Chapter 3 Flashcards

1
Q

In deciding the cost of inventory….

  1. What is absorption costing (full costing)?
  2. What is marginal costing?
A
  1. A method of building up a full product cost which adds direct cost and a proportion of production overheads.
  2. Prime costs (direct costs) + variable costs only (no fixed costs)
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2
Q

Define the standard cost

A
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3
Q

What is the fair share of fixed production costs?

A

Absorption costs = marginal costs + fair share of fixed production costs.

Essentially fixed production overheads

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4
Q

What are the 3 steps to absorbing fixed prouction overheads into costs per unit.

A
  1. Alloction and appportionment of overheads to all production cost centres.
  2. Re-apportioning of overheads that do not produce inventory.
  3. Absorbing overheads into units of inventory
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5
Q

Step 1. Alloction and appportionment of overheads to all production cost centres.

  1. How are overheads that arise in 1 department allocated
  2. How are overheads relating to a whole factory allocated?
A
  1. They are allocated to that departments cost centre.
  2. They are apportioned on a fair basis. e.g. factory rent may be apportioned in relation to the floor area occupied by each department or cost centre.
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6
Q

What does it mean to ‘apply factory wide’ or at a ‘blanket rate’?

A

When overheads should be apportioned but a company has simply divided total overheads for the factory by the number of units

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7
Q

Step 2: Re-apportioning of overheads that do not produce inventory.

What does this involve?

A

Re-apportioning the cost from departments that don’t produce inventory (often services) to the inventory producing departments

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8
Q

What should be done if there is more than one service centre for which costs need to be reappointed.

A
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9
Q

Bellow are the overhead costs for each department. Only Assembly and Finishing produce inentory.

Re-apportion overheads using the infomation provided.

A
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10
Q

Step 3: Absorbing overheads into units of inventory

  1. What does this do?
  2. How is this calculated?
  3. Give example of budgeted activity
A
  1. Assigns the costs caluclated in step 1 and 2 to 1 unit of inventory.
  2. Using an overhead absorption rate = Budget ed overhead cost (calculated in step 1 & 2) / Budgeted activity
  3. Number of units, Prime costs, Direct laybour/machine costs, & Direct laybour/machine hours.
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11
Q
A
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12
Q

What is the budget fixed cost per unit for alpha and beta?

A
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13
Q

At the end of the year how do you calculate over or under absorption?

A
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14
Q
  1. What are balanket absorbtion rates <em>(single factory rates)</em>?
  2. When are they appropriate to use?
A
  1. A single absorption rate is used for ll cost units irrisepctiv of departments.
  2. When an individual departments OARs are likely to be similar to that of the whole company.
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15
Q
A
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16
Q
A
17
Q
  1. What does process costing involve and when is it appropriate.
A
18
Q
  1. What is life style costing?
  2. What is target costing?
A
19
Q

What is ‘Just in time’ production?

A

Producing goods or services when required by the customer → therfore no inventory is held.

20
Q
  1. What does job costing involve and when is it appropriate.
  2. Contract costing?
  3. Batch costing?
A
  1. Prime costs and absorbed overheads → appropriate for specific one-off jobs of a short duration.
  2. Prime costs, allocated oevrheads & absorbed overheads • appropriate for one off long duration jobs.
  3. Prime costs and absorbed overheads → appropriate for a group of identical cost unit jobs.