Target and Life Cycle Costing
Target and Life Cycle Costing
Target costing and lifecycle costing can be regarded as relatively modern advances in
management accounting, so it is worth first looking at the approach taken by
conventional costing.
Typically, conventional costing attempts to work out the cost of producing an item
incorporating the costs of resources that are currently used or consumed. Therefore, for
each unit made the classical variable costs of material, direct labour and variable
overheads are included (the total of these is the marginal cost of production), together
with a share of the fixed production costs. The fixed production costs can be included
using a conventional overhead absorption rate (absorption costing (AC)) or they can be
accounted for using activity-based costing (ABC). ABC is more complex but almost
certainly more accurate. However, whether conventional overhead treatment or ABC is
used the overheads incorporated are usually based on the budgeted overheads for the
current period.
Once the total absorption cost of units has been calculated, a mark-up (or gross profit
percentage) is used to determine the selling price and the profit per unit. The mark-up is
chosen so that if the budgeted sales are achieved, the organisation should make a
profit.
1. The product’s price is based on its cost, but no-one might want to buy at that
price. The product might incorporate features which customers do not value and
therefore do not want to pay for, and competitors’ products might be cheaper, or
at least offer better value for money. This flaw is addressed by target costing.
2. The costs incorporated are the current costs only. They are the marginal costs
plus a share of the fixed costs for the current accounting period. There may be
other important costs which are not part of these categories, but without which
the goods could not have been made. Examples include the research and
development costs and any close down costs incurred at the end of the product’s
life. Why have these costs been excluded, particularly when selling prices have
to be high enough to ensure that the product makes an overall profit for the
company. To make a profit, total revenue must exceed total costs in the long-
term. This flaw is addressed by lifecycle costing.
Target costing
Target costing is very much a marketing approach to costing. The Chartered Institute of
Marketing defines marketing as:
In marketing, customers rule, and marketing departments attempt to find answers to the
following questions:
Marketing says that there is no point in management, engineers and accountants sitting
in darkened rooms dreaming up products, putting them into production, adding on, say
50% for mark-up then hoping those products sell. At best this is corporate arrogance; at
worst it is corporate suicide.
Note that marketing is not a passive approach, and management cannot simply rely on
customers volunteering their ideas. Management should anticipate customer
requirements, perhaps by developing prototypes and using other market research
techniques.
Example:
If a company normally expects a mark-up on cost of 50% and estimates that a new
product will sell successfully at a price of $12, then the maximum cost of production
should be $8:
Cost
100%
$8 + Mark-up = Selling price
50% 150%
$4 $12
This is a powerful discipline imposed on the company. The main results are:
Here are some of the decisions, made at the design stage, which can affect the cost of
a product:
You will see from this list that activity-based costing can also play an important part in
target costing. By understanding the cost drivers (cost causers) a company can better
control its costs. For example, costs could be driven down by increasing batch size, or
reducing the number of components that have to be handled by stores. The concept of
value engineering (or value analysis) can be important here. Value engineering aims to
reduce costs by identifying those parts of a product or service which do not add value –
where ‘value’ is made up of both:
use value (the ability of the product or service to do what it sets out to do – its
function) and
esteem value (the status that ownership or use confers)
The aim of value engineering is to maximise use and esteem values while reducing
costs. For example, if you are selling perfume, the design of its packaging is important.
The perfume could be held in a plain glass (or plastic) bottle, and although that would
not damage the use value of the product, it would damage the esteem value. The
company would be unwise to try to reduce costs by economising too much on
packaging. Similarly, if a company is trying to reduce the costs of manufacturing a car,
there might be many components that could be satisfactorily replaced by cheaper or
simpler ones without damaging either use or esteem values. However, there will be
some components that are vital to use value (perhaps elements of the suspension
system) and others which endow the product with esteem value (the quality of the paint
and the upholstery).
Lifecycle costing
As mentioned above, target costing places great emphasis on controlling costs by good
product design and production planning, but those up-front activities also cause costs.
There might be other costs incurred after a product is sold such as warranty costs and
plant decommissioning. When seeking to make a profit on a product it is essential that
the total revenue arising from the product exceeds total costs, whether these costs are
incurred before, during or after the product is produced. This is the concept of life cycle
costing, and it is important to realise that target costs can be driven down by attacking
any of the costs that relate to any part of a product’s life. The cost phases of a product
can be identified as:
There are four principal lessons to be learned from lifecycle costing:
All costs should be taken into account when working out the cost of a unit and its
profitability.
Attention to all costs will help to reduce the cost per unit and will help an
organisation achieve its target cost.
Many costs will be linked. For example, more attention to design can reduce
manufacturing and warranty costs. More attention to training can machine
maintenance costs. More attention to waste disposal during manufacturing can
reduce end-of life costs.
Costs are committed and incurred at very different times. A committed cost is a
cost that will be incurred in the future because of decisions that have already
been made. Costs are incurred only when a resource is used.
Typically, the following pattern of costs committed and costs incurred is observed:
The diagram shows that by the end of the design phase approximately 80% of costs are
committed. For example, the design will largely dictate material, labour and machine
costs. The company can try to haggle with suppliers over the cost of components but if,
for example, the design specifies 10 units of a certain component, negotiating with
suppliers is likely to have only a small overall effect on costs. A bigger cost decrease
would be obtained if the design had specified only eight units of the component. The
design phase locks the company in to most future costs and it this phase which gives
the company its greatest opportunities to reduce those costs.
Conventional costing records costs only as they are incurred, but recording those costs
is different to controlling those costs and performance management depends on cost
control, not cost measurement.
A company is planning a new product. Market research information suggests that the
product should sell 10,000 units at $21.00/unit. The company seeks to make a mark-up
of 40% product cost. It is estimated that the lifetime costs of the product will be as
follows:
Solution:
The target cost of the product can be calculated as follows:
(a)
Cost
100%
$15 + Mark-up = Selling price
40% 140%
$6 $21
(b) The original life cycle cost per unit = ($50,000 + (10,000 x $10) + $20,000)/10,000 =
$17
This cost/unit is above the target cost per unit, so the product is not worth making.
(c) Maximum total cost per unit = $15. Some of this will be caused by the design and
end of life costs:
Therefore, the maximum manufacturing cost per unit would have to fall from $10 to ($15
– $8.50) = $6.50.