Module 19 n 21

Latoyashs04
module19.pptx

© Cambridge Business Publishers, 2018

Activity-Based Costing, Customer Profitability, and Activity-Based Management

Module 19

Peter D.

EASTON

Robert F.

HALSEY

Mary Lea

McANALLY

Al L.

HARTGRAVES

Wayne J.

MORSE

FINANCIAL & MANAGERIAL ACCOUNTING for MBAs 5e

© Cambridge Business Publishers, 2018

2

Explain the changes in the modern production environment that have affected cost structures.

1

Learning Objective

Changing Cost Environment

© Cambridge Business Publishers, 2018

3

Fundamental shift from labor-intensive to automated assembly

More time is spent by employees

On scheduling

Setting up

Maintaining

Moving materials to and from equipment

Employees keep equipment running efficiently

RESULT

Increase in manufacturing overhead costs

Changing Production Cost Structure

© Cambridge Business Publishers, 2018

4

Many companies’ cost structures are moving to a lower proportion of variable costs and a higher proportion of fixed costs.

© Cambridge Business Publishers, 2018

5

Outline the concept of activity-based costing (ABC) and how it is applied.

2

Learning Objective

Activity-Based Costing (ABC)

© Cambridge Business Publishers, 2018

6

Involves determining the cost of activities and tracing their costs to a cost object on the basis of the cost object’s use of units of activity

Underlying premises

Activities drive costs

Costs should be assigned to products/services in proportion to the volume of activities they consume

Cost Object

© Cambridge Business Publishers, 2018

7

A product or service provided to a customer

Can be a customer

A revenue-producing event for which management wants to know the cost

Activity-Based Costing (ABC)

© Cambridge Business Publishers, 2018

8

Activities performed to fill customer needs consume resources that cost money.

The cost of resources consumed by activities should be assigned to cost objects on the basis of the units of activity consumed by the cost object.

Served by

Customers

Consume

Activities

Have

Resources

Costs

Assigned to

Costs of Resources

Reassigned to*

Activity Pools

Cost Objects

* Based on units of activity utilized by the cost objective

ABC Product Costing Model

© Cambridge Business Publishers, 2018

9

Consists of two stages:

Assignment of manufacturing overhead resource costs to activity cost pools for the key activities identified.

Costs can be indirect labor, insurance, maintenance, depreciation, utilities, etc.

Stage 1:

Assignment of costs from activity cost pools to cost objects

Stage 2:

Direct costs are assigned directly to the final cost objects and are, thus, excluded from the activity cost pools.

ABC Product Costing Model

© Cambridge Business Publishers, 2018

10

Operationalizing the two-stage model requires the following:

Identifying activities

Assigning cost to activities

Determining the basis (activity cost driver) for

assigning the cost of activities to cost object.

Determining the cost per unit of activity

Reassigning costs from the activity to the cost object on the basis of the cost object’s volume of consumption of activities

Most CRITICAL Step

ABC Product Costing Model

© Cambridge Business Publishers, 2018

11

Identifying Activities Example

© Cambridge Business Publishers, 2018

12

Expert Ironworks produces custom heavy duty shelving. Filling customer orders requires acquiring raw materials, manufacturing, and shipping as follows:

Supervisors spend 20% of their time with each employee in

purchasing and receiving.

Other costs related to space of which 25% is occupied by purchasing

and 75% by receiving.

Assigning Costs to Activities Example

© Cambridge Business Publishers, 2018

13

Placing Purchase Orders Receiving Materials
Salaries
Purchasing agents ($7,800 × 3 agents) $23,400
Receiving room employees ($2,400 × 2 employees) $ 4,800
Supervisor
($5,000 × 3/5 purchasing) 3,000
($5,000 × 2/5 receiving) 2,000
Other costs
($4,500 × 25% purchasing) 1,125
($4,500 × 75% receiving) - 3,375
Total $27,525 $10,175

Refining Into Three Activities

© Cambridge Business Publishers, 2018

14

Supervisors were found to spend their time:

30% of receiving time was verifying issues

70% spent on unloading, unpacking, and inspecting issues.

Interviews determined how

receiving room employees spent their time:

15% verifying purchase orders

85% unloading, unpacking, and inspecting.

Placing Purchase Orders Verifying Purchase Orders Unload Unpack Inspect Total Costs
Salaries
Purchasing agents ($7,800 × 3 agents) $23,400
Receiving room employees ($2,400 × 2 emp.)
($2,400 × 2 employees × 15% verifying) $ 720
($2,400 × 2 employees × 85% unload, etc.) $4,080
Supervisor
($5,000 × 3/5 purchasing) 3,000
($5,000 × 2/5 receiving x 30% verifying) 600
($5,000 × 2/5 receiving x 70% verifying) 1,400
Other costs
($4,500 × 25% purchasing) 1,125
($4,500 × 75% receiving) - - 3,375
Total $27,525 $ 1,320 $ 8,855 $37,700

Cost per Unit of Activity

© Cambridge Business Publishers, 2018

15

Each activity results in a different rate

Rates are used to apply costs to cost objectives

Cost per unit of activity cost driver

=

Cost of activity

Units of cost driver

Cost per Unit of Activity

© Cambridge Business Publishers, 2018

16

Each activity results in a different rate

Rates are used to apply costs to cost objects

Assume direct materials totaling $120,000 are to be acquired during the month.

Monthly Costs: Placing Purchase Orders Verifying Purchase Orders Unloading Unpacking Inspecting
Total cost of activity $27,525 $ 1,320 $ 8,855
Units of cost driver:
Number of purchase orders ÷ 300
Number of purchase orders ÷ 300
Number of dollars of materials 120,000
Cost per unit of activity $ 91.75 $ 4.40 $ 0.074

Assigning Activity Costs to Cost Objectives

© Cambridge Business Publishers, 2018

17

Assigning costs to one purchase which has a materials cost of $1,600.

Costs for Purchase Order 1 :
Direct materials costs $ 1,600
Activity costs:
Placing purchase order $ 91.75
Verifying purchase order 4.40
Unloading/unpacking/inspecting ($0.074 × $1,600) 118.40
Costs assigned to cost objective $214.55

Activities & Their Relationship to Purchase Orders

© Cambridge Business Publishers, 2018

18

Purchasing Department $37,700

Resource Costs

Purchase Order 1 $214.55

Other purchase orders $37,485.45

Cost Objects

Placing purchase orders $27,525

Verifying purchase orders $1,320

Unloading/ Unpacking/ Inspecting $8,855

Activity Cost Pool

Assigning Costs to a Job Example

© Cambridge Business Publishers, 2018

19

The following activity costs were determined in the Machining and Finishing Departments:

Machining Dept: Setup $160

Conversion $ 32 per machine hour

Finishing Dept: Polishing $33 per labor hour

Packing $ 5 per pound

If Job 554 requires 21 machine hours in the machining department and 32 labor hours in the finishing department, and weighs 230 pounds, what is the total activity cost assigned to Job 554?

Activity Costs assigned to Job 554:

Machining Department:
Setup $ 160
Conversion ($32 × 21 machine hours) 672
Finishing Department:
Polish ($33 x 32 labor hours) 1,056
Pack ($5 x 230 pounds) 1,150
Total activity cost assigned to Job 554 $3,038

Assigning Costs to a Job Example

© Cambridge Business Publishers, 2018

20

Direct materials and direct labor must be directly traced to determine the total coast of Job 554.

21

Perform product costing using both traditional and activity-based costing methods.

3

© Cambridge Business Publishers, 2018

Learning Objective

Traditional Product Costing

© Cambridge Business Publishers, 2018

22

Plantwide overhead allocations are used often where production of only one product occurs.

Departmental rates produce a more accurate allocation of overhead costs than plantwide rates.

Although product costs determined with department rates may not be as precise as those determined with ABC, they are used because of relative simplicity.

Traditional Product Costing Example

23

Jump Start produces two energy drinks in 800 gallon batches in two departments--mixing and bottling. A total of 60 batches are estimated to be produced with 2,400 machine hours and estimated total manufacturing overhead of $156,000.

Data for the products follows:

Explosion Eruption
Machine hours required per batch Total machine hours 18 hours 1,080 hours 22 hours 1,320 hours
Direct materials cost $260 per batch $380 per batch
Total direct labor cost per batch $80 $100
Total direct labor hours 240 hours 300 hours
Direct labor hours per batch 4 hours 5 hours

© Cambridge Business Publishers, 2018

Traditional Product Costing Example

© Cambridge Business Publishers, 2018

24

Overhead rate: $156,000 ÷ 2,400 = $65 per machine hour

Machine Hours for 60 Batches
Departments Explosion Eruption Total
Mixing 400 600 1,000
Bottling 680 720 1,400
Totals 1,080 1,320 2,400

Additional data:

Machine hours—Explosion: 1,080 ÷ 60 = 18 hours per batch

—Eruption: 1,320 ÷ 60 = 22 hours per batch

Explosion Eruption
Direct materials cost $ 260 $ 380
Direct labor cost 80 100
Overhead cost:
Explosion: 18 hours × $65 1,170
Eruption: 22 hours × $65 0 1,430
Unit cost per batch $ 1,510 $ 1,910

Unit Cost of Each Batch:

Departmental Rates Costing Example

© Cambridge Business Publishers, 2018

25

Assign a portion of the total overhead to the production departments

Assign departmental costs to the products

Two Steps

Additional data:

Direct Labor Hours for 60 Batches
Departments Explosion Eruption Total
Mixing 180 220 400
Bottling 60 80 140
Totals 240 300 540
Machine Hours for 60 Batches
Departments Explosion Eruption Total
Mixing 400 600 1,000
Bottling 680 720 1,400
Totals 1,080 1,320 2,400
Overhead Per Department
Mixing $40,000
Bottling $116,000
Dept. Overhead Application Base
Mixing Direct labor hours in mixing
Bottling Machine hours in bottling

Departmental Rates Costing Example

© Cambridge Business Publishers, 2018

26

Computation of departmental rates:

Overhead costs per activity Mixing Bottling
Department manufacturing overhead $40,000 $116,000
Quantity of overhead application base
Total direct labor hours in mixing ÷ 400
Total machine hours in bottling - ÷ 1,400
Overhead rates per department $ 100.00 $ 82.86
Per direct labor hour Per machine hour

Departmental Rates Costing Example

© Cambridge Business Publishers, 2018

27

Additional data:

Mixing direct labor hours per batch:

Explosion: 180 ÷ 60 = 3.00 direct labor hours

Eruption: 220 ÷ 60 = 3.67 direct labor hours

Bottling machine hours per batch:

Explosion: 680 ÷ 60 = 11.33 machine hours

Eruption: 720 ÷ 60 = 12.00 machine hours

Total Cost per Batch:

Explosion Eruption
Direct materials cost $260 $ 380
Direct labor cost 80 100
Manufacturing overhead
Mixing: $100 × 3 direct labor hours 300
Mixing: $100 × 3.67 direct labor hour 367
Bottling: $82.86 × 11.33 machine hours 939
Bottling: $82.86 × 12 machine hours - 994
Total costs per batch $1,579 $1,841

Applying Overhead with ABC Example

© Cambridge Business Publishers, 2018

28

Additional data:

Overhead Activity Total Activity Cost Activity Cost Driver (Number of) Activity Quantity Unit Activity Rates
Direct department costs—mixing $ 32,000 Labor hours 400 $80.00
Direct department costs—bottling 39,000 Machine hours 1,400 27.86
Common overhead costs
Support services
Receiving 17,000 Purchase orders 320 53.13
Inventory control 15,000 Batches produced 60 250.00
Engineering resources
Production setup 11,000 Production runs 18 611.11
Engineering and testing 16,000 Tests 400 40.00
Building and grounds
Maintenance, machines 12,000 Maintenance visits 150 80.00
Depreciation, machines 14,000 Machine hours 2,400 5.83
$156,000

Applying Overhead with ABC Example

© Cambridge Business Publishers, 2018

29

Explosion Eruption
Overhead costs Rate Activity Cost of Activity Activity Cost of Activity
Mixing $ 80.00 220 $17,600 180 $14,400
Bottling 27.86 680 18,943 720 20,057
Receiving 53.13 240 12,750 80 4,250
Inventory control 250.00 30 7,500 30 7,500
Production setup 611.11 4 2,444 14 8,556
Engineering and testing 40.00 200 8,000 200 8,000
Maintenance, machines 80.00 70 5,600 80 6,400
Depreciation, machines 5.83 1,080 6,300 1,320 7,700
Total overhead product cost $79,137 $76,863

Each activity rate is multiplied by the actual activity to determine the cost allocated to each product batch.

Cost per Unit ABC Example

© Cambridge Business Publishers, 2018

30

There were 60 batches of product resulting in a cost of $1,659 for Explosion and $1,761 for Eruption.

Explosion Eruption
Total factory overhead product cost $79,137 $76,863
Batches produced ÷ 60 ÷ 60
Factory overhead cost per batch 1,319 1,281
Direct material cost per batch 260 380
Direct labor cost per batch 80 100
Total batch product cost using ABC $ 1,659 $ 1,761

ABC provides more accurate cost data for internal decision making.

© Cambridge Business Publishers, 2018

31

Compare activity-based costing to traditional methods. Assess implementation issues involved in activity-based costing systems.

4

Learning Objective

Limitations of ABC

© Cambridge Business Publishers, 2018

32

Complete analysis requires consideration beyond manufacturing costs to include nonmanufacturing

Activity can be measured on practical capacity, actual capacity, or other estimate

Practical capacity preferred over actual capacity because

Does not hide the cost of idle capacity within product costs

Gives a truer cost of activities used to produce the product

Comparing Overhead Cost Allocation Methods

© Cambridge Business Publishers, 2018

33

ABC views operations of the company as activities.

Traditional methods

Undercost Explosion

Overcost Erruption

ABC

Most accurate costing method

Explosion Eruption
Traditional plantwide rate $1,510 $1,910
Traditional departmental rate 1,579 1,841
ABC 1,659 1,761

ABC Implementation Issues

© Cambridge Business Publishers, 2018

34

After switching to ABC, companies may find that only 10 to 15% of their products are profitable

Causes management to alter the product mix by minimizing unprofitable products which causes profits to increase

Implementation mirrors the complexity of the organization

Complete conversion to ABC requires auditors to accept the system when used for financial reporting

© Cambridge Business Publishers, 2018

35

Analyze customer profitability using activity-based costing.

5

Learning Objective

ABC and Customer Profitability

© Cambridge Business Publishers, 2018

36

ABC may be used for customer profitability analysis

Customer costs to be analyzed

Cost incurred to sell the goods or services

Cost incurred to provide service

Actions possible from analysis

Convert customers to profitability or increase profitability

Seek to terminate unprofitable customer relationships

Customer Profitability Profile Graph

© Cambridge Business Publishers, 2018

37

Once a company knows the amount of profits or losses generated by each customer, it can create a customer profitability profile.

ABC Customer Profitability Analysis

© Cambridge Business Publishers, 2018

38

Step 1: Identify the activities related to serving customers.

Step 2: Prepare a customer profitability analysis.

Step 3: Take proactive steps to increase profit.

ABC Customer Profitability Analysis Example

39

Manning Building Supplies prepared the following list concerning its customer activities:

Activity Activity Cost Driver Cost per Unit of Driver Activity
Visits to customers Visits $400
Remote contact Number of contacts 30
Processing and shipping Customer orders 150
Repackaging Number of requests 120
Billing and collection Invoices 40

The largest customer, Haskell Construction, will be analyzed.

© Cambridge Business Publishers, 2018

ABC Customer Profitability Analysis Example

40

Customer cost information:

Activity Activity Cost Driver Cost per Unit of Activity
Visits to customers Visits $400
Remote contact Number of contacts 30
Processing and shipping Customer orders 150
Repackaging Number of requests 120
Billing and collection Invoices 40

Customer activity costs for Haskell Construction:

Activity Cost Driver Data Cost per Unit of Driver Activity Customer Activity Cost
Visits to customers 4 $400 $1,600
Remote contact 3 30 90
Processing and shipping 6 150 900
Repackaging 2 120 240
Billing and collection 5 40 200
Total customer activity cost $3,030

© Cambridge Business Publishers, 2018

ABC Customer Profitability Analysis Example

41

Customer profitability ratio: $13,970 / $79,000 = 17.7%

Customer Profitability Analysis:
Customer sales $79,000.
Less cost of goods sold 62,000.
Gross profit on sales 17,000.
Less activity costs (3,030)
Customer profitability $13,970.

Customers found to generate lower profitability should be flagged and efforts made to correct the situation or terminate the customer.

© Cambridge Business Publishers, 2018

42

Explain the difference between activity-based costing and activity-based management.

6

© Cambridge Business Publishers, 2018

Learning Objective

Activity-Based Management

43

Identification and selection of activities to maximize the value of activities while minimizing their cost from the perspective of the final consumer

Helps focus managerial attention on what is most important among the activities performed to create value for customers

© Cambridge Business Publishers, 2018

Activity-Based Costing

© Cambridge Business Publishers, 2018

44

The evolution of ABC within the context of a product life cycle.

Introduced in the 1980’s

Expanded functionality

4th Generation

Activity-Based Costing

© Cambridge Business Publishers, 2018

45

Integral part of business performance management solutions.

Profitability management

Performance measurement

Financial management

Sustainability

Human capital management

Activity-Based Costing

© Cambridge Business Publishers, 2018

46

In its current state, a single ABC model can support a number of needs including:

Historical Cost Measurement

Resource Planning

Performance Measurement

Other Analyses

The End