Activity Based Costing Flashcards

1
Q

Why do organisations need to identify the cost of their products?

A

To value inventory
To identify profitability of products
To help plan and control performance
To provide information for decision making

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2
Q

What are the two main differences between absorption and activity-based costing?

A

In the first stage, absorption costing allocate overheads to cost centres, whereas ABC allocates to activities.

In the second stage, absorption costing absorbs overheads using a small range of volume related bases, whereas ABC absorbs overheads using a wide range of cost drivers (volume and non-volume related).

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3
Q

What are the 5 steps in ABC?

A

1 Identify the different activities of the organisation
2 Create cost pools by calculating the total cost of each.
3 Identify a cost driver for each
4 Calculate the cost driver rate
(Total budgeted overhead in activity / total budgeted no of cost drivers for activity)
5 Attach the activity costs to products according to their demand for each activity.

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4
Q

What are the 4 activity hierarchies?

A

1 Unit Level Activities - each time a unit is produced. Absorption costing assumes all activities are unit level.

2 Batch Level Activities - each time a batch is produced. Fixed for all units within one batch.

3 Product-sustaining activities - performed to allow the production of a particular model. Cost is unrelated to number of batches and units.

4 Facility-sustaining activities - performed to support the general operations of the organisation. Not related to products and can therefore be treated as fixed costs.

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5
Q

How can ABC highlight the cost of unused capacity?

A

Because ABC measures the cost of resources consumed not the cost of resources supplied.

Cost of resources supplied = Cost of resources used + cost of unused capacity

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6
Q

What is unused capacity?

A

Where resources cannot be immediately flexed to match the demand for them. This is because some are acquired in fixed amounts. Therefore reducing the cost driver would not lead to a saving unless they reduce the resource supplied.

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7
Q

Why did the limitations of absorption costing become apparent?

A

They were developed when companies produced a narrow range of products and overhead was small, therefore inaccurate proportion wasn’t a problem. However business environment changed with wider range of products, flexible systems, fast development and increased competition. Therefore poor decisions and apportionment are more damaging.

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8
Q

Which Harvard Business School alumni promoted ABC?

A

Cooper and Kaplan (1991)

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9
Q

Why is ABC particularly appropriate for service organisations?

A

1 Low levels of direct material and direct labour

2 Traditional costing would treat their cost as fixed as the ability to provide the service has to be supplied in advance of the service being demanded.

3 If customers are the cost object then ABC can provide information on customer profitability

4 Service organisations traditionally rely on basic costing systems, therefore incremental benefits of ABC can be considerable.

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10
Q

What are the usage rates of ABC?

A

Innes et al (2000) found 18%, less than 21% from five years before.
Large businesses, especially in the finance sector, are more likely to use ABC.

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11
Q

What variables did Shields (1995) associate with successful ABC implementation?

A
Top management support for the system
Linkage to competitive strategy
Linkage to performance evaluation and compensation
Training in ABC implementation
Non-accounting ownership of the system
Adequate resources being available
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12
Q

What did Shields (1995) note as a cause of problems with ABC?

A

Too much emphasis on technical aspects of the system rather than behavioural, cultural, organisational and political issues raised by implementing ABC.

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13
Q

What four measures do Foster and Swanson (1997) use to measure the success of ABC?

A

Its use in decision making
Its impact on managers’ decisions
Its financial impact on the firm
Managers’ satisfaction with it

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14
Q

What are the benefits of ABC?

A

More accurate basis for apportioning overhead costs than absorption costing

Improvement in unit costs leads to improved decision making

Identification of cost drivers provides a mechanism for reducing costs

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15
Q

What are the criticisms of ABC?

A

Only a marginal improvement on absorption.
Unrealistic assumptions about cost behaviour
Apportionment will be arbitrary
Time consuming
Expensive
Disruptive
Managers may manipulate information
Management fashion as opposed to a technical advance
Overall adoption is low, therefore perception is that costs outweigh benefits.

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