THE BEHAVIOR OF COSTS
Changes from the Twelfth Edition
All changes to Chapter 16 were minor.
Approach
We have retained our approach of putting all C-V-P topics in a single chapter because many schools’ marketing and management accounting core courses start simultaneously, and marketing likes to have break-even analysis covered early in the management accounting course. Also, if there are students in the course with work experience or, in the case of MBA courses, with some undergraduate cost accounting background, they will want to raise right away the more detailed and subtle cost behavior issues. Nevertheless, we have structured the chapter so that instructors wishing to retain the approach used in some earlier editions can do so simply by assigning only the sections preceding ''Cost Assumptions" initially. Then the rest of the chapter can be assigned just before Chapter 26.
One of the common sources of confusion about fixed costs and variable costs is the fact that fixed costs are fixed in total but vary per unit, whereas variable costs vary in total, but are fixed per unit. It is important, therefore, that the discussion always be clear as to whether the context is total cost or unit cost. When talking about unit costs, I try to remember always to precede "fixed" with the adjective average.
The text takes the view that items of cost can be classified as essentially fixed, variable, semivariable, or step-function, and that semivariable costs can be classified into fixed and variable components. Students who wish to nitpick can point out items of cost for which these simple linear relationships do not hold, even within a relevant range, but the importance of these items should be played down. In practice, it is often sufficiently accurate to use only the fixed/variable dichotomy, especially for time horizons of a year or less. The student should not get the impression that the linear relationships described in the chapter are a