MA Week 3 Flashcards

1
Q

Full (absorption) costing VS Variable (marginal) costing

Instead of gross profit, what term do we use in MC?

A
  1. AC includes ALL mfg costs (variable & fixed) in inventoriable costs; MC only includes variable mfg costs in inventoriable costs
  2. In MC, fixed mfg costs are charged directly to I/S as period costs. ∴ fixed costs are not capitalised under MC (but variable costs, yes). AC capitalises both variable and fixed costs.
  3. MC classifies costs by Behaviour: fixed vs variable

CONTRIBUTION

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2
Q

Formula for preparing I/S using MC

A
Revenue
Less: Variable costs 
Mfg
Non-mfg
= CONTRIBUTION !!!

Less: fixed costs
Mfg
Non-mfg
= OPERATING PROFIT

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3
Q

Support for MC & argument against AC?

(MC is actually not allowed under IAS2)

AC can smooth out profit by deferring the fixed production overheads through high levels of production than needed.

A
  1. Avoids issue of arbitrary apportionment of fixed OH costs
  2. Only includes variable costs & Most costs are variable in the long run, ∴ relevant to users of financial statements (decision-making). MOST variable costs tend to be controllable.
    - fixed costs are often uncontrollable

Often argued that apportionment of fixed overheads to individual units are carried out on a purely ARBITRARY basis, which is not very useful for decision making and can mislead.

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4
Q

How does management choose which costing method to use? (over/under-costing)

A

Cost of inventory matters (over-costing/under-costing). Profit can be different accordingly, Can lead to manipulation towards earnings.

Managers choose to under-cost for managerial commission based on profits.

Managers choose to over-cost for Government subsidies (if show low profits).

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5
Q

What is the meaning of under- & over-absorption?

Unrelated:
*Rmb that OAR has both fixed and variable cost elements!

A

Under-absorption: budgeted OAR absorbs too little cost to cost objects in the period
Over-absorption: budgeted OAR absorbs too much cost to cost objects in the period.

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6
Q

Production Volume Variance (PVV)

in Absorption costing

A
  1. Tells us whether actual production is above or below the predicted/budgeted volume
  2. Does not inform us about EFFICIENCY of production process
    > (Actual - Budgeted volume) * fixed overhead rate
  3. If budgeted volume > actual volume -> Unfavourable (U), lower actual gross profit
  4. If budgeted volume < actual volume -> Favourable (F), higher actual gross profit
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7
Q

Profit difference is caused by diff. valuations given to closing inventory.
When is Marginal costing-based profit higher than Absorption costing profit?

A

If opening inv > closing inv, MC based profit > AC
If opening inv < closing inv UNITS, MC based profit < AC

  • Any inventory holding is higher for absorption costing because includes fixed costs
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8
Q

Undesirable effects for Full costing

A

Encourages operational inefficiencies

  • enables a manager to increase operating profit by increasing production
  • even if 0 customer demand; so classifying potential period cost to closing inventory
  • Undesirable stock building (high closing inv, ie. high absorption of fixed costs into closing inv)
  • > hence Capitalised rather than Expensed
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9
Q

4 ways to alleviate the undesirable effects of Full costing

A
  1. Change internal accounting systems to more integrated systems
  2. Revise performance evaluation of managers, ie. not necessarily focused on bottom line profit
  3. Redesign operating systems
    - reduce waste
    - don’t let stocks pile up, by acquiring resources only when needed
    - move towards ‘Just-In-Time’ management (but risks in supply chain)
  4. Companies can predict market demand more accurately using technology. Transaction records are stored and accessible by everyone; helps reduce Fraud & provide time-saving TRACEABLE procedure
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10
Q

3 limitations of Marginal costing

A
  1. In reality, difficult to distinguish between fixed and variable costs
  2. Sales staff may mistake marginal cost for total cost and sell at a low price; which will result in loss or low profits.
  3. Assumption that fixed costs are fixed forever is false. cost behaviour can change.
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11
Q

Differential cost

A

A change in cost when there are 2 diff. alternatives to choose from (important cost to bear in mind in decision making)

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12
Q

Opportunity cost

+ charge out rate for workers is important

A

FOREGONE POTENTIAL BENEFIT of an alternative, 2nd best alternative out of the ones we KNOW

> the value (in monetary terms) of being deprived of the next best opportunity in order to pursue the particular objective

  • relevant to a particular decision if they differ between alternative courses of action
    eg. loss of income the students experience by deciding to study for a degree at university instead of going straight into work
  • different options you consider should have the same RISK
  • Never recorded in formal accounting records since they do NOT generate cash outlays
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13
Q

Sunk costs (past costs)

A

Actual costs/expenditure incurred in the past & CAN’T be recovered

  • Irrelevant cost because they cannot be changed by any decision
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14
Q

Relevant costs

include opportunity costs + future outlay costs

A

Costs that relate to the business’ objectives and that will vary with the decision

  • fixed costs are not relevant unless they will increase or decrease
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15
Q

AC vs MC - Explain reconciliation of income differences

A

Profit differences are caused by the different valuations given to the closing inventory in each period.
With absorption costing, an amount of fixed production overhead is included.

Inventory increased/decreased by __ units.
Under full costing, __ * £1 is inventoried.
Under variable costing, these costs are not inventoried; fixed mfg costs are treated as a period cost & charged to I/S.

Absorption costing operating profit – variable costing operating profit
= fixed manufacturing costs in closing inventory – fixed manufacturing costs in opening inventory

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16
Q

Cost

A

An amount of resources, usually measured in monetary terms,
/ (expense incurred)
sacrificed to achieve a particular objective