Activity-Based Costing System A presentation by Ahmad Tariq Bhatti FCMA‚ FPA‚ MA (Economics)‚ BSc Dubai‚ United Arab Emirates Activity-Based Costing Activity-Based Costing System 2 The Concept Activity-Based Costing In contrast to traditional/absorption costing system‚ ABC system first accumulates overheads costs for each organizational activity‚ and then assigns the costs of the activities to the products‚ services‚ or customers (cost objects) causing that activity. Activity-Based Costing System
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and Explanation of Job Order Costing System: A job order costing system is used in situations where many different products are produced each period. For example clothing factory would typically made many different types of jeans for both men and women during a month. In a job order costing system‚ costs are traced to the jobs and then the costs of the job are divided by the number of units in the job to arrive at an average cost per unit. Job order costing system is also extensively used in service
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Literature Review A literature review • Provides an overview and a critical evaluation of a body of literature relating to a research topic or research problem. • Analyzes a body of literature in order to classify it by themes or categories‚ rather than simply discussing individual works one after another. • Presents the research and ideas of the field rather than each individual work or author by itself. A literature review often forms part of a larger research project‚ such as within
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: Job Order and Process Costing Systems - Quiz ------------------------------------------------- Top of Form Time Remaining: | | Page: 1 2 | 1. (TCO F) Computing unit product costs involves averaging in: | Job-Order Costing | Process Costing | A | Yes | No | | B | Yes | Yes | | C | No | Yes | | D | No | No | | (Points : 5) | Choice A. Choice B. Choice C. Choice D. | 2. (TCO F) Process costing would be appropriate for
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book) Conventional Supermarket An industry that we would also touch upon is conventional supermarket. Conventional supermarket is a departmentalized food store with a wide range of food and related products. The supermarkets are usually differentiated by their sizes e.g. a conventional supermarket is between 500 and 2000m2. (cite pdf) Supermarket Strategy Goods Conventional supermarkets should have a basic retailing strategy that they can adapt globally. Firstly‚ what goods do conventional supermarkets
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Conventional Morality and Ethical Relativism I - Kohlberg’s Moral Development Theory The theory holds that moral reasoning‚ the basis for ethical behavior‚ has six identifiable developmental stages‚ each more adequate at responding to moral dilemmas than its predecessor. Kohlberg’s Theory of Moral Development | | | | | Level One: Pre-conventional Morality | Stage 1: Punishment-Obedience Orientation | | Stage 2: Instrumental Relativist Orientation | Level Two: Conventional
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Topic: Product costing Ningbo lecturer: Ms. Huang HuiQin – E: huanghuiqin@nbu.edu.cn – P: 86-574-87600960 Student: Lê Uyên Phương (Phoebe) – E: leuyenphuongvn@yahoo.com – P: 86-15 757 829 310 Student ID: 1211125031 NBU Intake 12‚ 2012 Required: Examine the literature to identify the different perspectives on how a product’s cost may be formulated. Assess the strengths and weaknesses of the various approaches to product costing that have been proposed
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each classification has its own importance. Many costing techniques evolved in due course of time to ascertain the costs of above elements and to facilitate the control of the cost of the product. The main costing techniques that evolved include Absorption Cost Technique‚ Marginal Cost Technique and recently developed Activity Based Costing Technique. The purpose of this paper is to analyse the Absorption Cost Technique and Activity Based Costing Technique and to highlight their basic differences
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Petroleum System: Niger Delta Province‚ Nigeria‚ Cameroon‚ and Equatorial Guinea‚ AfricabyMichele L. W. Tuttle‚ Ronald R. Charpentier‚ and Michael E. BrownfieldOpen-File Report 99-50-H | Chapter ATertiary Niger Delta (Akata-Agbada) Petroleum System (No. 701901)‚ Niger Delta Province‚ Nigeria‚ Cameroon‚ and Equatorial Guinea‚ Africaby Michele L. W. Tuttle‚ Michael E. Brownfield‚ and Ronald R. CharpentierABSTRACT In the Niger Delta province‚ we have identified one petroleum system--the Tertiary
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MARGINAL COSTING Introduction Even a school-going student knows that profit is a balancing figure of sales over costs‚ i.e. Sales - Cost = Profit. This knowledge is not sufficient for management for discharging the functions of planning and control‚ etc. The cost is further divided according to its behavior‚ i.e.‚ fixed cost and variable cost. The age-old equation can be written as: Sales - Cost = Profit or Sales - (Fixed cost + Variable Cost) = Profit. The relevance of segregating costs
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