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Job order costing ( system design ) ( 3 )

Managerial accounting chapter 3 System design ( Job order costing )

 

Management accounting includes the field of product costing , process of assigning manufacturing costs to manufactured goods.

Why do we say that it is important?

We say it is important as the purpose of a costing system is to provide information to the manager for the role of decision making .

The unit cost is needed for :

a)    Pricing products and services ( dont ignore market forces or competition)

Examples : Pharmaceuticals, Beverages, cosmetics.

You sell normally at a higher prices for those products.

b)    Adding and dropping products. Make bunch of products , focus on products that making higher margins of sales. Could make or buy decisions. Do we make something or do we buy from someone else. UBC starbucks, Do we make it or do we buy from someone else ( outsourcing ) . Another example is hotels. Do i clean the towels and laudry or do i outsource it for someone else to do it for me. Make 10000 towels the day , not enough to spread out the economies of scale. Another example is white spot, do i make my own desserts or do i get it from someone else.

c)     Access or reject special orders ( excess capacity ) , we need product cost information for balance sheet , We will accept a project if the price is greater than the variable cost as you will have higher margin of profit.

 

 

Process costing system : homogenous product , things like beer and milk.

The only thing you will do in theory would be single homogenous products that is produced for a long time.

 

The basic approach would be to take cost for entire period and divide by the number of units producted during the period

 

Job order costing

Used in situations where many different jobs , products and services are being manufactured or provided each period.

Service industry for example. Different products , different clients , Make to order.

 

The manufacturing of any product involves what kind of costs ?

Direct labout, direct material and manufacturing overhead.

 

Production process begins with transfer of raw material to production line , transfer may be direct materials and also may include indirect materials. Why is it important to distinguish between both ?

 

It is because direct materials go into work in process whereas indirect materials go into actual Manufacturing overhead.

 

 

Manufacturing overhead ?

IT is easy to assign materials and labour costs to product and services . why?

Because they are direct costs

 

However its is difficult to assign manufacturing overhead costs to product and services since they are indirect costs.

 

 

Predetermined overhead rate is used to assign overhead costs to products and services. It is based on estimated data and it is established before a period begins ( at the beginning of the period )

 

 

Why do we use estimated data ?

Waiting until the period ( month or year ) to actually determine actual overhead cost would be too late. Managers need timely information for decision making purposes such as setting price for cost plus contracts and bidding for contracts and requests for proposals.

 

2 ) Overhead cost sometimes are uniform from month to month while activity may change substantially from month to month and vice versa. We need to average sometimes.

 

 

 

Predetermined overhead rate ( POH) =

Estimated total fixed and variable moh costs/  estimated activity level ( MH, DLH, ETC)

 

 

Assumes ubc allocates overhead cost to jobs on the basis of machine hours , for the coming year in 2013 we estimates that we will incur an amount of 600 000$ in manufacturing overhead and work 75000 machine hours.

 

 

My POH RATE = 600 000 / 75000= $8 PER MH

Refer to previous example now we will apply the manufacturing overhead. If the particular job requires 5000 $ for direct material and 3000 $ for labour, and the job requirement is 500 machine hours to complete the cost of the job therefore will be

 

 

Direct materials   ( actual )      $ 5000

Direct Labour       ( actual )      $3000

Applied MOH                           $ 4000 ( 500*8), as 8$ was my poh rate

 

 

 

What drives an overhead cost?

Cost driver , the incurrence of cost like machine hours as machine hours go up , moh goes up its a direct relationship.

Nowadays since automation we see a divergence towards more fixed costs since automation

Therefore the importance of direct labour is that it is decreasing and that MOH is increasing.

 

If an inaccurate base is used therefore we would yield inaccurate results.

 

 

 

A reminder of the rules of debits and credits would be

Dead = debits increase for (expenses, assets and dividends)

 

 

Assets    liabilities

Dr +         DR –

Cr –          CR+

 

 

Shareholders equity is comprised of common shares and retained earnings

Common shares    Retained earnings

Dr –                                  DR –

CR +                                CR+

 

 

 

Retained earnings is comprised of expenses , dividends and revenues

 

Expenses       dividends                       Revenues

 

Dr +                  DR +                           DR –

Cr –                    CR +                          CR +

 

 

 

 

Now lets take this as an example

 

a)    UBC purchases raw material ( direct and indirect ) purchased on account for an amount of $ 150 000

 

 

Raw material inventory   150000

Accounts payable               150000

 

 

b)    UBC purchases and issues / and requisitioned for used in production  $ 160 000 ( 85 % direct materials and 15 % indirect materials )

 

Work in process inventory      0.85 *160000= 136000

MOH                                        0.15*136000= 24000

Raw material inventory                                        160000

 

 

c)     UBC employee service costs : Direct labour of 200000, Indirect labour 85000, Selling and administrative salaries 90000

 

Work in process  200000

MOH                     85000

Salaries expense  90000

Salaries and wage payable   90000

 

 

d)      UBC Utilities cost for their wood processing factory    40000

MOH    40000

Cash            40000

 

 

e)    Prepaid insurance expired during the year , 20000 ( 80 % factory operations , 20 % selling and administrative expenses)

 

 

MOH                       0.8 *20000 $16000

Insurance expense 0.2*20000     4000                                            period cost

Prepaid insurance                                  20000

 

 

 

f)      UBC Sauder school of business advertising costs incurrence  $ 100 000

 

Advertising expense                    $ 100 000                                             Period cost

Cash                                                     $ 100000

 

 

 

G) Amortization/ Depreciation was recorded on UBC factory assets     $ 145000, and selling and administrative assets  $ 15000

Manufacturing overhead  145000

Amortization expense         15000                                      ( Period cost )

Accumulated amortization           160000

 

 

 

We will never see wage expenses ( factory workers or amortization expense as separate line items on a manufacturing company income statement ? No, these are product costs.

Dm used , dl and applied moh go into WIP, which goes into Finished goods when completed which goes into cogs when sold, therefore cogs is the ultimate expense for all manufacturing costs.

 

 

 

But, wage expense and amortization expense are period costs for the office equipment ,  ( Expensed as incurred)

 

 

 

g)    Manufacturing overhead was applied to WIP. UBC predetermined overhead rate ( poh ) for 2011 was based on the following estimated data. Manufacturing overhead : 315 000 , Direct labour cost 210000

Estimate therefore would be 315000/210000= 150 % of direct labour cost

 

Therefore manufacturing overhead would be activity * rate

200000 * 150 %= 300 000

 

Therefore the journal entry to record the actual moh would be

Work in process inventory  300 000

Manufacturing overheard        300000

 

 

h)    Costs of good manufactured of 650000 was transferred into finished goods.

Therefore this is the cost of goods manufactured.

 

 

We will :

Finished goods inventory 650000

Wip                                   650000

 

i)       Sales for the entire year was on account an amount of 900000 $

Account receivable                    900 000

Sales reveunue                          900 000

 

 

J ) The company gross margin therefore would be 33 .333 % which means the company cost of goods sold is ( 67% )

 

Cost of goods sold          600000

Finished goods                      600000

 

 

 

Raw material inventory

 

 

20000  
a)    150000  B )  160000
 

Balance 10000

 

 

Manufacturing overhead

b)    24000  
c)     85000  
d)    40000  
e)    16000

 

 
f)      145000  
  g)     300000

Therefore actual  310000                                 applied moh 300 000

 

Therefore balance 10000

 

Underappplied moh as actual is greater than applied moh, just to note that the ubc moh is 310000 actual one but what has been applied is only 300 000

 

 

 

Work in process inventory

 

Balance 74000  
136000  
200000  
300000 650000
   

Balance 60000

 

 

 

 

Finished goods inventory

 

Balance 40000  
I ) 650 000  600 000  ( k) cogs
Balance 90 , 000  
   
   

 

Nothe that whatever was credited from Gogm was debited in Finished goods

And also Whatever would be credited from Finshed goods ( GOGS ) would be debited in GOGS

 
 

 

 

GOGS

j)         600 000  
   

 

 

We need to dispose under and overapplied overhead since its  is put into wip account which goes into finished goods and eventually into cogs. Applied overhead is based on a predetermined overhead rate ( poh rate ) at the beginning of the year.

 

By the end of the year then we know that the actual overhead is known. We want to include the actual moh in the wip , FG and GOGS account , however we cant until the the end of the year. During the year , for planning and decision making purposes , we calculate a poh rate and apply overhead to wip.

 

 

We prorate if its material  , which means we allocate the under and over applied overhead to WIP , FG and COGS account if ( material) which is under over applied / actual >=5 %

 

 

Whereas we close under/over applied into gogs if immaterial <5  %

 

 

 

Therefore as 10 000/310000 = 3.2 %

 

Close the balance to cost of goods sold

 

Cost of goods sold 10000

Manufacturing overhead  10 000                Which is immaterial we want to make the underapplied overapplied which is immaterial zero

 

 

 

 

But if the results were Material >=5 %

Work in process inventory 60000 8%
Finished goods 90000 12%
Cost of goods sold

 

 

 

Total

600 000

 

 

 

750000

80%

 

 

 

100%

 

 

 

Therefore we can close the journal entry to get rid of MOH

 

WORK IN PROCESS 8 % *10000   800

FINISHED GOODS    12 %*10000   1200

GOGS                        0.8*    10000   8000

MANUFACTURING OVERHEAD                   10000

 

 

 

Also note that whatever is prorated to wip and finished goods will eventually end up as cost of goods sold next year.

 

 

What are managers biased to do :

Sometimes managers, based on bonus measure on profitability

 

 

Underapplied means that MOH will have a DR balance  and then to close we will debit cost of goods solds and credit MOH. Thus COGS would be higher, there fore managers would want to prorate as it will result in a higher profit based since less than 100 % of cost of goods sold..

 

 

If overapplied this means that moh will have a CR balance and to clise we will credit cost of goods sold and debit MOH.  Thus Cost of goods sold will be lower and therefore managers would prefer to Close to cost of goodsd sold as it will result in a higher profit. ( Since it will result in a higher profit. Since 100 % would be cr into cost of goods sold and a higher bonus thereby.

 

 

 

Therefore for the income statement we will have

 

 

UBC

Income statement

For the year ended December 31, 2011

 

 

Sales revenue                                 $900 000

Cost of goods sold                          $ 610 000

Gross Margin                                   $ 290 000

 

 

Summary of the overhead concepts

 

Estimated overhead costs = Amount of overhead cost that management will be incurred. The estimate is made before period begins in order to compute the predetermined overhead rate

 

 

Actual overhead Cost

 

The amount of overhead cost that is actually incurred in a period ( IDM, IDL, Utilities, rent and so on for the factory )

 

 

Applied overhead cost ( DR WIP. CR MOH)   amount of overhead cost applied to work in process. Amount is computed by multiplying actual actvity used during a period by predetermining overhead rate

 

 

 

General models of cost flow

 

Raw material inventory

 

 

 
Debited for purchases Credited for Dm added to WIP
  Credited for  IM added to MOH
   
   

 

 

 

Work in process inventory

 

Debited for cost of DM used , DL incurred, Applied moh Credited for COGM
   
   
   

 

 

Wage Payable

 

Debited for wages paid ( direct and indirect)  Credited for labour into WIP
  Credited for indirect labour into moh
   

 

 

 

Manufacturing overhead

 

ACTUAL MOH APPLIED MOH
UNDERAPPLIED OVERAPPLIED

 

 

 

FINISHED GOODS INVENTORY

 

GOGM GOGS
   

 

 

GOGS

 

DEBITED COGS  
   

 

 

WORK IN PROCESS

 

Beginning balance  
Dm used ( this period) Cogm
Dl incurred this period  
Applied MOH this period  

 

 

 

 

 

Where COGM = dm used + dl +applied moh + bwip – ewip

 

BWIP= dm used + dl uncured + applied moh

Incomplete at the period

 

 

EWIP

Dm USED + dl incurred + applied moh

Only jobs incomplete at the end of the period

 

 

 

Accounts receivable

Beginning    
Credit sales Collection  
Ending balance    
     

 

 

Accounts payable

 

 

  Beginning balance
  Credit purchase
Payments  
  Ending balance

 

 

 

Wage payable

 

 

  BEGINNING
  WAGES INCURRED
WAGES PAID  
  ENDING BALANCE

 

 

 

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Cost terms , Concepts and Classifications ( 2)

Chapter 2

What is cost ?

Ø  Financial accounting : generally , cash and or fair market value ( FMV ) or non cash consideration given up

Ø  Management accounting has various definitions

Merchandising : These firms buy finished from the manufacturer and resell them.

 

Manufacturing : They buy raw materials and convert them ( add labour and overhead ) into finished goods which are sold to retailers.

 

 

 

Cost of manufactured products/ service

1 ) Direct materials 2) Direct labour  3) Manufacturing overhead

Direct materials

Raw material become an important  of the finished product , can be conveniently traced to the product or service.

 

Cost benefit do the benefits outweigh the cost?

Materiality : Will being exact make a difference in a decision ?

Examples of dm used in a manufacturing a sofa : leather , wood

Indirect materials ( IDM)

What about glue and nails ? Indirect materials

Indirect materials become a part of moh

Direct Labour> Can be physically traced to the creation of the product and be traced to the product / service without undue cost and inconvenience.

Examples : assembly workers

Examples : car repair : Mechanic

 

 

Indirect labour : Cannot be physically traced, becomes part of moh

Examples of manufacturing would be janitorial , factory manager

Examples: Service advisor,reception

 

Compared to a decade ago, now dl is less due to automation
Manufacturing overhead ( MOH )

All cost are manufacturing except dm and dl

 

Examples indirect material , indirect labour , amortization expense.

 

 

Conversation : DL + MOH

Prime cost : DM used + DL

 

Non Manufacturing costs : Marketing costs and administrative costs.

 

Marketing cost/ selling costs : Examples : Advertising , shipping , sales commissions.

Administrative cost :  Top management , CEO, Marketing / selling

 

Period costs : All expenses related to a revenue should be recognized in the same period as that related revenue.

 

All marketing / selling and administrative expenses are period costs.

 

Manufacturing

Cost of goods sold=

 

Beginning finished good

+ GOGM

= Gogafs

– Ending finished goods

= GOGS

where GOGM= dm used + dl incurred + moh + bwip – ewip

 

One example

UBC

Cost of goods manufactured

For the year ended January 31 2012

 

Direct materials

Beginning raw material

+ purchase

Raw material available for use

–  Ending raw material

= Raw material used                                      ans

 

 

Direct labour                                                  ans

 

 

Manufacturing overhead

Indirect materials and indirect labour

Utilities factory

Properties tax and insurance factory

Amortization factory

Total overhead                                            ans for this

 

 

 

Total manufacturing cost would be dm used + dl + total moh

 

Add BWIP which is previous year ending wip December 31 2011

 

Deduct EWIP which is jan 31 2012

 

= Cost of goods manufactured

 

 

Cost classification is

1)    Variable

2)    Fixed

3)    Period

4)    Product

5)    Administrative  – period

 

6)    Selling              – period

7)    Manufacturing – product

8)    Direct labour    – manufacturing cost

9)    Direct material – manufacturing cost

10) Manufacturing overhead – manufacturing cost

 

a)    Cost of fabric in tshirt : Variable cost , product cost , manufacturing cost , direct material

b)    Wages of shirt makers ( piece meal)- variable, product , manufacturing , direct labour

c)     Cost of advertising for tshirts – fixed , selling ,period

d)    Wages for employee per hour for tshirt sewn-  fixed cost

e)    Cost of electricity used in sewing department – variable, product, manufacturing overhead, manufacturing cost

f)      Salaries of Sales personnel : fixed , period, selling  cost

g)    Amortization on the sewing machines- fixed, product cost, manufacturing cost, manufacturing overhead

h)    Rent on building – fixed

1)     Part of the first floor used to make tshirts – product cost, manufacturing cost , manufacturing overhead

2)    Part of building used for retailes sales shop – product cost, selling cost

3)    Second floor was used for administrative offices-  Administrative cost , period

4)    Part of second floor was used for storage of raw materials- Product, manufacturing, manufacturing overhead

 

i)       Salary of the CEO – Fixed , administrative , period

 

Behaviour of cost

Total fixed cost is not affected by change in activity level , total fixed cost remains constant

fixed cost per unit drops as activity level increases and vice versa, inverse relationship

Total variable cost increases and decreases in direct proportion with activity level

Variable cost per unit remains constant per unit

 

 

Short term costs tend to be fixed and non controllable

Long term costs tend to be variable and controllable

 

Other types of cost tend to be

Differential costs

Where in making deciosions we say that a cost is relevant when it differs among alternatives. Ex cost in one alternative but absent in the other alternative

 

Opportunity costs

Potential benefit lost or sacrificed when selecting one course of action meaning to also withdraw a competing course of action

Ex land.

 

Sunk costs

Cost already incurred and cannot be changed, those costs should be ignored since they are totally irrelevant.

 

 

One long example to finish chapter 3

 

We recently had an earthquake in British Columbia and UBC was part of it and lost all its particular records for their next accouting process but one of its students managed to recover some of the information.

DL this year = 290000

Raw material purchased = 290 000

 

Sales = 1200 000

Gross Margin rate was 40 % of sales

Cost of goods available for sales was  810 000

 

 

Prime cost was 410 000

Manufacturing overhead was 70 % of conversion cost

 

Beginning Finished goods was 45000

Beginnning raw materials 18000

Work in process beginning 65000

 

 

Now UBC wants to know  the ending raw materials, ending wip and ending finished goods for their date of the earthquake, what should they do?

 

Lets solve this piece by piece

 

 

 

Sales     1200 000

COGs     60%* 1200000 = 720000

Gross margin 40 % 1200000 = 480 000

 

Prime cost = dm +  dl

410000      = dm + 180000

DM used = 410 000 – 180 000= 230 000

 

 

 

Conversion cost = dl + moh

Dl = 30 % cc

180 000 = 30 % cc

180 000 / 0.3 = CC

CC= 600 000

 

Therefore moh = 600 000 – 180 000= 420 000

 

 

Ending raw materials

Beginning + purchase – ending = raw material used

18000+290000- ending = 230000

Ending = 78000

 

 

 

Ending finished goods

 

Beginning finished goods + COGM – Ending finished goods = COGS

Cogafs- Ending finished goods = COGS

810 000- x =720000

X= 90 000

 

 

Ending Work in process

DM + DL + Moh + BWIP- Ewip= COGM

230 k+ 180 k+ 420 k+ 65 k -765k

EWIP= 130 K

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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What is managerial accounting (1)

Chapter one is a broad interview of managerial accounting. The purpose of financial accounting would be to provide useful information to external users such as investors and creditors. For managerial accounting the decisions are for the internal decision makers such as managers and board of directors. You need information to solve and evaluate information.

We have three objectives for managerial accounting:

A ) To provide information for costing products, services and other objects of interest to management

B) To provide information for planning , control and performance evaluation.

C) Providing information for decision making.

Managers need accounting information, why?

1)    How are the information being used

2)    Managers can identify problems , solve problems and evaluate performance

3)    Accounting information used in all organizations: Manufacturing, Merchandising, service, non profit and government

Imagine you are a CEO of gap store and what are the types of information they need and what decisions going to help you make.

What are the types of information:

Sales Volume, Expense ect

Conceptual framework of management accounting

Four legs of management accounting

 

1)    Planning  2) Control  3) Performance evaluation  4) decision making

Planning : short term planning vs long term planning

Long term planning is more of a strategic plan , what do you want to achieve in the future whereas short term planning is more of a budjet.

For example Telus, beating shaw with optic tv, stealing business from shaw. Strategic planning .

 

Control : Am i sticking to my plan? We compare actual results to planned results ( budjeted result and material differences ( performance report)

 

For example new year resolution . I want to work out 5 times a week in the upcoming year but if i only work out 2 times in one week there is huge difference.

For big businesses with large volume we have to delegate decisions making authority since management and CEO cant really delegate authority. Delegation creates a need for performance evaluation.

 

 

The planning and the Control cycle

 

We plan long term and short term first , then implement plans ( directing and motivating) , Then we measure the performance ( controlling ) , after then we evaluate the differences between plans and actual performances.

 

 

Professional judgment , we say that the results is material if its >= 5 % of budget.

(Actual – budget) /  budget >= 5 % , then we say that the results is significant

Decision making

-In order to make decision there must be choices, thus decision making must be choosing among competing alternatives

– because of information asymmetry ( managers know more about current condition and future prospects of firm than outside investors/ owners and cant be observed continuously.

Managers not always act in the best interest of the company. ( Goal in congruence)

Management accounting

Cost accounting systems

Knowing how cost behave is crucial for successful enterprise

Knowing how cost behave is important for flexible budgeting and cost volume profit analysis ( cvp ) and decision making

 

Cost behaviour can be fixed vs Variable

Fixed can be rent and salary whereas variable can be commissions and such

Knowing how cost behave can help us plan and its only variable cost will change as output changes.Imagine your are ceo of air Canada and last minute i want to go to vegas. The ceo of air Canada is there and i run to him for a private conversation. 20 $ take it or leave it to go to vegas.  What would be decision of CEO?

1)    Accept if the price is greater than the variable cost, exess capacity , request is a special order

Now i say , ill give ceo nothing and just put me on the plane. Take it or leave it?

Knowing the cost going up and down , you will make your decision on this request.

Cost of making , increase in revenue vs increase in cost. Cost going up would be variable cost.

 

 

Comaparison of Financial vs Managerial accounting ( purpose is the same )

Providing ( Useful information to users for decision making )

 

Financial accounting focus on external users : Investors and creditors

Managerial accounting : Management and board of directors

 

 

Financial accounting use gap for external report,  but management accounting dont have to use it only guided by usefulness to managers

The structure of practice tends to be rigid whereas managerial accounting is relatively flexible.

 

From comm 294 class and Libby

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Using Blogs.ubc.ca, to actively share what i am learning at the university with the world

After being done my marketing class with Elaine Sprague , i intend to use this blog to share my knowledge of what im learning at the University of British Columbia, especially at the Sauder school of Buisness with the world. From now on , my blogs will share the notes and the applied material of in class notes from the world class Professors .  It would be amazing to demonstrate what it takes to be an active student in one of the most prestigious University in the country.

Sincerely

Avi x

 

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