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Module 17

Module 17. Product Costing. Product and Period Costs. Product Costs. Period Costs. All production costs necessary to get products ready to sell. All costs other than product costs. For production companies all costs are either:. Product Costs and Accounts. Direct Materials.

yvonne-lott
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Module 17

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  1. Module 17 Product Costing

  2. Product and Period Costs Product Costs Period Costs All production costs necessary to get products ready to sell All costs other than product costs For production companies all costs are either:

  3. Product Costs and Accounts

  4. Direct Materials A finished good for one company may be the raw material for the next company. • Costs of primary raw materials that are converted into finished goods • Examples • Iron ore to a steel mill • Light fixtures for a house builder • Food stuffs for a restaurant

  5. Conversion Costs Costs of converting raw materials into finished goods: direct labor cost and production overhead

  6. Actual Overhead and Product Costs • Issues with actual overhead for most products or services: • Actual production overhead costs are unknown until after the end of the period • Seasonal costs vary: property taxes, utility bills • Volume of activity each month/year causes actual overhead costs per unit to differ • Used for large construction projects

  7. Predicted total manufacturing overhead cost for the year Predicted total direct labor hours for the year Using Predetermined Overhead Rates • Established at beginning of year • Can use different cost drivers • Predicted total direct labor hours • Predicted total machine hours • Calculating the predetermined rate using direct labor hours (normalized):

  8. Predicted total manufacturing overhead cost for the year Predicted total direct labor hours for the year $5,600,000 400,000 direct labor hours $14 per direct labor hour = = Example Predetermined overhead rate = Predicted 2013 activity level of 400,000 direct labor hours with manufacturing overhead totaling $5,600,000.

  9. Applying Overhead Example = 22,000 × $14 per direct labor hour = $308,000 Job #167 required $80 in materials and $100 in direct labor (10 hours): Direct Materials $ 80 Direct labor 100 Production overhead (10 x $14) 140 Total job cost $320 If production uses 22,000 direct labor hours in January, how much is applied overhead?

  10. The Production Order • Specifies details for a unique production job • Quantity to be produced • Materials requirements • Based on bill of materials • Production operations and other activities • Based on operations list

  11. The Job Cost Sheet Job-Cost Sheet Job No.___________________ Start Date __________________ Product No_________ Description_________________ Quantity_____ Materials Cost Requisition Total Date Department Number Description Cost • Serves as the record for recording the actual progress on the job • Basis for Work-in-Process & Finished goods • All production costs are included • Direct materials • Direct labor • Manufacturing overhead

  12. Basic Production Cost Flows

  13. Over and Under Applied Overhead • Balance in Production overhead at the end of year: • Exists because the amount of overhead applied is almost never the same amount as the overhead incurred • Actual overhead > Applied OH, then underapplied • Actual overhead < Applied OH, then overapplied • Transfer to Cost of goods sold as an adjustment • Underapplied will increase the COGS because too little overhead was applied. • Overapplied will decrease the COGS because too much overhead was applied.

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