then square footage is more likely to result in a cause and effect allocation. However, if maintenance costs are mostly made up of machine maintenance, then machine hours might be a better allocation base. Allocating Budgeted and Actual Service Department Costs Management should allocate based on budgeted costs rather than actual costs. Allocation of actual amounts allows for cost of inefficiencies and waste to be passed on to production departments. Problems with Cost Allocation Responsibility Accounting Identifies units and individuals responsible for generating revenue and controlling costs Controllable Costs Allocation based solely on costs management can control Problems with Cost Allocation Arbitrary Allocations Cost allocations are inherently arbitrary Typically there are numerous allocation bases that are equally justifiable Problems with Cost Allocation Unitized Fixed Costs Fixed costs are divided into a per unit basis and allocated as a variable cost Perception of costs as variable could alter decision making Lump-Sum Allocations Allocate predetermined amount of fixed costs that is not affected by level of activity Allocation must appear to be fixed to management Problems with Cost Allocation Too Few Cost Pools Although simple, may lead to distortion of cost allocation Product costs will be more accurate when more overhead cost pools are used Must analyze cost-benefit relationship of more cost pools Problems with Cost Allocation Using Only Volume-Related Allocation Bases Some firms allocate manufacturing overhead based on volume such as direct labor or machine hours Not all overhead costs vary with volume Study Break #3 The direct method of allocating costs: a. Allocates service department costs to other service departments b. Allocates only direct costs c. Allocates service department costs to producing departments only d. Both b and c Answer: c. Allocates service department costs to producing departments only Study Break #4 When fixed costs are stated on a per unit basis: a. Fixed costs are said to be “unitized” b. Fixed costs may appear to be variable to managers receiving allocations c. Decision making is greatly improved d. Both a and b Answer: d. Both a and b Activity-Based Costing Relatively recent development in managerial accounting Is considered to have helped to improve managerial accounting information The Problem of Using Only Measures of Production Volume to Allocate Overhead Typical allocation bases include: Direct labor hours Machine hours Assumes all overhead costs are proportional by production volume When they are not proportional by production volume: High-volume products are overcosted Low-volume products are undercosted ABC Portal The ABC Approach Common Activities and Associated Cost Drivers Example Exercise #2 Power Electronics manufactures portable power supply units. Power has recently decided to use an activity-based approach to cost its products. Production line setups is a major activity at Power. Next year Power expects to perform 1,000 setups at a total cost of $1,500,000. Power plans to produce 750 units of product EP150, which will require two setups. How much setup cost will be allocated to each unit of EP150 produced? Example Exercise #2 Solution Cost Per Setup = $1,500,000 / 1,000 = $1,500 Cost of Setups Related to EP150 = 2 setups x $1,500 = $3,000 Setup Cost Per Unit of EP150 = $3,000 / 750 units produced = $4 per unit Benefits of ABC Provide more accurate costing Less likely to undercost/overcost due to cost drive usage May lead to improvements in cost control Costs divided into a number of activities as compared to two overhead cost pools Limitations of ABC More costly to develop and maintain than a traditional costing system Develops full cost of products Includes fixed costs Lacks incremental information necessary for decision making Fixes and Variable Costs Activity-Based Management Improve efficiency and effectiveness by analyzing and costing activities Cost Allocation and Decision Making Activity-Based Management Determine Major Activities Identify Resources Used by Each Activity Evaluate the Performance of the Activities Identify Ways to Improve the Efficiency and/or Effectiveness of the Activities Copyright © 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. 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