This document outlines the contents of a textbook on managerial accounting. It covers 8 chapters, including introductions to managerial accounting and cost classification/estimation. Managerial accounting provides internal managers with information for planning, directing, controlling and decision making. It differs from financial accounting in prioritizing relevance, flexibility and timeliness over objectivity. Costs are classified in various ways depending on the purpose, and whether they can be directly traced to a cost object. Indirect costs include overheads associated with production, administration and selling/distribution. The classification of a cost as direct or indirect depends on the chosen cost object.
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This document outlines the contents of a textbook on managerial accounting. It covers 8 chapters, including introductions to managerial accounting and cost classification/estimation. Managerial accounting provides internal managers with information for planning, directing, controlling and decision making. It differs from financial accounting in prioritizing relevance, flexibility and timeliness over objectivity. Costs are classified in various ways depending on the purpose, and whether they can be directly traced to a cost object. Indirect costs include overheads associated with production, administration and selling/distribution. The classification of a cost as direct or indirect depends on the chosen cost object.
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MANAGERIAL ACCOUNTING
by Assoc. Prof. Dr. Nguyen Thi Phuong Hoa CONTENTS Chapter 1: Introduction to management accounting, cost classification and estimation Chapter 2: Product costing systems
Chapter 3: Overhead costing
Chapter 4: Decision-making using relevant information
Chapter 5: Standard costs and Differential Analysis
II. Cost classification III. Cost estimation I. FEATURES OF MANAGERIAL ACCOUNTING Accounting is the process of 3 basic activities: identifying, recording and reporting/communicating economic events/transactions of an organisation to interested users To identify economic events/transactions, a company selects economic events relevant to its business, then Records those events/transactions in order to provide a history of its financial activities, then Communicates the collected information to interested users by means of accounting reports, commonly called financial statements (FS) Management accounting in concerned with providing information for managers – that is people inside an organisation who direct + control its operations MA provides the essential data with which organisations are actually run Financial accounting is concerned with providing information to shareholders, creditors, + others who are outside an organisation FA provides the scorecard by which a company’ past performance is judged B/c it is manager oriented, study of MA must be preceded by some understanding of what managers do, the information managers need + the general business environment DIFFERENCES BETWEEN MA + FA FA MA Reports to those outside the Reports to those inside the organisation: shareholders, creditors, organisation for: planning, directing + tax authorities, regulators… motivating, controlling , performance evaluation + decision making Emphasis is on summaries of financial Emphasis is on decisions affecting the consequences of past activities future Objectivity + verifiability of data are Relevance + flexibility of data are emphasized emphasized Precision of information is required Timeliness of info is required Only summarized data for the entire Detailed segment reports, about dept, organisation are prepared products, customers are prepared Must follow IFRS Need not follow IFRS Mandatory for external report Not mandatory Managers of any organisation carry out 4 major activities: (i) planning: identifying alternatives + selecting the one that does the best job of furthering the organisation’s objectives (ii) directing + motivating: mobilizing people to carry out plans and budgets + run routine operations (iii) controlling: ensuring that the plan is actually carried out + appropriately modified as situations change. Feedback is the key to effective control (iv) decision making: selecting a course of action from competing alternatives The role of MA: MA assist managers in carrying out their responsibilities, which include planning, directing and motivating, controlling, and decision making Useful MA information should be: Relevant: information must have an overall effect on the decision suitable and timely Reliable: information must be correct and be able to be checked Comparable: information must be able to be compared Understandable: management may comprehend MA information Material: the information provided must be important in terms of the overall decision II. COST CLASSIFICATION Cost: a resource sacrified/forgone to achieve a specific objective. E.g. to achieve 50 kilos of cement as raw material we have to pay USD5, so USD5 is the cost of 50 kilos of cement Cost object: anything for which a separate measure of cost is needed. E.g. a product, service, a project, a customer, a brand category, an activity, a department Actual cost: the cost incurred Budgeted cost: predicted/forecasted cost Cost accumulation: the collection of cost data in some organized way by means of an accounting system Cost centres In general, departments are termed cost centres + the product produced is a cost unit When costs are incurred, they are generally allocated to a cost centre. A cost centre acts as a collecting place for certain costs b/f they are analysed further A cost centre can be a department, machine, project, a new product. A product cost: the sum of the costs assigned to a product for a specific purpose Different purposes result in different measures of product cost: Pricing decision: assigned costs incurred in all business functions of the value chain to different products Contracting with government agencies: production costs plus design cost and part of R&D cost Preparing FSs under GAAPs: only manufacturing costs can be assigned to products (inventories) in the FS COST CLASSIFICATION Types of costs are different based on purposes of the users of the information The classification of costs is relative Manufacturing costs and non-manufacturing costs Product costs + period costs Direct + indirect costs (classification for assigning costs to cost objects) Fixed + variable costs (classification for cost behavior analysis) Differential costs, opportunity costs, sunk costs (classification for decision making) Controllable + non-controllable costs (classification for controlling) Manufacturing costs: include direct material costs: costs of materials that go into the final product direct labour costs: costs of labour that can easily be traced to individual units of product manufacturing overheads: all costs of manufacturing except direct materials + direct labour Non-manufacturing costs: include selling (or marketing) costs: all costs necessary to secure customer orders + get the finished product/service into the hand of the customer administrative costs: all executive, organisational + clerical costs associated with general management of an organisation COST CLASSIFICATION FOR STOCK VALUATION + PROFIT MEASUREMENT Direct costs: costs that can be traced in full to the product, service, or department that is being costed Eg: direct materials costs, direct labour costs, other direct expenses Indirect costs (or overheads): costs that are related to the particular cost object but cannot be traced directly or in full to the product, service Materials cost = Direct materials + Indirect materials cost cost + Labour cost = Direct labour cost + Indirect labour costs + expenses = Direct expenses + Indirect expenses
Total costs = Direct costs + Indirect cost
Total direct cost is often called prime cost Direct material is all material becoming part of the product. Examples: components parts, part-finished work, primary packing materials
Materials used in negligible amount can be grouped
under indirect materials as part of overhead Direct wages: all wages paid for labour (either as basic hours/overtime) expended on work on the product itself Direct expenses: any expenses incurred on a specific product other than direct material cost and direct wages. Examples: The cost of special designs, drawings, layout The hire of tools/equipment for a particular job Maintenance costs of tools, fixtures
Overheads: all indirect material cost, indirect wages
and indirect expenses incurred by a business Overheads associated with the production process: Indirect materials which cannot be traced in the finished product. Eg. Consumable stores: materials used in negligible amounts Indirect wages: salaries +wages of non-productive personnel (eg supervisors, cleaners) in the production department Indirect expenses: rent, rates + insurance of a factory, depreciation, fuel, power, repairs + maintenance of plants, machinery + factories Overheads associated with administration of the business: Depreciation of office equipment Office salaries Rent, rates insurance, lighting, cleaning + heating of general offices, telephone + postal charges, bank charges, legal charges, audit fees Overheads incurred in selling + distribution of goods: Printing + stationery Cost of packing cases Salaries + commission of sales representatives + sales staff, wages of packers, drivers, despatch clerks Advertising + sales promotion, market research Rent, rates + insurance of sales offices, bad debts + collection charges, cash discounts allowed, after sales services Freight + insurance charges, depreciation of warehouses, vehicles INDIRECT OR DIRECT? A cost classification can vary as the chosen cost object varies Consider a factory supervisor’s salary: If the cost object is a product the factory supervisor’s salary is an indirect cost If the factory is the cost object, the factory supervisor’s salary is a direct cost Product costs: costs identified with a finished product. costs of purchasing or manufacturing of goods. Are initially identified as part of the value of stock. They become expenses (in the form of cost of goods sold) only when the stock is sold Period cost: associated with time periods. They are deducted as expenses during the current period without being included in the value of stock held COST CLASSIFICATION FOR DECISION MAKING Variable costs: vary with the level of activity. Eg. Direct material costs, sales commission, telephone charges Fixed costs: costs incurred for a particular period of time + which, within certain activity levels, is unaffected by changes in the level of activity. Eg. Rental cost of business premises COST CLASSIFICATION FOR CONTROL Controllable costs: Cost that can be influenced by a manager’s decisions and actions Uncontrollable costs: Cost that cannot be affected by management within a given time span CVP ANALYSIS Breakeven analysis: P*Q = FC + VCU*Q Breakeven quantity (Q) = FC/(P - VCU) Target profit analysis: P*Q = FC + VCU*Q + TP Q = (FC + TP)/(P - VCU) Contribution margin = P*Q – VCU*Q Contribution margin per unit = P – VCU Margin of safety = budgeted (actual) sales – breakeven sales Margin of safety percentage = margin of safety/budgeted (or actual) sales Sales mix: the relative proportions in which a company’s products sold Exercises of Hongren et al. (2015) EXERCISE:
Jenny runs a small business in leather shoes trading.
She rented a shop for VND20 million per month. The selling price is VND3 million per pair of shoes. The purchasing price is VND2 million per pair of shoes. Required: (i) how many pairs of shoes should be sold each month to get breakeven? (ii) how many pairs of shoes should be sold each month for getting target profit of VND50 million per month? (iii) now assume that Jen recruits a saleman with monthly salary of VND 3 mill. and 5% of revenue, how many pairs of shoes should be sold each month to get breakeven? III. COST ESTIMATION Involves the measurement of historical costs to predict future costs Cost estimation methods Some techniques are more sophisticated than others + are thus likely to be more reliable but the simple techniques are more commonly found + should give estimates that are sufficiently accurate for their purpose Account-classification methods or engineering method The manager responsible for estimating costs will go through a list of the individual expenditure items. Each item will be classified as fixed, variable or semi-variable, + values will be assigned to these, probably by reference to the historical cost accounts with an adjustment for estimated cost inflation This technique depends on the subjective judgement of each manager + his skill + realism in estimating costs, so only an approximate accuracy can be expected High/low method Use data of high performance and low performance to estimate the cost function. Then the cost function is used to estimate future costs. Drawback: only two historical cost records from previous periods are used. Advantage: relative simplicity. The scatter graph A graph can be plotted of the historical costs from previous periods, + from the resulting scatter diagram, a line of best fit can be drawn by visual estimation The advantage of this method over the high/low method is that a greater quantity of historical data is used in the estimation. The disadvantage is that the cost line is drawn by visual judgement + is a subjective approximation THE COST OF FACTORY POWER IS IN THE FOLLOWING TABLE. BUDGETED PRODUCTION FOR 20X5 IS 10,200 UNITS. ESTIMATE THE COST OF FACTORY POWER WHICH WILL BE INCURRED?