MI1 Chapter 1
MI1 Chapter 1
• The financial accounting and cost accounting systems both record the
same basic data but each set of records may analyse the data in a
different way
1.1. The cost accountant
• What was the cost of goods produced or services provided last week?
• What are the future costs of goods and services likely to be?
Board of directors
Board of directors
Definition:
• Composite cost units are cost units being made up of two parts.
+ + +
Labour cost = Direct labour cost + Indirect labour cost
+ + +
Expenses = Direct expenses + Indirect expenses
Total cost = Direct cost/prime cost + Indirect cost/overhead
3.3.1. Production overhead
• Production (or manufacturing) overhead includes all indirect
material costs, indirect wages and indirect expenses incurred in the
factory from receipt of the order until its completion, including:
‐ Indirect material (e.g. material used across several different
products)
‐ Indirect wages (e.g. supervisors’ salaries)
‐ Indirect expenses (e.g. depreciation of plan and buildings)
3.3.2. Administration overhead
• Administration overhead is all indirect material costs, wages and
expenses incurred in the direction, control and administration of
an undertaking, including:
‐ Depreciation of office equipment
‐ Office salaries, including the salaries of secretaries and accountants
‐ Rent, rates, insurance, telephone, heat and light cost of general
offices
3.3.3. Selling overhead
• Selling overhead is all indirect materials costs, wages and expenses
incurred in promoting sales and retaining customers, including:
‐ Advertising cost
‐ Sales promotion
‐ Printing of catalogues and price list
‐ Salaries and commissions of salesmen
‐ Sales department’s costs like staff, rent, rates and insurance of showroom
‐ Cost of free samples to customers
3.3.4. Distribution overhead
• Distribution overhead is all indirect material costs, wages and
expenses incurred in making the packed product ready for
despatch and delivering it to the customer, such as:
‐ Packing cost
‐ Wages of packing staff, drivers, dispatch clerks
‐ Rent and rates, insurance and depreciation of finished goods
warehouse
‐ Cost of delivery of finished goods
3.4. Product costs and period costs
• Product costs are costs of making or buying an item of inventory.
(such as materials, labour and other expenses)
• Period costs are costs deducted as expenses during a particular period.
Those costs relate to the passage of time rather than the output of
individual product or service and often presented on Income
Statement. (salaries, rent of the building, etc.)
4. Cost classification for planning and
decision making
• Costs can be classified according to how they vary in relation to the
level of activity.
• A knowledge of how the cost incurred varies at different activity levels
is essential to planning and decision making.
4.1. Cost behavior patterns
• A knowledge of how the cost incurred varies at different levels of
activity is essential to planning and decision making.
• Cost behaviour patterns are the way that costs vary in relation to the
level of activity.
• The level of activity can be measured in different ways depending on
the circumstances. For example:
‐ The number of products produced in a period
‐ The number of items sold
‐ The number of machine hours
4.2. Fixed costs
• Fixed cost is a cost, within a relevant range of activity levels and a
particular period of time, is not affected by changes in the level of
activity.
4.2. Fixed costs
• Examples:
‐ The rental cost of business premises is a constant amount, at least
within a stated time period, and so it is a fixed cost.
‐ Straight-line depreciation.
4.3. Variable costs
• Variable cost is a cost that changes as the level of activity increases or
decreases.
4.3. Variable costs
• Examples:
‐ Direct material costs are variable costs because they rise as more
units of a product are manufactured.
‐ Sales commission is often a fixed percentage of sales turnover, and
so is a variable cost that varies with the level of sales
4.4. Semi-variable costs
• Semi-variable, semi-fixed or mixed costs are costs that are part-fixed
and part-variable and are therefore partly affected by changes in the
level of activity.
4.4. Semi-variable costs
• Examples:
‐ Bills (electricity, gas…)
‐ Guaranteed wage
‐ Cost of running car
4.5. Cost behaviour and total and unit costs
• As the level of activity increases the total costs per unit (fixed cost
plus variable cost) will decrease.
4.5. Cost behaviour and total and unit costs
Summary of cost behaviour patterns:
- If activity is increase:
+ VC per unit are constant
+ FC per unit will fall
+ TC per unit will fall
4.6. The relevant range
• The relevant range is the range of activity levels within which
assumed cost behaviour patterns occur.
5. Cost classification for control
• For control purposes the most effective classification of costs is by
responsibility
• A system of responsibility accounting segregates costs and revenues
into areas of personal responsibility in order to monitor and assess the
performance of each part of the organisation
5.1. Responsibility accounting
• Responsibility accounting is a system of accounting that segregates
revenue and costs into areas of personal responsibility in order to
monitor and assess the performance of each part of an organisation.
• A responsibility centre is a department or function whose
performance is the direct responsibility of a specific manager.
5.2. Controllable and uncontrollable costs
• Controllable costs are costs that can be influenced by managers
• Examples: Materials used for production, wages paid to production
workers, etc. can be controlled by production managers.
• Uncontrollable costs are costs that cannot be affected by managers or
some specific managers within a given time span.
• Examples: Production costs can be classified as uncontrollable costs
for sales managers.
5.2. Controllable and uncontrollable costs
A cost that is not controllable by a manager in one department may be
controllable by a manager in another department
A cost that is not controllable by a junior manager might be
controllable by a senior manager
6. Ethics
• A professional accountant is defined by ICAEW as ‘an individual
who is a member of an IFAC member body’.
• A professional accountant in business is defined as ‘a professional
accountant employed or engaged in an executive or non-executive
capacity in such areas as commerce, industry, service, the public
sector, education, the not for profit sector, regulatory bodies or
professional bodies, or a professional accountant contracted by such
entities.’
6. Ethics