Marginal Costing Flashcards

1
Q

What is the purpose of costing?

A

Inventory valuation
Record costs
Price products
Decision making

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2
Q

What is a fixed cost?

A

a cost which is incurred for an accounting period which tends to be unaffected by changes in output

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3
Q

What is a variable cost?

A

a cost that varies with changes in activity

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4
Q

What is a semi variable cost?

A

a cost that contains fixed and variable components

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5
Q

What is included in the cost per unit?

A

Direct material
Direct labour
Direct expenses
Variable overheads

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6
Q

How do you calculate contribution?

A

Contribution = Sales–Variable cost of sales

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7
Q

How do you calculate profit in marginal costing?

A

Contribution – Fixed costs

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8
Q

What does the marginal costing profit statement look like?

A
Sales								     x
Less variable cost of sales
Opening stock					x
Variable production costs			x
							        x
less Closing stock			               (x)		
									      x
Less Variable selling distribution+admin costs(x)
Contribution							     x
Less fixed costs
Production costs				     x
Selling, distribution and admin.         x
Total fixed costs						    (x)
Profit/(loss)							     x
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9
Q

What are the advantages of marginal costing?

A

It is a simpler costing system
Variable production cost is a more realistic estimate of inventory value
Reflects the behaviour of costs in relation to activity

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10
Q

What are the disadvantages of marginal costing?

A

When fixed costs are high the marginal cost of production is only a small proportion of total costs
Only really useful for short-term decision making

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11
Q

What does the reconciliation of profits look like due to impact on stock values of fixed OH’s in marginal costing?

A

Absorption costing net profit X
Marginal costing net profit X
Difference X
Fixed overhead absorbed in stock
increase/(decrease) X/(X)
Net profit reported X

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12
Q

If outputs > sales does absorption costing report a higher or lower net profit?

A

Higher

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13
Q

If output < sales does marginal costing report a higher or lower net profit?

A

Higher

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14
Q

If output = sales what do both methods report the same?

A

Net profit

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15
Q

How do you calculate full cost pricing?

A

Estimate direct costs, add % for overheads and add % for profit

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16
Q

What are the advantages of full cost pricing?

A

Simple and easy to use
Justification for price rises
Produces stable prices

17
Q

What are the disadvantages of full cost pricing?

A

Ignores demand
Ignores competitors
Ignores distinction between incremental and fixed cost
Selling price depends on how fixed costs are apportioned to products

18
Q

What is marginal cost-plus pricing?

A

Estimate direct costs and add % for profit

19
Q

What are the advantages of marginal cost-plus pricing?

A

Simple and easy to use
Just as accurate as full cost as allocate a larger profit %
Gives option to price below total cost
Useful for pricing one-off contracts

20
Q

What are the disadvantages of marginal cost-plus pricing?

A

Ignores level of competition, customer attitudes

Mark up % can be arbitrary