chapter 3 Flashcards
cost pool
grouping of individual cost items. can range from very broad to very narrow.
cost-allocation base
factor that is the common denominator for systematically linking an indirect cost or group of indirect costs to a cost object. can be financial or non-financial. often the cost driver of indirect costs.
job-costing system
costs are assigned to a distinct unit, batch or lot of a product or service. a job is a task for which resources are expended in bringing a distinct product or service to the market, which is often custom-made. it accommodates the cost accounting for distinct and identifiable individual services or products.
process-costing system
used when the cost object is masses of identical or similar units. the cost of a product or service is obtained by using broad averages to assign costs to masses of identical or similar units.
actual costing
costing method that traces direct costs to a cost object by using the actual direct-cost rate * actual quantity of the direct-cost inputs and allocates the indirect costs based on the actual indirect-cost rate * actual quantity of the cost-allocation base.
source documents
original records that support journal entries in an accounting system.
normal costing
method that traces direct costs to a cost object by using the actual direct-cost rate * actual quantity of the direct-cost input and allocates indirect costs based on the budgeted indirect-cost rates * actual quantity of the cost-allocation base.
job cost record
key source document in a job-costing system. it records and accumulates all the costs assigned to a specific job.
materials requisition record
a form used to charge departments and job cost records for the cost of materials used on a specific job.
labour time record
used to charge departments and job cost records for labour time used on a specific job.
under-allocated/underapplied indirect costs
occur when the allocated amount of indirect costs in an accounting period is less than the actual amount in that period.
over-allocated/under-absorbed indirect costs
occur when the allocated amount of indirect costs in an accounting period exceeds the actual amount in that period.
adjusted allocation rate approach
restates all entries in the general ledger by using actual cost rates rather than budgeted cost rates.
proration
a term used to refer to spreading over under- or over-allocated overhead among closing stocks and cost of goods sold.