Activity Base Costing-Presentation-vuguide.tk

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ACTIVITY ACTIVITY BASED BASED

COSTINGCOSTINGMUHAMMAD AZEEM

VUGUIDE.TK

ROADMAP OF THE PRESENTATION

WHAT IS COST?

IMPORTANCE OF TRUE PRODUCT COST

METHODS OF CALCULATING COST

IMPORTANTANCE OF ACTIVITY-BASED COSTING

STEPS FOR IMPLEMENTING ACTIVITY-BASED

COSTING

TRADITIONAL COSTING VS ACTIVITY-BASED

COSTING

COST COLOURS

LIMITATIONS OF ACTIVITY BASED COSTING

SUMMARY

WHAT IS COST? According To American Accounting

Association

WHY KNOWLEDGE OF TRUE PRODUCT COST IMPORTANT?

To discover opportunities for cost

improvements

To prepare and actualize a business plan

To improve strategic decision making

METHODS OF CALCULATING COST

1. Direct costing

2. Traditional costing

3. Activity based costing

(ABC)

ACTIVITY-BASED COSTING

Activity-based costing is a method that is

designed to provide management with

cost information

Activity-based costing is ordinarily used

as supplement

Most organization that use Activity-based

costing have 2 costing systems

IN ACTIVITY-BASED COSTING Non manufacturing as well as

manufacturing costs may be assigned to

product

Some manufacturing costs may be

excluded from product cost

A number of overhead cost pools are

used each of which is allocated to

product

The allocation basis often differ from those used in traditional costing system

Overhead rates may be based

on level of activity

WHY ACTIVITY-BASED COSTING IS IMPORTANT?

Major advantage of using Activity-

based costing is that it avoids or

minimizes distortion in product

costing

Activity-based costing generates

useful information

Activity-based costing also

provides a clear metric for

improvement

Activity-based costing

encourages management to

evaluate efficiency

STEPS FOR IMPLEMENTING ACTIVITY-BASED COSTING

STEP 1: IDENTIFY AND DEFINE ACTIVITIES AND ACTIVITY COST POOLS

STEP 2: DIRECTLY TRACE OVERHEAD COSTS TO ACTIVITY AND COST OBJECTS

STEP3: ASSIGN COSTS TO ACTIVITY COST POOLS

STEP 4: CALCULATE ACTIVITY RATES

STEP 5: ASSIGN COST TO COST OBJECTS

STEP 6: PREPARE MANAGEMENT REPORT

TRADITIONAL TRADITIONAL COSTINGCOSTING

VS VS

ACTIVITY-BASED ACTIVITY-BASED COSTINGCOSTING

TRADITIONAL TRADITIONAL COSTINGCOSTING

ACTIVITY-BASED ACTIVITY-BASED COSTINGCOSTING

1. NON MANUFACTURING COSTS

Only manufacturing costs are assigned to products

Products are assigned all overhead costs – manufacturing as well as non manufacturing

2. MANUFACTURING COSTS

All manufacturing costs are assigned to products

Products are assigned all overhead costs – manufacturing as well as non manufacturing

COST OF IDLE CAPACITY

TRADITIONAL COSTING SYSTEM

ACTIVITY-BASED COSTING SYSTEM

• Predetermined overhead rates are computed

Rate = ESTIMATED FOH BASE

This results in

• Products are

charged for the costs

of capacity they use

• The costs of idle

capacity are not

charged to products

This results in • more stable unit costs• consistency with the objective of assigning

• Applying idle capacity costs to products• Unstable unit product costs

FLOW OF ACTIVITIES

ACTIVITY-BASED COSTING MODEL

TRADITIONAL COSTING SYSTEM

CONSUMPTION OF RESOURCES VS CONSUMPTION OF ACTIVITIES

Activity-based costing assumes

Products consume activities

Activities consume resources

Traditional Costing assumes

cost objects consume resources

STRUCTURE-ORIENTATION VERSUS PROCESS-ORIENTATION

TRADITIONAL COSTING SYSTEM

ACTIVITY-BASED COSTING SYSTEM

• Traditional costing

systems are more

concerned about

the organizational

charts than the

actual process

• result

capacity management

unknown

• ABC gathers

information from the

processes

• result

both capacity management

and resource management

is known

COST COLOURS

There are three colours used for cost classification.

1. GREEN COLOUR COST:

automatically adjusts with changes in

activity

management action not required

EXAMPLE

direct material cost

shipping cost, etc.

2. YELLOW COLOUR COST:

need to be adjusted with changes in

activity

management action required

EXAMPLE

direct labor cost

indirect factory wages

factory utilities

3. RED COLOUR COST:

management action required to

adjust these costs

difficult to change with activity

EXAMPLE

Factory equipment depreciation

Factory/Administration building lease

LIMITATIONS OF ACTIVITY BASED COSTING

Activity-based costing is more costly to

maintain than a traditional labor costing

system

Activity-based costing does not have full

support of top management

Activity-based costing can easily be

misinterpreted

Organization using activity-based costing

have to maintain 2 cost systems

SUMMARY

Activity-based costing estimates the

cost of sources consumed by cost

objects such as product and customers

The approach taken in activity-based

costing assumes that cost objects

generate activities that in turn

consumes costly resources.

Activities form the link between costs

and cost objects

Activity-based costing is concerned

with overhead – both manufacturing

overhead and selling, general, and

administrative overhead

Recommended