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RN Week 2 - Costs & Costing Students

The document provides an introduction to accounting and finance concepts like costs, costing methods, and marginal costing. It defines different types of costs, explains costing methods like marginal costing and absorption costing, and how to use cost information for pricing decisions. It also discusses concepts of fixed costs, variable costs, contribution and how to calculate them.

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dredre463
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
21 views14 pages

RN Week 2 - Costs & Costing Students

The document provides an introduction to accounting and finance concepts like costs, costing methods, and marginal costing. It defines different types of costs, explains costing methods like marginal costing and absorption costing, and how to use cost information for pricing decisions. It also discusses concepts of fixed costs, variable costs, contribution and how to calculate them.

Uploaded by

dredre463
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Introduction to

Accounting & Finance

Presented by:
Reshma Nanan F.C.C.A, C.A

Costs & costing

1
Learning outcomes

• explain the different classifications given to production


costs
• understand the uses to which cost data can be put
• analyse which costs of production are likely to vary with
output and which will not

Types of costs

• Direct cost
−Costs directly associated with a product
eg. Material cost

• Indirect cost
−Costs that cannot be directly associated with a product
( also called overhead costs or expenses)
eg. rent

2
Methods of costing

• Marginal costing or variable costing


−A method which only takes into account variable costs
& ignores fixed costs in decision making

• Full costing
−Takes into account both direct & indirect costs
associated with the manufacture of a product

Methods of costing

• Absorption costing*
−Where indirect manufacturing or overhead costs are
spread fairly across a range of products

• Activity-based costing*
−Splits the production into activities and departments

• *Beyond the scope of this module

3
Using cost information to price a product

• Pricing a product depends on many factors, including


market factors.
• Businesses may use their costs to calculate their selling
price.
• Two basic methods:
1) Cost plus
2) Margin pricing

Cost + Profit = Selling price

Cost plus pricing

Where the product is priced to achieve a standard mark-


• Mark up % based on cost price

Cost + Profit = Selling Price


100% + 50% = 150%

Mark-up = Gross profit x 100 = 50 x100 = 50%


Cost of sales 100

4
Margin pricing
where the product is priced to achieve a standard margin based on
the selling price.
• Margin % based on selling price

Cost + Profit = Selling Price


75% + 25% = 100%

Gross profit = Gross profit x 100 = 25 x 100 = 33%


margin Sales 75

Question

1) If Sales are £25,000 and Gross Profit margin is 35%, what


is the Cost of Sales?

2) If Cost of Sales is £140,000 and there is a mark-up of


70%, what is Sales?

5
Cost Behavior & Marginal
Costing

Management Accounting

• Decision making
• Planning
• Control

6
Fixed costs
• those costs that remain the same
whatever the level of output
(over a limited range of output).
−Eg. Rent

Costs
£

FC

Activity in units

Variable costs
• Vary directly with the number of units
produced. The Variable Cost of producing
one unit is also known as the MARGINAL
COST.

Eg. Materials cost


Costs
£
VC

Activity in units

7
Total Costs
• The Total Cost is the actual cost incurred in the
production of a given level of output.
• The total cost includes both the variable cost and
the fixed cost
TC = FC + VC
Costs
£
TC

Activity in units

Semi- variable costs


• costs that contain both a fixed and variable
element.
Eg. telephone charges may include a fixed rental
cost plus a charge linked to telephone usage.
Costs
£

S-VC

Activity in units

8
Step-fixed costs
• costs that will remain fixed as output increases until
the activity reaches a level where the costs have to
increase sharply.
Eg. supervision costs where an additional
supervisor is required once a certain level of
output is exceeded.

Costs
£

Step FC

Activity in units

Sales Revenue

£
Costs

SR
Vary directly with the
number of units sold.
= No of units x selling
price per unit

Activity in units

9
Exercise 1

• Sam has established a business selling printed team kits in


UK and India
• He is considering the possibility of manufacturing hand-
strung tennis racquets

Exercise 3
Sam has estimated his costs.

Hire of machine £550 per month to hire

Material costs £8.50 per racquet

Labour costs £9 per hour


- Racquet framing The machine requires one
person to operate it.
Four racquets can be framed
every hour.
- Racquet stringing Staff who string racquets can
hand string 2 racquets in an
hour.

10
Exercise 3 continued

a) From the list of costs, decide which are fixed and which
are variable costs.
Fixed Variable
−Rent of the machine
−Material costs
−Labour costs

Exercise 3 continued

b) what is the variable cost per racquet?

c) what are the total fixed costs in a year?

11
Contribution

Contribution is defined as the difference between the selling


price of a product and the variable costs incurred in
producing that product.

Contribution = Selling Price – Variable Cost


per unit per unit per unit

Total Contribution

Total = Total - Total


Contribution Sales Revenue Variable cost
SR VC

OR

Total = Contribution per unit x Quantity


Contribution

12
Exercise 1

If Sam can sell the racquets at £25 each;


d) Calculate the contribution for each racquet sold

Marginal Costing

• Marginal cost is often defined as: the cost of producing


‘one more unit’.
• Marginal costing therefore effectively ignores fixed costs,
as they are very unlikely to increase if you are only
producing one more unit.
• Marginal cost is normally the same as variable cost
• This approach to costing is useful for short-term decisions
eg:
−Should we accept a special order?
−Should we make a part ourselves or buy it in?

13
Marginal Costing continued..

• Marginal costing data is usually presented in the form of a


marginal costing statement.
• The format of this statement (see next slide) follows the
marginal costing approach, ie:
SP – VC = Contribution
• The statement then considers fixed costs as one lump sum:
Contribution – FC = Profit
The marginal costing statement is actually a simplified
version of an income statement.

Marginal Costing Statement


for the period ended 31 Dec 2017

Per Unit Per year


£ £
Sales revenue 10.00 150,000
Less Variable Cost (5.25) (78,750)
Contribution 4.75 71,250
Less Fixed Cost (50,000)
Profit/Loss 21, 250

14

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