Basics Fixed costs Activ. Based Costing Target Cost. Life-Cycle Costing Cost Benchmarking Prof. Dr. P. Weber-Dreßler Stategic Costing.ppt (p. 1) Strategic Costing Strategic Costing Basics Contents Fixed costs Part 1: Basics to strategic costing 1. Traditional costing vs. strategic costing 2. Specifics of strategic costing 3. Tools of strategic costing Activ. Based Costing Target Cost. Life-Cycle Costing Cost Benchmarking Prof. Dr. P. Weber-Dreßler Stategic
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have evaluated the different proposals and come up with one project that we recommend. In doing this‚ we have calculated the change in profits compared with the draft budget and compiled the Break-even charts to justify our recommendation. Marginal Costing Profit Statement of the draft budget £(000) £ (000) Sales 1000 Less Cost of sales: Direct Materials 320 Direct wages 200 Variable factory overheads 100 (620) Contribution 380 Less Fixed Costs:
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ARBSORPTION COSTING STATEMENT DETAILS COST PER SYSTEM Systems Mist cooling Water mist OAR $1500/hrs Variable cost $ 1 450‚00 $ 1 254‚00 Fixed Overhead cost $ 4 500‚00 $ 5 400‚00 Total unit cost $ 5 950‚00 $ 6 654‚00 Traditional Absorption Costing Income Statement
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Project report of NSP on Bakery Store Jyoti Chaudhary Rishikesh Gupta Tulika Bhatt
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Absorption costing: * It is costing system which treats all manufacturing costs including both the fixed and variable costs as product costs * In absorption costing‚ all costs are absorbed into production and thus operating statements do not distinguish between fixed and variable costs. * Absorption costing is a process of tracing the variable costs of production and the fixed costs of production to the product. Absorption costing is used to cost products and to report financial
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Marginal Costing Marginal cost is the increase in the total cost when the total quantity produced increases by one unit. That is‚ it is the cost of producing one more unit of a good. Generally‚ marginal cost at each level of production is the additional costs required to produce the next unit. For example‚ if producing additional computers requires building a new factory‚ the marginal cost of the extra computers includes the cost of the new factory. In practice‚ this analysis is divided into
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Exercises (Group A) (15-20 min.) E 4-22A Req. 1 Plantwide overhead rate = Estimated total manufacturing costs Estimated cost allocation base = = $1‚150‚000 25‚000* direct labor hours = = $46 per direct labor hour *When calculating plantwide overhead rates‚ all direct labor hours incurred in the plant are used. (continued) E 4-22A Req. 2 Departmental overhead rate Machining Dept. overhead rate = = Finishing Dept. overhead rate Total department overhead
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Most manufacturers don’t have all the tools they need to reliably contain or reduce costs on products and projects. The key missing pieces typically include a view across the extended enterprise with multiple disciplines; a view of lifecycle costs‚ starting with design or project engineering and moving through supply‚ production‚ distribution‚ and‚ where relevant‚ aftermarket service; customer needs balanced with costs; forward-looking cost analysis; and a means of creating visibility and accountability
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Katie Powell Dr. Willis BA 310 9 November 2014 Greyston Bakery: The Zen of Philanthropy 1. While Julius Walls Jr. occupied the position of CEO of Greyston Bakery between the years 2000 and 2009‚ he implemented both the three Cs and the three Rs into the company. By creating a more task-oriented system for the employees‚ Walls encouraged accountability for these employees’ actions. This system improved the opportunities to increase profits in the company. Since the new CEO that was hired in
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Marginal Costing Introduction The Cost of a product of comprises of materials‚ labour‚ and over heads. On the basis of variability they can be broadly classified as fixed and variable costs. Fixed costs are those costs which remain constant at all levels of production within a given period of time. In other words‚ a cost that does not change in total but become. Progressively smaller per unit when the volume of production increases is known as fixed cost. it is also called period cost eg. Rent
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