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Prepared by Diane Tanner University of North Florida

Chapter 31. Normal Product Costing. Prepared by Diane Tanner University of North Florida. Costing of Products and Services. Three methods Actual costing Normal costing Standard costing

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Prepared by Diane Tanner University of North Florida

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  1. Chapter 31 Normal Product Costing Prepared by Diane Tanner University of North Florida

  2. Costing of Products and Services • Three methods • Actual costing • Normal costing • Standard costing • Differs from actual costing in how costs for manufacturing overhead are assigned to products or services

  3. How Costs Get Assigned to Products • Direct materials and direct labor • Traced to a product or service provided • Easy to determine which product/service to which the cost belongs because they are direct • Manufacturing overhead • Consists solely of indirect costs • Indirect costs cannot be easily identified with one specific product or service • Allocated to products and services in a normal costing system

  4. Production Departments Factory/Production Area Materials Storeroom Raw Materials Work in Process Finished Goods Costs in departments correlate to inventory accounts. Ready for Sale

  5. Materials Storeroom Acquiring Raw Materials 1 The Purchasing Manager fills out a purchase order to order materials from a supplier 2 When materials are received, the Materials Storeroom Clerk records and stocks the materials in the storeroom. Factory/Production Area 3 The Materials Storeroom Clerk sends the receiving report to Accounting for payment.

  6. Transactions to Acquire Materials Same as Actual Costing Purchase Materials for Cash • Debit Raw Materials • Credit Cash Purchase Materials on Account • Debit Raw Materials • Credit Accounts Payable Pay for materials previously purchased on account • Debit Accounts Payable • Credit Cash • Credit Inventory for cash discount, if any

  7. Will E. Delite Materials Requisition Materials Storeroom Factory/Production Area 1 The production supervisor fills out a materials requisition form. The materials storeroom clerk delivers the requested materials to the production area. 2 Authorizes the use of materials on a job 3 The form is sent to Accounting.

  8. Normal Costing • Used effectively when there are multiple products • Accumulates manufacturing overhead costs into an expense account—Manufacturing Overhead Expense • Allocates a portion of the manufacturing overhead to individual products based on • A beginning of period rate calculation • A rate generated by estimates • Provides more timely product cost information

  9. Using Materials (Normal Costing) Requisition of Direct Materials to Production • Debit Work in Process • Credit Raw Materials Requisition Indirect Materials to Production • Debit MOH expense • Credit Raw Materials Key Difference from Actual Costing

  10. Materials Requisition Materials Storeroom Will E. Delite Factory/Production Area Materials requisition form authorizes the use of materials on a job

  11. Time Tickets Factory/Production Area Materials Storeroom Time tickets to record the time spent on each job

  12. Measuring and Tracking Direct Labor • Multiplying a wage rate for each employee by the number of hours that each employee works on each product • Overtime premium (the extra ‘half’ time paid) • If the result of production problems, treat as overhead • If the result of accepting a rush order, treat as direct labor • Idle time • Treat as overhead • Why?

  13. Incurring Labor (Normal Costing) Incur Direct Labor Costs • Debit Work in Process • Credit Cash, salaries payable, etc. Incur Indirect Labor Costs • Debit MOH expense • Credit Cash, salaries payable, etc. Key Difference from Actual Costing

  14. ‘Applying’ Manufacturing Overhead • Applying overhead means to add MOH cost to products based on a predetermined allocation • Why is MOH applied? • It is an indirect cost • I.e., impossible or impractical to trace to a particular product • Need to know job costs asproduction occurs, i.e., on a timely basis • For making decisions such as pricing, product changes, etc. • Waiting until the end of the period when actual costs are known makes information untimely

  15. MOH Costs (Normal Costing) Incur MOH Costs • Debit MOH expense • Credit Cash, salaries payable, etc Apply MOH to Products • Debit Work in Process • Credit MOH expense Based on a predetermined rate

  16. Examples of MOH Rates • $5.00 per direct labor hour • $3.00 per direct labor dollar • $1.50 per machine hour used • How to apply: • $5.00 x Actual DL hours on a product = MOH cost • $3.00 per direct labor dollar • $3.00 x Actual DL dollars on a product = MOH cost • $1.50 per machine hour used • $1.50 x Actual machine hours used on a product = MOH cost

  17. The End

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