1) A well-designed activity-based costing system starts with __________. A. analyzing the activities performed to manufacture a product B. assigning manufacturing overhead costs for each activity cost pool to products C. computing the activity-based overhead rate D. identifying the activity-cost pools 2) "Generally accepted" in the phrase generally accepted accounting principles means that the principles __________. A. have been approved for use by the managements of business
Premium Cost Costs Economics
Activity based costing in manufacturing: two case studies on implementation The Authors Amrik S. Sohal‚ Department of Management‚ Monash University‚ Australia Walter W.C. Chung‚ Department of Manufacturing Engineering‚ Hong Kong Polytechnic University‚ Hong Kong Acknowledgements The authors are grateful to the Financial Controller at MelCo and to Mr Richard Siu‚ now Deputy General Manager of Ciba Specialty Chemicals (China) Ltd. They are also thankful to the Hong Kong Government Industry
Premium Management Costs Cost
Activity-based costing in restaurants 1. Introduction Interest in cost and management accounting practices in the restaurant industry is rising (Raab et al.‚ 2009; Annaraud et al.‚ 2008). Pavesic (1985) has initiated research in pricing and cost accounting for restaurants‚ introducing the concept of profit factor (PF) in menu engineering (ME). Prior studies‚ such as the one presented in Chan and Au (1998) investigate the implications of not incorporating overhead costs in menu-item profitability
Premium Costs Cost accounting Management accounting
Activity-based Costing (ABC) An activity-based approach refines a costing system by focusing on individual activities as the fundamental cost objects. It uses the cost of these activities as the basis for assigning costs to other cost objects such as products or services. There are four levels of a cost hierarchy: 1- Output unit-level costs: costs of activities performed on each individual unit of a product or service. 2- Batch-level costs: costs of activities related to a group of
Premium Costs Cost driver Cost accounting
Date: July 29‚ 2013 To: Rubrics Corporation From: Group 1 RE: Activity-Based Costing and Management Objective and Purpose It is said that Rubrics Corporation is no longer satisfied with single direct cost driver‚ which is also called Traditional Volume-Based Product-Costing System‚ because it is not accurate. A shortcoming or overloading of cost occurs when they use Traditional Volume-Based Product-Costing System to calculate cost of producing four products: Widgets‚ Gadgets‚ Smidgets‚ and Smadgets
Premium Costs Variable cost Marginal cost
ACTIVITY-BASED COSTING MODEL I. Definition Activity based costing (ABC) is an accounting method that identifies the activities a firm performs creating the real cause of the overhead‚ and then assigns the indirect costs of those activity only to the products that are actually demanding the activities. An activity based costing (ABC) system recognizes the relationship between costs‚ activities and products‚ and through this relationship assigns indirect costs to products less arbitrarily than
Premium Management accounting Cost Cost accounting
Compare and contrast job order costing to process costing methods. Comparison: These systems are to determine the manufacturing costs of products. Both costing systems combine direct materials‚ direct labor and overhead which is indirect costs or could be considered a direct cost in the process costing method nonetheless both systems use this in the process of producing products. The manufacturing accountants assign cost objectives to raw materials inventory‚ work in process inventory and finished
Premium Cost Cost accounting Costs
an article relevant to activity-based costing (ABC)‚ job costing‚ or process costing. Prepare a 125-word summary of the article. Briefly summarize the major topics of the article‚ and explain what you learned as a result of your reading. Be sure to properly cite the article in your summary and be prepared to present your summary to the entire class. Using activity-based costing in surgery AORN Journal‚ Jan‚ 2004 by Cheryl Grandlich Article “Using activity-based costing in surgery” covers how
Premium Cost Costs Economics
environment‚ the use of traditional costing system is no longer relevance to the company to achieve competitive advantage. Nowadays‚ Activity Based Costing is considered as one of the effective tools to enhance the ability of the organisation to meet global competition. This had resulted in the change from traditional costing system to an increasingly popular costing system such Activity-Based Costing (ABC). ABC system has emerged as an alternative to traditional costing system to meet the need for accurate
Premium Management accounting Management Cost accounting
Super Bakery‚ Inc. – Costing Methods Norman Thompson ACC/561 July 24‚ 2010 In today’s economy the business world has changed tremendously with the advances of computer systems‚ global competition‚ and innovation in technology. Because of these changes businesses compete to keep their products and services profitable as well as keeping a strong customer base. The main challenges for keeping a business successful are managing the cost of services and products while keeping the company
Premium Profit Cost Costs