Journal of Accounting Research Vol. 40 No. 3 June 2002 Printed in U.S.A. The Association Between Activity-Based Costing and Manufacturing Performance C H R I S T O P H E R D . I T T N E R ‚∗ W I L L I A M N . L A N E N ‚† A N D D A V I D F . L A R C K E R∗ Received 20 May 1999; accepted 23 October 2001 ABSTRACT This study examines the association between activity-based costing and manufacturing performance. Results using a cross-sectional sample of manufacturing plants indicates that extensive
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Introduction to Costing Semester 2 2008/ 2009 TOPIC 7: ABSORPTION AND MARGINAL COSTING Outline: 1. Learning Objectives 2. Differences between absorption and variable costing 3. Impact on profit under each costing technique 1. Learning objectives a. Explaining the differences between absorption costing and marginal costing b. Explaining the impact on stock valuation & profit under each costing system c. Explaining the impact on under each costing system d. Preparing multi-period absorption and marginal
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Product Costing and Cost Accumulation in a Batch Production Environment 3-1 Chapter 4 Process Costing and Hybrid Product-Costing Systems 4-1 Chapter 5 Activity-Based Costing and Management 5-1 Chapter 6 Activity Analysis‚ Cost Behavior‚ and Cost Estimation 6-1 Chapter 7 Cost-Volume-Profit Analysis 7-1 Chapter 8 Variable Costing and the Costs of Quality and Sustainability 8-1 Chapter 9 Financial Planning and Analysis: The Master Budget 9-1 Chapter 10 Standard Costing and Analysis
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COST ACCUMULATION: SUMMARY OF ESSENTIAL TRANSACTION JOURNAL ENTRIES: TRANSACTIONS JOURNAL ENTRIES 1. Purchase of Direct Raw Materials - Initial Journal Entry Raw Materials - Direct xxx Cash / Accounts Payable xxx - To record purchase of Direct Raw Materials. 2. Purchase of Indirect Raw Materials - Initial Journal Entry Raw Materials
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INTRODUCTION Standard Costing became increasingly widespread at the beginning of the 20th century as a system for determining the manufacturing unit cost of a product‚ by setting standard rates and required material quantities for various production processes (Hyer & Wemmerlöv‚ 2002). Drury (2008) state that "Product standard costs are derived by listing and adding the standard cost of operations required to produce a particular product." The popularity of this technique increased significantly
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Traditional Overhead Costing vs Activity Based Overhead Costing Activity based costing deals with the key activities in which the firm’s resources are put. It accumulates overhead costs for each such activity. It is also used in determining the drivers of these activities. It assigns the cost of these activities to their ultimate cost centre. Activity based costing is rather a refinement over traditional costing system. The major differences are as follows: Under traditional costing‚ the overheads are
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Content 1. Introduction 4 2. Part Ⅰ--Standard Costing System and Variance Analysis 5 2.1. Definition 5 2.2. Scenarios of Standard Costing System and Variance Analysis 5 2.2.1 Scenario Ⅰ Manufacturing Companies—Auto-making Firms 6 2.2.2 Scenario Ⅱ Service Industries—Banks 7 2.2.3 Scenario Ⅲ Other Industries That Have not Repetitve Processes—AdvertisingFirms 8 2.3. Standard Costing System on Different SIzes 9 2.4. Variance Analysis 9 2.4.1 Total Production Cost Variance 9 2.4.2
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BRIEF SUMMARY PRODUCT COSTING AND COST ACCUMULATION IN A BATCH PRODUCTION ENVIRONMENT Learning Objectives 1. Discuss the role of product and service costing in manufacturing and nonmanufacturing firms. 2. Diagram and explain the flow of costs through the manufacturing accounts used in product costing. 3. Distinguish between job-order costing and process costing. 4. Compute a predetermined overhead rate‚ and explain its use in job-order costing for job-shop and batch-production
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activity-based costing on banking industry performance Activity-based costing (ABC) gives a true cost for the bank compared to traditional costing‚ which allocates most of the expenses. Banking has become very competitive‚ and it has become imperative that banks like any other businesses allocate their resources to the most profitable areas. For banking industry‚ in particular‚ the potential benefits of activity-based costing (ABC) implementation can be numerous. These include the proper costing of transactions
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case 2 C. Greetings Inc. : Activity-Based Costing Developed by Thomas L. Zeller Loyola University Chicago‚ and Paul D. Kimmel‚ Univ ers ity of Wis consin-Milw aukee THE BUSINESS SITUATION Mr. Burns‚ president of Greetings Inc.‚ created the Wall Décor unit of Greetings three years ago to increase the company’s revenue and profits. Unfortunately‚ even though Wall Décor’s revenues have grown quickly‚ Greetings appears to be losing money on Wall Décor. Mr. Burns has hired you to provide consuìting
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