TOPIC 2 - Costing Method - ABC
TOPIC 2 - Costing Method - ABC
ACTIVITY BASED
COSTING (ABC)
ACC466
WAN MARDYATUL MIZA WAN TAHIR
Topic outcome:
At the end of this topic, you should be able to:
classify costs according to its function,
traceability and behavior
calculate overhead absorption rate (OAR)
using traditional costing method (TCM)
calculate overhead using activity based
costing (ABC) method
justify the importance and limitation of both
method
Introduction
There are 3 elements of cost:
Direct Materials Prime Cost
• Materials
Indirect Materials
Direct Labour
• Labour
Indirect Labour Overhead
Direct Expenses
• Expenses
Indirect Expenses
Fabric – RM30
Foam – RM400
1 unit of Sofa/Couch
Material cost:
RM500
1 unit of Sofa/Couch
Wages/salary – RM50 Labour cost:
RM50
Costing for Labour
REMUNERATION SCHEMES
1 unit of Sofa/Couch
Overhead cost:
???
Depreciation –
Insurance – RM1,500 per month
RM500 per month
Costing for Overhead
TCM
Overhead
ABC
CLASSIFICATION OF OVERHEAD
4 MAIN GROUPS
Note that in a traditional costing system all of these production overheads would be
absorbed on production volume measured as direct labour/machine hours/unit
production (basis).
STAGES IN ABC
1. Identify the major activities that take place in an
organization.
2. Determining the cost driver to each major
activity.
3. Compute cost driver rate by dividing activities
with cost driver. Cost driver rate (CDR) for each activity
= Overhead cost per activity (RM)
Total cost driver per activity
TOTAL
4,000
60,000
1,200
1,200
100,000
Overhead per unit: 2,800,000
Activity Cost Driver Rate DE1 (RM) DE2 (RM)
SELLING PRICE = COST + Example DE1 profit Margin 20% Example DE1 profit Markup 20%
PROFIT Profit = Cost x 20/80 Profit = Cost x 20/100
= RM155 x 20/80 = RM155 x 20/100
Profit can be expressed as = RM38.75 = RM31
Margin or Markup Selling price Selling price
= RM155 + RM38.75 = RM155 + RM31
Margin is on Selling price = RM193.75 = RM186
Markup is on Total Cost
Comparison between TCM and ABC
product cost
TCM ABC
Production overhead Allocate all production Allocates production
overheads to cost object or overhead cost that is only
products. consumed by particular
products (more accurate).
Basis Allocate overheads using Allocate overhead using
one single basis. multiple cost driver (basis)
based on activity.
Non production overhead Ignore any non production ABC include overhead cost
overhead costs (period (including non production
cost). overhead) which is caused
by the products in the
activity cost pools that are
assigned to the product.
Advantages & disadvantages of traditional
method
• Advantage/importance
– Easy to implement- just need a space and a good filing system
• Disadvantage/limitations
– Not as accurate as ABC systems-this system results in significant
under-costing and over-costing when costs of performing all of
the diverse activities will be contained in one cost pool and will be
divided by single basis.
– outdated costing system in many companies because
manufacturing companies now use machines and computers for
much of their production, instead of labour.
– lead to bad management decisions because it excludes certain
non-manufacturing costs.
Advantages & disadvantages of activity based costing
method
• Advantages/importance
– Applies multiple cost drivers to ascertain a more reliable product
cost
– Provides an opportunity to trace the costs to the activities that
cause the costs.
– This method eliminates allocating irrelevant costs to a product.
– include an easy interpretation of cost for internal management,
the ability to enable benchmarking and a greater understanding
of overhead costs.
• Criticism/limitation
– Difficult to determine the most appropriate cost driver
– Implementation involves high expertise and high costs
– Uses large amount of historic data and may restrict future
decision
ABC in Service Industry
The same steps used in manufacturing organizations can also be used in
service organizations. To understand how ABC could be used in a service
organization, let’s look at how ABC can be used to determine the cost of loan
products at a financial institution.
Imagine you are the chief financial officer of Five Star Bank. You are interested
in implementing an activity-based costing system to evaluate the cost of
different loan products, such as auto loans and home equity loans, offered by
the bank. Let’s look at how five steps of activity-based costing might work when
evaluating the cost of bank loans.
Step 1. Identify costly activities.
Processing loans includes activities such as meeting with customers, reviewing
customer applications, and running credit reports.
Step 2. Assign overhead costs to the activities identified in step 1.
Costs assigned to the activity of reviewing customer applications include items
such as wages of personnel reviewing applications, depreciation of computer
equipment used to review online applications, and supplies needed for the
review process.
ABC in Service Industry
Step 3. Identify the cost driver for each activity.
Activity cost drivers are shown as follows:
Activity Cost Driver
Meeting with customers Hours of meeting time
Reviewing customer applications Number of applications reviewed
Running credit reports Number of credit reports run
Step 4. Calculate a predetermined overhead rate (aka CDR) for each activity.
This is done by dividing estimated overhead costs for each activity by the estimated
cost driver activity. For the activity meeting with customers, this calculation results in
a rate per hour of meeting time. For the activity reviewing customer applications, the
calculation results in a rate per application reviewed, and for running credit reports, a
rate per credit report run.
Step 5. Allocate overhead costs to products.
Overhead is allocated, or applied, to products (auto loans and home equity loans in
this example) based on the use of each activity’s cost driver. If a loan officer reviews
30 auto loan applications, an amount equal to the rate per application reviewed times
30 applications is allocated to the auto loans product.
(Source - https://courses.lumenlearning.com/acctmgrs/chapter/3-5-using-activity-based-costing-abc-and-activity-based-management-abm-in-service-organizations/)