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Costing systems: Activity based costing

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Details the 3 stages of Activity based costing and provides examples. Demonstrates step-by-step calculations and applicability in business.










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Uploaded on
July 28, 2022
Number of pages
8
Written in
2020/2021
Type
Lecture notes
Professor(s)
Anna f
Contains
All classes

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Managerial Accounting 12.10.20



Costing systems: Activity based costing




- Different activity cost pools and cost drivers

ABC 2 stages:

Stage 1:

o The cost of an organisations significant activities is first isolated into cost pools (an area
that performs a significant activity for which costs can be accumulated)
o Cost pools (and related cost) fall into the following broad categories, which collectively
are known as a cost hierarchy:
- Unit level (each unit produced) – Direct labour, materials
- Batch level (A packet rather than individual) – Machine set up
- Product line – Product engineering, marketing, product development
- Distribution channel
- Customer level
- Facility sustaining – depreciation, rent, management

, Managerial Accounting 12.10.20




Stage 2:
o Involves identification of a cost driver for each pool (Cost driver represent activities that
affect costs)
o Use cost driver to allocate costs based on activity
o Volume based cost drivers or transaction-based cost drivers
o System then assigns overhead costs by using the cost drivers and assessing the relative
proportion of the activity consumer by a product

o This process results in the calculation of a pool rate, a cost for each ‘product line’ and an
eventual cost per unit
o Interested in cost per unit for products produced to identify appropriate mark up to add in
order to set the right price

Selection of cost driver

o Firms should consider:
- Degree of correlation (consumption of an activity and consumption of the cost driver)
- Cost of measurement (using the second-best alternative for the cost driver if the first
is not readily available or is too expensive)
- Behavioural effects (how the cost driver selected will affect the behaviour of the
individuals involved in the activity related to the cost driver)

o ABS and information sources:
- Interviews
- Top-down approach

How can ABC be used?

o ABC assigns both manufacturing and non-manufacturing costs to products
o Multiple activity cost pools and use multiple cost drivers to allocate costs

o Allocation bases used usually differ from traditional costing systems
- Uses more than one cost driver to allocate costs accurately

o Can be used in internal decision-making as well as for inventory
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