COST ACCOUNTING

                                                                       

Academic year: 2009-2010

Professor: André Cabannes

 

Duration: 1 hour 30 minutes

 

Books and class notes forbidden

Computers forbidden

Hand held calculators (including scientific ones) allowed

Write your name in the box :

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 


COST ACCOUNTING

2nd semester

 

Write your answers in the blank space below each question.

 

Question 1: What are the two main objectives of cost accounting, which cannot be attained with the data produced by general accounting?

 

 

-         prepare a budget, i.e. a forecast of sales per profit center, and a plan of costs per cost center

-         calculate costs per unit

 

(we can add :

-         calculate past results per profit center

-         calculation of future cash flows of an investment)

 

 

 

 

Question 2: Explain what we mean when we say that double-entry accounting is a “value accounting” as opposed to single-entry accounting which is a “cash accounting”.

 

 

In double-entry accounting, we record transactions where there may be no movement of cash between the firm and the rest of the world, but there are necessarily movements of value in and out of the firm

 

Single-entry accounting is simply the record keeping of cash movements in and out of the firm’s till.

 

 

 

 

 

Question 3: A computer store F sells a computer to a flower shop G. The price is 1000 euros, paid on credit. Post the transaction in F accounting system.

 

Sales account : credit 1000

Client account : debit 1000

 

 

And post the transaction in G accounting system.

 

Supplier account : credit 1000

Equipment account : debit 1000 (careful: in a flower shop, the acquisition of a computer does not go into the Purchases account)

 

 

Question 4: In cost accounting, what is a cost center? Give some examples.

 

A cost center is a fine subdivision of the activities of the firm, where costs corresponding to an activity of a homogeneous nature are accumulated. Each cost center has a person responsible for keeping the costs in line with the budget. Examples: the stamping shop, the assembly shop, the maintenance dept, the security dept, the G&A, the canteen…

 

 

 

 

 

Question 5: What is a profit center? Give some examples.

 

A profit center is a large subdivision of the activities of the firm, to which we can not only attach costs, but also sales, and therefore a profit or loss figure. Examples: the car division of Renault, the truck division of Renault, etc.

 

(Some cost centers may serve several profit centers.)

 

 

 

 

 

Question 6: A firm F had the following results last year

 

Firm F

 

 

 

 

Product line A

Product line B

Total

 

 

 

 

Units sold

1000

2000

 

Price per unit (€)

25

10

 

VC per unit (€)

10

5

 

 

 

 

 

Sales (K€)

25

20

45

Variable costs (K€)

10

10

20

Fixed costs (K€)

 

 

15

 

 

 

 

Net result (K€)

 

 

10

What were the contributions per unit in product line A, and in product line B?

 

 

The global contribution of product line A is 25K-10K = 15K euros. The contribution per unit is 15 euros.

 

The global contribution of product line B is 20K-10K = 10 K euros. The contribution per unit is 10 000 / 2000 = 5 euros.

 

 

 

 

Question 7: For next year, the management of F budgeted 1250 units in product line A, and 2500 units in product line B. The price per unit in A will be 22 euros, and in B 9 euros. The variable costs per unit won’t change. The total fixed costs are budgeted to be 17 K€.

 

What is the budgeted net result?

 

Firm F

 

 

 

 

Product line A

Product line B

Total

 

 

 

 

Units

1250

2500

 

Price per unit (€)

22

9

 

VC per unit (€)

10

5

 

 

 

 

 

Sales (K€)

27,5

22,5

50

Variable costs (K€)

12,5

12,5

25

Fixed costs (K€)

 

 

17

 

 

 

 

Net result (K€)

 

 

8

 

 

 

 

 

Question 8: If we allocate the fixed costs proportionally to the number of units sold, what were the total costs per unit last year in A, and in B? And what are they budgeted to be next year?

 

Last year:

Units

1000

2000

 

Price per unit (€)

25

10

 

VC per unit (€)

10

5

 

 

 

 

 

Sales (K€)

25

20

45

Variable costs (K€)

10

10

20

Fixed costs (K€)

5

10

15

 

 

 

 

Net result (K€)

 

 

10

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

total cost per unit

15

10

 

 

 

 

Next year:

Firm F

 

 

 

 

Product line A

Product line B

Total

 

 

 

 

Units

1250

2500

 

Price per unit (€)

22

9

 

VC per unit (€)

10

5

 

 

 

 

 

Sales (K€)

27,5

22,5

50

Variable costs (K€)

12,5

12,5

25

Fixed costs (K€)

5,67

11,33

17

 

 

 

 

Net result (K€)

 

 

8

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

total cost per unit

14,53

9,53

 

prices

22

9

 

 

 

 

 

net result per unit

7,47

-0,53

 

 

 

 

 

Question 9: We are unhappy with this budget, and decide to see what will happen if we sell more units of B. Everything else being equal, for which number of units of B will the net result of B be zero? (Be careful with the allocation of the FC which is still proportional to units sold in each product line.)

 

Try another number of units in B, for instance 3500:

Firm F

 

 

 

 

Product line A

Product line B

Total

 

 

 

 

Units

1250

3500

 

Price per unit (€)

22

9

 

VC per unit (€)

10

5

 

 

 

 

 

Sales (K€)

27,5

31,5

59

Variable costs (K€)

12,5

17,5

30

Fixed costs (K€)

4,47

12,53

17

 

 

 

 

Net result (K€)

 

 

12

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

total cost per unit

13,58

8,58

 

prices

22

9

 

 

 

 

 

net result per unit

8,42

0,42

 

 

Therefore 3500 units B is too much.

 

Try 3000:

Firm F

 

 

 

 

Product line A

Product line B

Total

 

 

 

 

Units

1250

3000

 

Price per unit (€)

22

9

 

VC per unit (€)

10

5

 

 

 

 

 

Sales (K€)

27,5

27

54,5

Variable costs (K€)

12,5

15

27,5

Fixed costs (K€)

5,00

12,00

17

 

 

 

 

Net result (K€)

 

 

10

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

total cost per unit

14,00

9,00

 

prices

22

9

 

 

 

 

 

net result per unit

8,00

0,00

 

 

3000 is the correct number of units to produce in B.

 

 

 

 

Question 10: Explain what is a direct cost in a cost center.

 

It is a cost which can be attached directly to units produced. Examples: raw materials going into the product; direct labor to assemble the product.

 

Whereas, maintenance, for instance, is not a direct cost, because usually it cannot be directly related to specific units produced (for instance if we repair machines used for different products).

 

 

 

Question 11: What does the abbreviation OH stands for? And explain what is this kind of cost.

 

OH = overhead (or overheads).

 

This is another name for indirect costs (costs which are not direct).

 

(Some accountants restrict the name “overheads” to costs which do not participate physically in the production process. They would include G&A, but not maintenance.)

 

 

 

Question 12: If we suppress a product line, do we change the total costs per unit in the remaining product lines, or do they stay the same? Explain your answer.

 

We do change the costs per units in the other remaining product lines.

 

This is because the OH must then be allocated to the remaining products, and therefore they received a larger share of OH per unit.

 

This is also why “total costs per units” are somewhat artificial.

 

 

 

Question 13: An exercise on stocks and delivery to production. We bought and received in stocks five identical elements which will go into the finished products after some work in the work shop. The prices from the oldest to the most recently received were 4 euros, 5 euros, 5 euros, 6 euros, 5 euros. Sometime later, three elements went into production. What is the value of the remaining stock using the FIFO method of evaluation?

 

Using FIFO, we record as gone into production the oldest elements. Therefore the remaining ones are worth 6 + 5 = 11 euros.

 

 

Same question with the LIFO method.

 

Using LIFO, we record as gone into production the most recent elements. Therefore the remaining ones are worth 4 + 5 = 9 euros.

 

 

Same question with the continuing averaging method.

 

Before production the entire stock is worth 25 euros, that is 5 euros per element.

After using three of them, we are left with 2 elements, valued altogether at 10 euros.

 

 

 

Question 14: Describe what is the simplest cost model of the activity of a single product line firm?

 

It is a model of the costs behavior, where some costs generated in the firm are exactly proportional to the number of units produced, and the other costs are fixed (do not vary at all with the number of units produced).

 

 

 

Question 15: What is the fundamental equation of this simplest cost model?

 

If we denote

A = level of activity (i.e. number of units produced)

P = price per unit

VCU = variable cost per unit

FC = fixed costs in the firm

P&L = Profit or loss

 

the equation is

 

P x A = VCU x A + FC + P&L

 

(note that P&L depends on A; we could also write it P&L(A) )

 

 

 

 

Question 16: Draw the so-called Break-Even graph.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Question 17: A firm F, making only one type of product, had the following results last year:

 

Number of units sold

10 000

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Per unit

Total

 

 

(€)

(K€)

 

 

 

 

Sales

 

30

300

VC

 

15

150

 

 

 

 

Contribution

 

15

150

 

 

 

 

FC

 

 

60

 

 

 

 

Profit

 

 

90

 

What was the BE point?

 

It is the level of activity where Sales = Total costs.

 

Therefore where

 

A x Contribution per unit = Fixed costs

The contribution per unit, here, is 15 euros. The FC are 60 000 euros. Therefore the BE is

60 000 / 15 = 4000 units.

 

 

What was our margin of safety?

 

The margin of safety, at a given level of activity, is the distance between that level of activity and the BE. Here, it is 10 000 – 4000 = 6000 units.

 

 

 

Question 18: In order to try and boost profit to 100 K€ next year, we consider the two following possibilities:

a)      launch a marketing campaign which will cost 20 000 euros

b)      improve product quality, which will cost an extra 2 euros per unit

 

Comment upon each option. And suggest one to the management, explaining why.

 

Answers:

a)      if we add 20K euros of extra costs, in order to reach 100K€ of profit next year, we must reach a level of activity satisfying the equation

 

30€ x A = 15€ x A + 80K€ + 100K€

 

(the 80K€ is the new FC, and the 100K€ is the profit we would like to attain)

 

This requires a level of activity A = 180 000 / 15 = 12 000 units.

 

(15 is the contribution per unit = 30 - 15)

 

 

b)      if we improve the quality of the product while raising its variable cost per unit, the new contribution per unit will be 13 euros.

 

In this case, the level of activity A, must satisfy

 

30€ x A = 17€ x A + 60K€ + 100K€

 

This yield A = 12 308 units

 

 

The question becomes: “are we more likely to sell 12 000 units with the ad campaign, or to sell  12 308 units with a product improvement ?”

 

If we believe that the market is sensitive to product improvement, option b) is probably the best. If the product cannot much improved, and the 2€ per product will not create a significant difference, then we should rather choose the ad campaign.

 

 

 

 

Question 19: Explain why total cost per units in a multi-product-line firm are artificial.

 

Because, we must allocate OH. And these OH do not correspond to specific products. The allocation can be done in several ways.

 

When we cancel some production, the other products see their total cost per unit go up.

 

 

 

 

Question 20: The last two years, a firm F had the following results:

 

Year

Sales

Profits

 

(K€)

(K€)

 

 

 

2008

700

120

 

 

 

2009

900

200

 

If, in 2010, we budget sales of one million euros, what will be our profit?

 

 

Solve a system of two linear equations with two unknowns (VCU and FC):

 

700 x 1K€ = 700 x VCU + FC + 120K€

900 x 1K€ = 900 x VCU + FC + 200K€

 

Say, for the sake of the calculation, that PU = 1K€ (any number will do).

 

We find:

 

VCU =

0,6K€

 

 

FC =

160K€

 

 

Then if A is 1000 units (i.e. Sales = 1 mio €), then

 

1 mio € = 1000 x 0,6K€ + 160K€ + P&L

 

This yields P&L = 240 000 euros

 

 

This result can also be obtained without all these calculations:

The profit is linearly related to sales. We see that an increase of 200K€ in sales, leads to an increase of 80K€ in profit. Therefore a further increase of 100K€ in sales will lead to a further increase in profit of 40K€.

 

Therefore at 1 mio € of sales, the profit will be 240K€.