Classification of cost- management accounting Flashcards

1
Q

What must be done so that information can be prepared for the managers?

A

cost must be classified

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2
Q

What does it mean if costs are classified?

A

organised into sets in a way that managers will find useful

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3
Q

What are the 3 basic ways to split up costs?

A

Materials costs
Labour costs
Expenses

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4
Q

What are material costs?

A

the costs of all sorts of raw materials, components and other goods used

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5
Q

What are some examples of material costs?

A

components to make a TV set
Cleaning materials
grease for machines

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6
Q

What are labour costs?

A

the cost of employees wages and salaries

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7
Q

What are expenses costs?

A

other costs which cannot be included in materials and labour

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8
Q

What are some examples of expenses costs?

A

rent and rates
telephone charges
insurance

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9
Q

How can the type of cost to the business be split?

A

Direct
Indirect

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10
Q

What are direct costs?

A

Clearly linked to a unit of output
Only paying because you make a product

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11
Q

What are some examples of direct costs?

A

Labour costs
Raw materials

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12
Q

What are indirect costs?

A

costs that we cannot directly link to a unit of output but still have to be paid

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13
Q

What are some examples of indirect costs?

A

Grease for machines
Heating for factory
Supervisors salary

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14
Q

What are material direct costs?

A

cost of raw materials from which the finished product is made

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15
Q

What are material indirect costs?

A

the cost of all other materials

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16
Q

What are labour direct costs?

A

wages paid to those who work the machinery on the production line or who are involved in assembly or finishing of product

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17
Q

What are labour indirect costs?

A

wages and salaries paid to all other employees (managers, supervisors, maintenance staff and admin staff)

18
Q

What are expenses direct costs?

A

any expenses which can be attributed to particular units of output (royalties to product designer, fees linked to people who are not employees)

19
Q

What are expenses indirect costs?

A

All other expenses (lighting and heating, rent, rates , telephone depreciation of fixed assets
Not directly linked to unit output

20
Q

What are fixed costs?

A

Cost that does not change with output
Constant for a fixed time period and range of outputs

21
Q

What is an example of a fixed cost?

A

Rent

22
Q

What does the graph for the fixed cost per unit look like?

A

L shape on the graph with cost decreasing with output

23
Q

What does the graph look like for total fixed costs?

A

Straight flat line with cost and output being the same

24
Q

What are stepped costs?

A

fixed costs that increase at regular intervals

25
Q

What are some examples of stepped costs?

A

Factory supervisors salary

26
Q

What does the graph look like for stepped costs?

A

Looks like a set of stairs going up

27
Q

What are semi-variable costs?

A

Costs that change with output but not directly or proportionately

28
Q

What are some examples of semi-variable costs?

A

Utility bills (gas + electric)

29
Q

What are variable costs?

A

cost that changes with output directly and proportionality

30
Q

What do the graphs look like for variable costs?

A

Total= linear increase
Unit= straight, flat line

31
Q

What is marginal cost?

A

The cost of producing 1 more unit

32
Q

What is an example of marginal costs?

A

Making 100 pens and the cost to make the 101st unit

33
Q

What will marginal cost usually be equal to?

A

Variable costs

34
Q

Why must companies look at there marginal cost before making too many orders?

A

If at full capacity the cost of producing the extra unit will also be the cost of a new factory and workers

34
Q

Why must companies look at there marginal cost before making too many orders?

A

If at full capacity the cost of producing the extra unit will also be the cost of a new factory and workers

35
Q

How can a small increase units be managed when at full capacity?

A

Might have workers do overtime or give bonuses to create extra product

36
Q

What is contribution?

A

The amount of money each product gives to wards paying fixed costs

37
Q

What is the order for contribution? (For using it)

A

Fixed cost first then goes towards profit

38
Q

What is the formula for contribution?

A

Sale price- unit variable cost

39
Q

When would you use target profit?

A

when business survival depends on reaching a certain level of profit or choosing between different projects

40
Q

What is the formula for target profits?

A

(Target profit + fixed costs)/ Unit contribution

41
Q

What would the target profit be if units is 75000 selling price = 10.60 and variable cost =4.2 and fixed costs are 220,000?

A

Target profit= 75000x10.6=795000-220000-(4.2x75000)=260000
Unit contribution= 10.6-4.2=6.4
Number of units to reach target profit= (220000+260000)/6.4= 75000