Solution Manual For Managerial Accounting: Creating Value in a Dynamic Business Environment, 10th Edition

Preview Extract
Chapter 02 – Basic Cost Management Concepts CHAPTER 2 BASIC COST MANAGEMENT CONCEPTS Learning Objectives 1. Explain what is meant by the word cost. 2. Distinguish among product costs, period costs, and expenses. 3. Describe the role of costs in published financial statements. 4. List five types of manufacturing operations and describe mass customization. 5. Give examples of three types of manufacturing costs. 6. Prepare a schedule of cost of goods manufactured, a schedule of cost of goods sold, and an income statement for a manufacturer. 7. Understand the importance of identifying an organization’s cost drivers. 8. Describe the behavior of variable and fixed costs, in total and on a per-unit basis. 9. Distinguish among direct, indirect, controllable, and uncontrollable costs. 10. Define and give examples of an opportunity cost, an out-of-pocket cost, a sunk cost, a differential cost, a marginal cost, and an average cost. 2-1 Copyright ยฉ 2014 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education. Chapter 02 – Basic Cost Management Concepts Chapter Overview I. What Do We Mean by a Cost? A. Product costs, period costs, and expenses II. Costs on Financial Statements A. Income statement 1. Selling and administrative costs 2. Costs of manufactured inventory B. Balance sheet 1. Raw-materials inventory 2. Work-in-process inventory 3. Finished-goods inventory III. Manufacturing Operations and Manufacturing Costs A. Job shop, batch, assembly line, continuous flow B. Assembly manufacturing C. Manufacturing costs 1. Direct material 2. Direct labor 3. Manufacturing overhead 4. Indirect material 5. Indirect labor 6. Other manufacturing costs 7. Conversion cost, prime cost IV. Manufacturing Cost Flows A. Cost of goods manufactured B. Production costs in service industry firms and nonprofit organizations V. Basic Cost Management Concepts: Different Costs for Different Purposes A. The cost driver team 1. Variable and fixed costs B. The cost management and control team 1. Direct and indirect costs 2. Controllable and uncontrollable costs C. The outsourcing action team 1. Opportunity costs 2. Out-of-pocket costs 3. Sunk costs 4. Differential and incremental costs 2-2 Copyright ยฉ 2014 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education. Chapter 02 – Basic Cost Management Concepts D. VI. 5. Marginal and average costs Costs and benefits of information Costs in the Service Industry A. Product and period costs B. Variable and fixed costs C. Controllable and uncontrollable costs D. Opportunity, out-of-pocket, and sunk costs E. Differential, marginal, and average costs Key Lecture Concepts I. What Do We Mean by a Cost? โ€ข A cost is the sacrifice made to achieve a particular purpose. โ€ข There are different costs for different purposes, with costs that are appropriate for one use being totally inappropriate for others (e.g., a cost that is used to determine inventory valuation may be irrelevant in deciding whether or not to manufacture that same product). โ€ข An expense is defined as the cost incurred when an asset is used up or sold for the purpose of generating revenue. The terms “product cost” and “period cost” are used to describe the timing with which expenses are recognized. โžข Product costs are the costs of goods manufactured or the cost of goods purchased for resale. These costs are inventoried until the goods are sold. โžข Period costs are all other non-product costs in an organization (e.g., selling and administrative). Such costs are not inventoried but are expensed as time passes. 2-3 Copyright ยฉ 2014 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education. Chapter 02 – Basic Cost Management Concepts II. III. Costs on Financial Statements โ€ข Product costs are shown as cost of goods sold on the income statement when goods are sold. Income statements of service enterprises lack a costof-goods-sold section and instead reveal a firm’s operating expenses. โ€ข Product costs, housed on the balance sheet until sale, are found in three inventory accounts: โžข Raw materialsโ€”materials that await production โžข Work in processโ€”partially completed production โžข Finished goodsโ€”completed production that awaits sale Manufacturing Operations and Manufacturing Costs โ€ข There are various types of production processes; for example: โžข Job shopโ€”low production volume, little standardization; one-of-akind products โžข Batchโ€”multiple products; low volume โžข Assembly lineโ€”a few major products; higher volume โžข Continuous flowโ€”high volume; highly standardized commodity products โ€ข Direct materialsโ€”materials easily traced to a finished product (e.g., the seat on a bicycle) โ€ข Direct laborโ€”the wages of anyone who works directly on the product (e.g., the assembly-line wages of the bicycle manufacturer) โ€ข Manufacturing overheadโ€”all other manufacturing costs such as: โžข Indirect materialsโ€”materials and supplies other than those classified as direct materials, 2-4 Copyright ยฉ 2014 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education. Chapter 02 – Basic Cost Management Concepts IV. โžข Indirect laborโ€”personnel who do not work directly on the product (e.g., manufacturing supervisors), and โžข Other manufacturing costs not easily traceable to a finished good (insurance, property taxes, depreciation, utilities, and service/support department costs). Overtime premiums and the cost of idle time are also accounted for as overhead. โžข Idle time โ€“ time that is not spent productively by an employee due to such events as equipment breakdowns or new setups of production runs. โ€ข Conversion cost (the cost to convert direct materials into finished product): direct labor + manufacturing overhead โ€ข Prime cost: direct material + direct labor Manufacturing Cost Flows โ€ข Manufacturing costs (direct materials, direct labor, and manufacturing overhead) are “put in process” and attached to work-in-process inventory. The goods are completed (finished goods), and the costs are then passed along to cost of goods sold upon sale. โ€ข Cost of goods manufactured: Direct materials used + direct labor + manufacturing overhead + beginning work-in-process inventory – ending work-in-process inventory โžข โ€ข This amount is transferred from work-in-process inventory to finished-goods inventory when goods are completed. Product costs and cost of goods sold for a manufacturer: 2-5 Copyright ยฉ 2014 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education. Chapter 02 – Basic Cost Management Concepts Beginning Inventory, + Finished Goods โ€ข V. Cost of Goods Manufactured to Completion – Ending Inventory, = Finished Goods Cost of Goods Sold Beginning Finished Goods Cost of Goods Manu. Ending Finished Goods Cost of Goods Sold Supported by the prior year’s balance sheet A schedule of production costs Current balance sheet Income statement Production-cost concepts are applicable to service businesses and nonprofit organizations. For example, the direct-materials concept can be applied to the food consumed in a restaurant or the jet fuel used by an airline. Similarly, direct labor would be equivalent to the cooks in a restaurant and the flight crews of an airline. Basic Cost Management Concepts: Different Costs for Different Purposes โ€ข A cost driver is any event or activity that causes costs to be incurred. Cost driver examples include labor hours in manual assembly work and machine hours in automated production settings. โžข โ€ข The higher the degree of correlation between a cost-pool increase and the increase in its cost driver, the better the cost management information. Variable and fixed costs โžข Variable costs move in direct proportion to a change in activity. For example, in the manufacture of bicycles, the total cost of bicycle seats goes up in proportion to the number of bicycles produced. However, the cost per unit (i.e., per seat) remains constant. 2-6 Copyright ยฉ 2014 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education. Chapter 02 – Basic Cost Management Concepts โžข โ€ข Fixed costs remain constant in total as the level of activity changes. For instance, straight-line depreciation of a bicycle plant remains the same whether 100 bicycles or 1,000 bicycles are produced. However, the depreciation cost per unit fluctuates because this constant total is spread over a smaller or greater volume. Direct and indirect costs โžข An entity (e.g., a specific product, service, or department) to which a cost is assigned is commonly known as a cost object. โžข A direct cost is one that can be easily traced to a cost object. โ–ช โžข An indirect cost is a cost that cannot be easily traced to a cost object. โ–ช โžข If a college department has been defined as the cost object, professors’ salaries and administrative assistants’ salaries are direct costs of the department (just as assembly workers’ wages are direct costs of a manufacturing department). For example, the costs of a university’s controller, president, campus security, and groundskeeper cannot be directly traceable to a specific department, as these individuals service the entire university. (Similarly, a factory guard’s salary is not traceable to only one department and is, thus, considered indirect to all departments.) A cost management system strives to trace costs to the objects that caused them so that managers can isolate responsibility for spending and objectively evaluate operations. Teaching Tip: When discussing indirect costs, you may want to cite a hospital’s medical and surgical supplies as an example. Such items do not appear to be a primary target for trimming; however, these indirect costs often account for a sizable portion of a hospital’s operating costs. Understanding indirect costs has become more valuable in a managedcare environment because it helps hospitals negotiate fixed-fee contracts. 2-7 Copyright ยฉ 2014 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education. Chapter 02 – Basic Cost Management Concepts โ€ข Controllable and uncontrollable costs โžข Controllable costsโ€”costs over which a manager has influence (e.g., direct materials) โžข Uncontrollable costsโ€”costs over which a manager has no influence (e.g., the salary of a firm’s CEO from the production manager’s viewpoint) โ€ข Opportunity costโ€”the benefit forgone by choosing an alternative course of action (e.g., the wages forgone when a student decides to attend college full-time rather than be employed) โ€ข Out-of-pocket costโ€”a cost that requires a cash outlay โ€ข Sunk costโ€”a cost incurred in the past that cannot be changed by future action (e.g., the cost of existing inventory or equipment) โžข โ€ข Such costs are not relevant for decision making. Differential costโ€”the net difference in cost between two alternative courses of action โžข Incremental costโ€”the increase in cost from one alternative to another โ€ข Marginal costโ€”the extra cost incurred when one additional unit is produced โ€ข Average cost per unitโ€”total cost divided by the units of activity โ€ข Accountants must weigh the benefits of providing information against the costs of generating, communicating, and using that information. The goal is to use information effectively and avoid information overload. 2-8 Copyright ยฉ 2014 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education. Chapter 02 – Basic Cost Management Concepts VI. Costs in the Service Industry โ€ข The preceding costs are relevant in service providers as well as for manufacturing entities. Teaching Overview The main purpose of Chapter 2 is to expand the way in which costs are defined and viewed. After completing a course in financial accounting, students are very much geared into thinking about functional costs (depreciation, utilities, and commissions) for an entire organization. While this is useful information to an outside creditor or investor, it is insufficient with respect to helping internal managers do their jobs effectively. Managers must also consider cost behavior, controllability, costs incurred by smaller segments, and so on. An initial reminder of these facts generally opens a discussion of additional ways of viewing financial information. It is worthwhile to spend a few extra minutes in the area of cost behavior since it is so fundamental to later topics. Before discussing manufacturing costs, I ask for a show of hands from students who have actually visited a manufacturing plant. The typical, small number of hands serves as a reminder that many students have little idea of what a factory “looks like” and does. Pictures and videos are helpful in providing a context for the concepts being discussedโ€”even a field trip to a local manufacturer is a good idea. This is also an excellent time to point out that even if a student does not plan to work in production management, he or she may well work in accounting, finance, or marketing for a company that makes a product. Therefore, being conversant in the language and concepts of cost accounting will be useful. Accounting techniques in manufacturing are frequently transferable to the service sector, and this fact should be emphasized in class. In summary, Chapter 2 discusses the many ways that costs can be categorized. Chapter 3 then follows with a discussion of a system to track product costs and answers the ageold question, โ€œHow much does this cost?โ€ I recommend using Problem 2-50 (cost terminology and cost behavior) and Exercise 2-28 (financial schedules and statements) as lecture demonstration problems. 2-9 Copyright ยฉ 2014 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education. Chapter 02 – Basic Cost Management Concepts Links to the Text Homework Grid Item No. Exercises: 2-24 2-25 2-26 2-27 2-28 2-29 2-30 2-31 2-32 2-33 2-34 2-35 2-36 Problems: 2-37 2-38 2-39 2-40 2-41 2-42 2-43 2-44 2-45 2-46 2-47 2-48 2-49 2-50 2-51 2-52 2-53 2-54 2-55 Learning Objectives Completion Time (min.) 2, 5, 8 1, 3, 6 5 5 1, 3, 6 4 1, 8 1, 10 1, 8, 10 1, 9, 10 1, 10 1, 10 1, 10 20 10 10 10 25 30 15 5 15 5 10 10 15 2, 5, 10 1, 3, 5, 9 3, 4 1, 2, 3 1, 9 1, 5, 9 1, 3, 5, 6 5, 6 2, 5 5, 6, 8 5, 6 7, 8 7, 8 5, 8, 9 1, 3 8, 9, 10 7, 8 1, 3, 9, 10 7, 10 25 15 20 10 10 20 35 30 40 25 25 25 15 20 40 25 15 20 10 Special Features* C I C S S W 2-10 Copyright ยฉ 2014 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education. Chapter 02 – Basic Cost Management Concepts 2-56 4, 10 25 2-57 8, 10 15 2-58 7, 8 25 Cases: 2-59 7, 8, 10 30 W, G 2-60 10 50 W, E * W = Written response E = Ethical issue G = Group work I = International C = Internet use S = Spreadsheet 2-11 Copyright ยฉ 2014 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.

Document Preview (11 of 1144 Pages)

User generated content is uploaded by users for the purposes of learning and should be used following SchloarOn's honor code & terms of service.
You are viewing preview pages of the document. Purchase to get full access instantly.

Shop by Category See All


Shopping Cart (0)

Your bag is empty

Don't miss out on great deals! Start shopping or Sign in to view products added.

Shop What's New Sign in