Chapter 3
Chapter 3
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Introduction to Management
Accounting
Chapter 3
Measurement of Cost
Behavior
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Linear-cost Behavior
Costs are assumed to be fixed or
variable within the relevant
range of activity
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Learning
Objective 2
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Cost-Control Incentives
Managers use their
knowledge of cost
behavior to set
cost expectations.
Employees may
Receive rewards that
are tied to meeting
these expectations.
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Learning
Objective 3
Cost Functions
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Cost Functions
Understanding relationships between costs
and their cost drivers allows managers to...
Make better operating, marketing,
And production decisions
Plan and evaluate actions
Determine appropriate costs for
short-run and long-run decisions.
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Cost Functions
The first step in estimating or predicting
costs is measuring cost behavior as a
function of appropriate cost drivers.
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Reliability:
A cost functions estimates of costs
at actual levels of activity must reliably
conform with actually observed costs.
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Learning
Objective 5
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Engineering analysis
Account analysis
High-low analysis
Visual-fit analysis
Least-squares regression analysis
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Engineering Analysis
Engineering analysis measures cost behavior
according to what costs should be,
not by what costs have been.
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Account Analysis
st
Fixed
Variable
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High-Low Method
Plot historical data points on a graph.
Focus on the highest- and lowest-activity points.
High month: April
Maintenance cost: $47,000
Number of patient-days: 4,900
Low month: September
Maintenance cost: $17,000
Number of patient-days: 1,200
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Visual-Fit Method
In the visual-fit method, the cost analyst
visually fits a straight line through a plot
of all of the available data, not just
between the high point and the
low point, making it more reliable
than the high-low method.
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The End
End of Chapter 3
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