CH-3 Job Order Costing-Revised
CH-3 Job Order Costing-Revised
CH-3 Job Order Costing-Revised
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The distinction between the job cost and the process cost methods centers largely on how product costing is
accomplished. Job costing applies costs to specific jobs, which may consist of either a single physical unit or a
few like units in a distinct batch or job lot. In contrast, process costing deals with great masses of like units
and broad averages of unit costs. The basic distinction between job order costing and process costing is the
breadth of the denominator: in job order costing, the denominator is small; however, in process costing, the
denominator is large.
Job costing and process costing are extremes along a continuum of potential costing systems. Each company
designs its own accounting system to fit its underlying production activities. Some companies use hybrid
costing systems, which are blends of ideas of both job costing and process costing.
Job-costing Process-costing
System system
In this chapter, we focus on job costing systems. Chapter Four discusses process-costing systems.
The discussion below assumes that a paper-based manual system is used for recording costs. Cost and other data
are recorded on materials requisition forms, time tickets, and job cost sheets. Of course, many companies now
enter cost and other data directly into computer databases and have dispensed with these paper documents.
Nevertheless, the data residing in the computer typically consists of a "virtual" version of the manual system.
Since a manual system is easy for students to understand, we continue to rely on it when describing a job-order
costing system.
1. Job Cost Sheet.
In a job order costing system, we maintain a job cost sheet for each job. The cost sheets are like the accounts
receivable subsidiary ledger. While the accounts receivable subsidiary ledger provides a detailed listing of
individual customer accounts, the job cost sheets show a detailed listing of the costs assigned to individual jobs
in the work in process and finished goods inventories. Each job sheet breaks the costs down in terms of direct
materials, direct labor, and manufacturing overhead assigned to individual jobs. The job cost sheet will have
some code or descriptive data to identify the particular job and will contain spaces to collect costs of materials,
labor, and overhead.
2. Accounting for materials Costs.
When a job is started, materials that will be required to complete the job are withdrawn from the storeroom. The
document that authorizes these withdrawals and that specifies the types and amounts of materials withdrawn is
called the materials requisition form.
Normally the production department supervisor completes the materials requisition form and presents it to the
storeroom supervisor. The materials requisition form is prepared at least in three copies. One copy goes to the
cost accounting department. In this department this copy is used as a basis for transferring the cost of the
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requisitioned material from the “Raw Material Inventory” account to the “Work in Process Inventory” account,
and for entering the cost of the material on the job-cost sheet for the production job in process. The materials
requisition form identifies the job to which the materials are to be charged. Care must be taken when charging
materials to distinguish between direct and indirect materials.
For products and product components that are produced routinely, the required materials are known in advance.
For these products and components, material requisitions are based on a “bill of material” that lists all of the
materials needed. In complex manufacturing operations, in which production takes place in several stages,
material requirements planning (MRP) may be used. MRP is an operations-management tool that assists
managers in scheduling production in each stage of the manufacturing process. Such careful planning insures
that, at each stage in the production process, the required subassemblies, components, or partially processed
materials will be ready for the next stage. MRP system, which are generally computerized, include files that list
all of the component parts and materials in inventory and all of the parts and materials needed in each stage of
the production process.
The cost of a manufactured product consists of the combined costs of the raw materials processed, the direct
labor of employees who processed the raw materials and the factory overhead generated by the manufacturing
process. Since materials may comprise the largest single element of cost, the control of materials cost is an
important factor in manufacturing.
Materials control Procedures
The logical step-by-step development of materials control procedures can be illustrated by using a simplified
version of what is ordinarily a complex manufacturing activity. Although the following presentation suggests
that only one job is being processed and that each step in the processing of the forms described is isolated, the
fact is that several jobs may be in production simultaneously, and the flow of paperwork would be continuous.
Control during Purchasing
On receipt of a customer’s order, the sales manager communicates to the production manager all the needed
details, such as specifications, units ordered, required delivery date, and prices. From these data, the production
manager reports a production order which authorizes the production of the required products.
Bill of materials:
The production order is given to supervisor in charge of production, who, based on knowledge of the product,
prepares a schedule of the materials required to complete the order. The form for this purpose is called bill of
materials.
A copy of the bill of materials is sent to be storeroom keeper. This person checks the quantities of the various
materials required with those on hand and on order to determine whether or not there are enough materials
available to complete the order. If there are not enough materials, the purchasing agent must be notified of the
quantity required; if there is an adequate amount of materials on hand for the order, it must be determined
whether the withdrawal of the required quantity will reduce the stock on hand to a low level. If such is the case,
the purchasing agent must be advised on the replacement needed. The bill of materials procedures are
preliminary to the actual starting of the job order through the factory. They are designed to ensure that once the
order starts into production, it will not be held up for lack of raw materials.
Purchase Requisition.
The form used by the storeroom keeper to notify the purchasing agent of the additional materials needed is
known as a purchase requisition. This requisition is an important part of the materials control process because it
is the agent’s authority to buy. A carefully designed form should be used. Purchase requisitions should originate
with the storeroom keeper or some other designated individual given similar authority and responsibility.
Purchase requisitions should be numbered serially to help detect the loss or misuse of any of these forms. They
may be prepared in duplicate or in triplicate. If prepared in duplicate, the storeroom keeper retains one copy is
sent to the purchasing agent. If the storeroom keeper has physical charge of the materials but another person in
the accounting department is in charge of the subsidiary stores ledger in which a record is kept on the materials
on hand, the requisition should be prepared in triplicate. The first copy goes to the purchasing agent; the second
copy goes to the person in charge of the subsidiary stores ledger; and the third copy is retained by the storeroom
keeper.
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Purchase order
The purchase requisition gives the purchasing agent authority to order the materials described in the
requisition. From a file of quotations and prices, the vendor may be selected from whom the materials can be
obtained at the lowest cost and with the least delay. If the file does not contain this information, the purchasing
agent may communicate with several prospective vendors and request quotations on the materials needed.
A purchase order is then completed and addressed to the chosen vendor, describing the materials wanted stating
price and terms, and fixing the date and method of delivery. This purchase order should be numbered serially
and prepared in quadruplicate. The first goes to the vendor, the second copy is retained by the purchasing agent,
the third copy goes to the accounting department where it is referred to the stores ledger clerk, and the fourth
copy goes to the receiving clerk. The stores ledger clerk makes a memo entry on the appropriate ledger sheet of
the quantity on order.
Vendor’s Invoice
The vendor’s invoice should be received before the materials arrive at the factory. As soon as it is received, it
goes to the purchasing agent, who compares it with the purchase order, noting particularly that the description
of the items is the same, that the price and the terms agree, and that the method of shipment and the date of
delivery conform to the instructions on the purchase order. When satisfied that the invoice is correct, the
purchasing agent indicates approval directly on the invoice.
Receiving Report
It was suggested that the fourth copy of the purchase order goes to the receiving clerk to give advance notice of
the arrival of the materials ordered. This is done to facilitate planning work and allotting space to incoming
materials. The receiving clerk is in charge of the receiving department where all incoming materials are
received, opened, counted or weighed, and tested for conformity with the order. If the materials received are of
too technical a nature to be tested by the receiving clerk, the inspection may be undertaken by an engineer from
the production manager’s office or the materials may be sent to the plant laboratory for testing.
As the receiving clerk counts and identified the materials, a receiving report should be prepared similar in form
to the one reproduced below. Each report is numbered serially and shows from whom the materials were
received, when they were received, what the shipment contained, and the number of the purchase order that
identifies the shipment. The report should be prepared in quadruplicate. The first and second copies go to the
purchasing agent, the third copy goes with the materials or supplies to the storeroom keeper to ensure that all of
the materials that come to the receiving department are put into the storeroom; and the fourth copy is retained
by the receiving clerk.
The purchasing agent’s first copy of the receiving report is compared with the vendor’s invoice and the
purchase order to determine that the materials received are exactly like those ordered and billed. If they are
found to be the same, the purchasing agent then attaches the receiving report to the other forms already in the
file and sends the entire file to the accounting department where a voucher is prepared and recorded in the
voucher register. To the second copy of the receiving report, the purchasing agent adds the unit prices of the
articles received and extends the figure to show the total cost. This copy then goes to the accounting department
for posting to the appropriate materials accounts in the stores ledger. The purpose of this double routing to the
accounting department of copies of the same form is to maximize internal control procedures. One accounting
clerk enters the purchase in total in the voucher register; a second clerk enters the purchase in detail in the
subsidiary stores ledger.
Debit-Credit Memorandum - occasionally, a shipment of materials does not match the order and the invoice.
When this situation occurs, comparing the receiving report with the purchase order and the invoice will disclose
the variance to the purchasing agent. Whatever the cause of the difference, it will lead to correspondence with
the vendor, and copies of the letters should be a part of the files of forms relating to the transaction. If a larger
quantity has been received than has been ordered and the excess is to be kept for future use, a credit
memorandum is prepared notifying the vendor of the amount of the increase in the invoice.
If, on the other hand, the shipment is short, one of the two courses of action may be taken. If the materials
received can be used, they may be retained and a debit memorandum prepared notifying the vendor of the
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amount of the shortage. If the materials received can not be used, a return shipping order is prepared and the
materials returned.
The return shipping order is usually made out in triplicate. The first copy goes to the vendor, the second copy
goes to the receiving or shipping clerk, and the third copy is filed with other forms relating to the transaction.
Debit or credit memorandums should be prepared in duplicate. The first copy goes to the vendor and the second
copy is filed with documents relating with the transaction.
Not until all variances or disagreements have been resolved will the transaction be complete. When they are
resolved, the purchasing agent sends the file to the accounting department.
Control During storage and Issuances
The proceeding discussion applies to the control of materials during the process of procurement. The routine
that has been suggested and the forms described have traced the ordering and the arrival of the materials and
their transfer to the storeroom. The next problem to be considered is the storage and issuance of materials and
supplies.
Materials inventories usually represent a considerable investment of money; therefore, care should be taken to
devise an adequate control system to protect these assets. The problem is how this control can best be achieved.
The importance of knowing the quantities of materials on hand at any time has already been emphasized; it is
equally important that the cost of materials on hand be known.
Materials Requisition
No material should be issued from the storeroom except on written authorization so that there is less chance of
theft, carelessness, or misuse. The form used to provide this control is known as the material requisition or
stores requisition and is prepared by the person or persons in the factory authorized to withdraw materials from
the storeroom. The individuals who are authorized to perform this function may differ from company to
company, but such authority must be given to someone. The most satisfactory arrangement would be to have
the production manager prepare all of the materials requisitions, but this is not usually feasible. Another
arrangement is to require that the supervisor of the department sign all materials requisitions. When a properly
signed requisition is presented to the storeroom keeper, the requisitioned materials are released. The employee
to whom materials are issued should be required to sign the requisition.
The material requisition, which is numbered serially, is usually prepared in quadruplicate. The first and second
copy goes to the accounting department. One copy, after pricing, provides the information needed in posting the
cost of requisitioned materials to the appropriate accounts in the job cost and factory overhead ledgers. Direct
materials are charged to the proper jobs and indirect materials are charged to the factory overhead accounts. The
other copy provides the information needed in posting the quantities and costs of issued materials to the credit
of the proper materials accounts in the stores ledger. This copy also serves as a source of the information needed
in preparing a summary of the total direct and indirect materials issued during the month. The third copy is
given to the storeroom keeper and serves as the authority for issuing the materials requisitioned. The fourth
copy is retained by the production manager or supervisor who prepared it.
Identification continues to be the most important factor in the control of materials. From the time materials are
issued for use in the factory until they are removed as finished products, they are identified by number as
applying to a particular job. For this reason, one of the most important items of information that should appear
on the materials requisition is a job or production order number.
3. Accounting for Labor Costs.
Labor costs are recorded on a document called a time ticket or a time sheet. Each employee records the
amount of time he or she spends on each job and each task on a time ticket. The time ticket is the source
document used in the cost accounting department as the basis for adding direct-labor cost to “Work in
Process Inventory” and to the job-cost sheets for the various jobs in process. In some factories a
computerized time-clock system may be used. Employees enter the time they begin and stop work on each
job into the time clock. The time clock is connected to a computer, which records the time spent on various
jobs and transmits the information to the accounting department. The time spent on a particular job is
considered direct labor and its cost is "traced" to that job. The cost of time spent on other tasks, not traceable
to any particular job, is usually considered part of manufacturing overhead.
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Allocation of Factory Overhead
Why Allocation?
As discussed in the previous chapter, manufacturing overhead includes all of those costs incurred in the
manufacturing process which are not directly "traced" to a particular cost object. In practice, manufacturing
overhead usually consists of all manufacturing costs other than direct materials and direct labor. Compared to
direct materials and direct labor, manufacturing overhead costs are not as easy to assign to particular job.
Besides, for most overhead costs actual cost is known after a long period of time, say, after a year, a month, etc.
So, since manufacturing overhead costs are also costs of a job, we assign (allocate) manufacturing overhead to
jobs based on a predetermined overhead rate, which is estimated at the beginning of the year. Otherwise, we
would have to wait until the end of the year to calculate the cost of jobs.
Selection of Allocation Base
In order to allocate overhead costs, some type of allocation base common to all products being produced must
be identified. The most widely used allocation bases are direct labor-hours, direct labor costs, and machine-
hours. (These bases have been severely criticized in recent years since allegedly there is little relationship
between machine-hours or direct labor-hours and overhead.). A predetermined overhead rate is computed by
dividing the estimated total overhead for the upcoming period by the estimated total amount of the allocation
base.
Ideally overhead cost should be strictly proportional to the allocation base; in other words, for example a 10%
change in the allocation base should cause a 10 % change in the overhead cost. Only then will the allocated
overhead costs be useful in decision-making and in performance evaluation. However, much of the overhead
typically consists of costs that are not proportional to any allocation base that could be devised for products and
hence any scheme for allocating such costs will inevitably lead to costs that are biased and unreliable for
decision-making and performance evaluation. In practice, the overriding concern is to select some bases for
allocating all overhead costs and hardly any (scant) attention is paid to questions of causality.
The predetermined cost-driver rate may be referred to as a predetermined overhead rate or a burden rate.
Developing predetermined cost-driver rates requires a lot of estimation, described below.
For estimating cost-driver rates, all activities must be defined and categorized.
Then the overhead costs of all of the categories must be estimated. These cost estimates are usually based on
past experience, current conditions, and expected changes.
Next, cost-driver bases must be chosen and the quantity of the base must be estimated. Sometimes a cost-driver
base is obvious for some overhead costs. At other times, a valid cost-driver base cannot be identified. Cause and
effect relationship between the driver and the cost must be investigated.
Finally, the predetermined cost-driver rate can be calculated by dividing the estimated cost of a resource by the
estimated quantity of the chosen cost-driver base. These rates are then used to apply costs to jobs based on the
actual amount of use of the cost driver.
At any rate, the actual amount of the allocation base incurred by a job is recorded on the job cost sheet. The
actual amount of the allocation base is then multiplied by the predetermined overhead rate to determine the
amount of overhead that is applied to the job.
The following bases can be used to compute the factory overhead application rate:
1. Physical output per unit of production base
2. Direct materials cost base
3. Direct labor (DL) cost base
4. Direct labor hours base
5. Machine hours base
The bases used differ not only from company to company but also from one department or cost center to
another within the same company.
1. Physical output per unit of production base
This method applies factory overhead equally to each unit produced and is appropriate when a company
or department manufactures only one type/kind of product. This method is very simple since data on the
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units produced are readily available for applying factory overhead. The factory overhead rate is
computed as follows:
Factory overhead rate per unit of production = Estimated factory overhead costs
Estimated units of production
2. Direct materials cost:
If factory overhead consists mainly of the labor and equipment costs needed for material handling, a
direct relationship is established and this base is used. A problem arises when more than one product is
made, because each product requires its own quantities and types of materials, therefore accuracy would
dictate a separate computation of factory overhead application rates for each product. This, however,
violates the goal of simplicity.
The factory overhead rate is computed as follows:
FOH rate as a percentage of direct material cost = Estimated factory overhead cost X100%
Estimated direct material costs
This method has limited use because in most cases no logical relationship exists between
direct material cost of a product and factory overhead used in its production.
3. Direct labor cost base:
This is the most widely used base because direct labor costs are generally closely related to factory
overhead costs and payroll data are readily available. It therefore meets the objectives of having a
direct relationship to factory overhead cost, being simple to compute and apply and requiring little, if
any, additional cost to compute. The formula is as follows:
FOH rate as a percentage of direct cost = Estimated factory overhead cost X 100%
Estimated direct labor cost
This method would not be appropriate:
a) If there is a direct relationship between factories overhead cost and direct labor cost but wage
rates vary greatly within departments.
b) If factory overhead costs are composed largely of depreciation and equipment related costs.
4. Direct labor hours:
This method is appropriate when there is a direct relationship between factory overhead costs and direct
labor hours and when there is significant disparity in hourly wage rates. Time keeping records must be
accumulated to provide the data necessary for applying this rate.
The rate computed as follows:
Factory overhead rate per direct labor hours = Estimated factory overhead cost
Estimated direct labor hours
This method like direct labor cost method would be inappropriate if factory overhead cost
were composed of costs unrelated to labor activity.
5. The machine hours:
This method uses the time required for machines to perform similar operations as a base in computing
the factory overhead application rate. This method is appropriate in organizations or departments that
are largely automated so that the majority of factory overhead costs consist of department and other
equipment related costs.
The formula is as follows:
Factory overhead rate per machine hours =Estimated factory overhead cost
Estimated machine hours
In general, Factory overhead application rate per unit\dollars = Estimated factory overhead costs
Estimated base at denominator activity
Note that in any case, the numerator remains constant; only the denominator or base activity varies.
General Approach to Job Costing
There are seven steps to assigning costs to an individual job. This seven-step procedure applies equally to
assigning costs to a job in the manufacturing, merchandising, and service sectors.
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Step 1: Identify the job that is the chosen cost Object.
Step 2: Identify the Direct costs of the Job. Direct material and direct labor:
Direct materials costs are calculated by multiplying the quantity of each material used for a particular job by
its unit cost (the direct-cost rate) and adding together the costs of all the materials. Similarly, direct
manufacturing labor costs are calculated by multiplying the hours worked by each employee on a particular
job by his or her wage rate and adding these costs together.
Step 3: Select the cost-Allocation Bases to Use for Allocating Indirect Costs to the Job. Indirect
manufacturing costs are necessary costs to do a job that cannot be traced to a specific job. It would be
impossible to complete a job without incurring indirect costs such as supervision, manufacturing engineering,
utilities, and repairs. Because these costs cannot be traced to a specific job, they must be allocated to all jobs
but not in a blanket way, different jobs require different quantities of indirect resources. The objective is to
allocate the costs of indirect resources in a systematic way to their related jobs. Companies often use multiple
cost-allocation bases to allocate indirect costs.
Step 4: Identify the Indirect Costs Associated with Each Cost-Allocation Base: i.e. FOH.
Step 5: Compute the Rate per Unit of Each cost-Allocation Base Used to Allocate Indirect costs to the
Job. For each cost pool, the indirect-cost rate is calculated by dividing total overhead costs in the pool
(determined in step 4 above) by the total quantity of the cost-allocation base (determined in step 3 above).
Step 6: compute the Indirect costs Allocated to the Job. The indirect costs of a job are computed by
multiplying the actual quantity of each different allocation base (one allocation base for each cost pool)
associated with the job by the indirect cost rate of each allocation base.
Step 7: Compute the Total Cost of the Job by Adding all direct and Indirect costs Assigned to the Job.
Examples 1
1. The following budgeted data is given for XYZ Textile Factory for the year 2001.
Estimated factory overhead for the year………………………………$450,000
Estimated number of shirts to be produced in the year…………………200,000
Estimated direct material cost for the year…………………………….$300,000
Estimated direct labor cost…………………………………………….$900,000
Estimated direct labor hours………….……………………………… 300,000 hrs
Estimated machine hours……………………………………………… 90,000 hrs
Instruction: Compute the predetermined factory overhead rate based on the following bases.
A. Physical output method
B. Direct materials cost base
C. Direct labor cost base
D. Direct labor hours base
E. machine hours base
Example-2
Assume all information in example 1 above and the following additional information:
Actual data for job 201 is give is given below
o Actual shirts completed for job 201………………2,000 shirts
o Actual direct material cost used………………...$30,000
o Actual direct cost incurred……………………...$20,000
o Actual direct labor hours used…………………. 400 hours
o Actual machine hours…………………………. 240 hours
Instruction: Record the applied factory overhead and determine the total cost of job 201 under each of the five
bases.
A. Physical output method
B. Direct materials cost base
C. Direct labor cost base
D. Direct labor hours base
E. Machine hours base
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The Manufacturing Overhead Control Account
Actual overhead costs are recorded by debiting “Manufacturing Overhead Control” account. Overhead costs
applied to jobs in Work in Process using predetermined rates are recorded on the credit side of the
Manufacturing Overhead Applied account with a debit to ‘Work in Process’ account.
Time Period Used To Compute Indirect-Cost Rates
Indirect cost rates should be calculated for a long period of time (usually for a year) and not for short periods
(such as a week, a month, etc). This is so because of the following reasons:
1. The numerator reason (indirect-cost pool). The shorter the period, the greater the influence of seasonal
patterns on the amount of costs. For example, if indirect- cost rates were calculated each month, costs of
heating (included in the numerator) would be charged only to production during the winter months. But an
annual period incorporates the effect of all four seasons into a single, annual indirect-cost rate.
Levels of total indirect costs are also affected by nonseasonal erratic costs. Examples of nonseasonal erratic
costs include costs incurred in a particular month that benefit operations during future months, costs of repairs
and maintenance of equipment, and costs of vacation and holiday pay. Pooling all indirect costs together over
the course of a full year and calculating a single annual indirect-cost rate helps to smooth some of the erratic
bumps in costs associated with specific periods.
2. The denominator reason (quantity of the allocation base). Another reason for longer periods is the
need to spread monthly fixed indirect costs over fluctuating levels of monthly output. Some indirect costs
may be variable each month with respect to the cost allocation base (for example, supplies). Whereas other
indirect costs are fixed each month (for example, property, taxes, and rent).
Normal Costing
The difficulty of calculating actual indirect cost rates on a weekly or monthly basis means managers cannot
calculate the actual costs of jobs as they are completed. However, managers want a close approximation of the
manufacturing costs of various jobs regularly during the year, not just at the end of the year. Managers want
manufacturing costs (and other costs, in fact) for ongoing uses, including pricing jobs, managing costs and
preparing interim financial statements. Because of these benefits of immediate access to job costs, few
companies wait until the actual manufacturing overhead is finally known (at year end) before allocating
overhead costs to compute job costs. Instead, a predetermined or budgeted indirect-cost rate is calculated for
each cost pool at the beginning of a fiscal year, and overhead costs are allocated to jobs as work progresses.
For the numerator and denominator reasons already described, the budgeted indirect-cost rate is computed for
each cost pool by dividing the budgeted annual indirect cost by the budgeted annual quantity of the cost
allocation base. Using budgeted indirect-cost rates gives rise to normal costing.
Normal costing is a costing method that traces direct costs to a cost object by using the actual direct-cost
rates times the actual quantity of the direct cost inputs, and allocates indirect costs based on the budgeted
indirect-cost rates times the actual quantity of the cost allocation base(s). Both actual costing and normal
costing trace direct costs to jobs in the same way. The actual quantities and actual rates of direct materials and
direct manufacturing labor used on a job are known from the source documents as the work is done. The only
difference between actual costing and normal costing is that actual costing uses actual indirect-cost rates,
whereas normal costing uses budgeted indirect-cost rates to cost jobs.
Example-3 (taken from your text book, page 123, exercise 4-18)
Anderso construction assembles residential houses. It uses a job costing system with two direct cost categories
(direct materials and direct labor) and one indirect cost pool (assembly support). A direct labour hours is the
allocation base for assembly support costs. In December 2003, Anderson budgets 2004 assembly support costs
to be $8,000,000 and 2004 direct labor hours to be 160,000.
At the end of 2004, Anderson is comparing the cost of several jobs that were started and completed in 2004.
Laguna Model Mission Model
Construction period Feb – June 2004 May – Oct 2004
Direct materials $106,450 $127,604
Direct labor $36,276 $41,410
Direct labor hours 900 1,010
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Direct material and direct labor are paid for on a contract basis. The costs of each are known when direct
materials are used or direct labor hours are worked. The 2004 actual assembly – support costs were $6,888,000,
and actual direct labor hours were 164,000.
Required:
i) Computethe (a) budgeted and (b) actual indirect cost rates. Why do they differ?
ii) What is the job cost of the Laguna Model and the Mission Model using:
(a) Normal costing and (b) Actual costing
iii) Why might Anderson construction prefer normal costing over actual costing?
Example-4
Zigba Furniture is a furniture manufacturing firm that uses job order costing. The company’s inventory balances
on January 1, the beginning of its fiscal year were as follows:
Raw materials............................................. Br 40,000
Work in process......................................... 30,000
Finished goods ........................................... 60,000
The company applies overhead cost to jobs on the basis of machine-hours worked. For the current year, the
company estimated that it would work 150,000 machine-hours and incur a manufacturing overhead cost of Br
900,000. The following transactions were recorded for the year:
a. Raw materials were purchased on account, Br 820,000.
b. Raw materials were requisitioned for use in production, Br 760,000 (Br 720,000 direct
material and Br 40,000 indirect material).
c. The following costs were incurred for employee services; direct labor Br 150,000: indirect
labor Br 220,000; sales commission, Br 180,000; administrative salaries, Br 400,000.
d. Sales travel costs were incurred, Br 34,000.
e. Utility costs were incurred in the factory, Br 86,000.
f. Advertising costs incurred; Br 360,000.
g. Depreciation for the year, Br 700,000 (80% relates to factory operations and 20% to selling
and administrative activities)
h. Insurance expired during the year, Br 20,000 (70% relates to factory operations and the
remaining 30% relates to selling and administrative activities)
i. Manufacturing overhead was applied to production. Due to greater than expected demand for
its products, the company worked 160,000 machine hours during the year.
j. Goods costing Br 1,800,000 to manufacture, according to their job cost sheets, were completed
during the year.
k. Goods were sold on account to customers during the year at a total selling price of Br
3,000,000. The goods cost Br 1,740,000 to manufacture according to their job cost sheets.
Instruction:
Prepare journal entries to record the preceding transactions.
Budgeted Indirect Costs and End-Of-Period Adjustments
Since the predetermined overhead rate is based entirely on estimated data, there will almost always be a
difference between the actual amount of overhead cost incurred and the amount of overhead cost that is applied
to the Work In Process account. This difference is termed under applied or over applied overhead and can be
determined by the comparing these two accounts. An under applied balance occurs when more overhead cost is
actually incurred than is applied to the Work in Process account. An over applied balance results from applying
more overhead to Work in Process than is actually incurred. In another word, when the total FOH Applied
exceeds the FOH Control account the difference is over applied and when the total FOH Applied is lower than
the FOH Control account the difference is under applied.
Cause of under- and over applied overhead
When a predetermined overhead rate is used, it is implicitly assumed that the overhead cost is variable with
(i.e., proportional to) the allocation base. For example, if the predetermined overhead rate is Br 80 per direct
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labor-hour, it is implicitly assumed that the actual overhead costs will increase by Br 80 for each additional
direct labor-hour that is incurred. If, however, some of the overhead is fixed with respect to the allocation base,
this will not happen and there will be a discrepancy between the actual total amount of the overhead and the
overhead that is applied using the Br 80 rate. In addition, the actual total overhead can differ from the estimated
total overhead because of poor controls over overhead spending or because of inability to accurately forecast
overhead costs.
Disposition of under- and over applied Overhead
There are three approaches to dealing with an under- or over applied overhead balance in the accounts.
(1) the adjusted allocation-rate approach, (2) the proration approach, and (3) the write-off to cost of goods
sold approach.
1. Adjusted Allocation-Rate Approach
The adjusted allocation-rate approach restates all overhead entries in the general ledger and subsidiary ledgers
using actual cost rates rather than budgeted cost rates. First, the actual indirect-cost rate is computed at the
end of the year. Then, the indirect costs allocated to every job during the year are recomputed using the actual
indirect-cost rate (rather than the budgeted indirect-cost rate). Finally, end-of year closing entries are made.
The result is that at year-end, every job-cost record and finished goods record - as well as the ending Work-in
Process Control, Finished Goods Control, and Cost of Goods Sold accounts - accurately represents actual
indirect costs incurred. The widespread adoption of computerized accounting systems has greatly reduced the
cost of using the adjusted allocation-rate approach.
The adjusted allocation-rate approach yields the benefits of both the timeliness and convenience of normal
costing during the year and the accuracy of actual costing at the end of the year. Each individual job-cost
record and the end-of-year account balances for inventories and cost of goods sold are adjusted to actual costs.
After-the-fact analysis of actual profitability of individual jobs provides managers with accurate and useful
insights for future decisions about job pricing, which jobs to emphasize, and ways to manage costs.
2. Proration Approach
Proration spreads under allocated overhead or over allocated overhead among ending work in process,
finished goods and cost of goods sold. Materials inventories are not allocated manufacturing overhead costs,
so they are not included in this proration.
Organizations should prorate under allocated or over allocated amounts on the basis of the total amount of
manufacturing overhead allocated (before proration) in the ending balances of Work-in-Process Control,
Finished Goods Control, and Cost of Goods Sold. However, in case such information is not available, the
ending balances (before proration) of WIP, FGs and CGS accounts can be used for disposition of over or
under applied overhead.
3. Write-Off to Cost of Goods sold Approach
In this case, the total under allocated overhead or over allocated overhead is included in the current year's Cost
of Goods Sold. The simplest approach is to close out the under- or over applied overhead to Cost of Goods
Sold
Choice among Approaches
Which of these three approaches is the best one to use? In marketing this decision, managers should be
guided by how the resulting information will be used. If managers intend to develop the most accurate record
of individual job costs for profitability analysis purposes, the adjusted allocation-rate approach is preferred. If
the purpose is confined to reporting the most accurate inventory and cost of goods sold figures in the financial
statements, proration based on the manufacturing overhead-allocated component in the ending balances
should be used because it adjusts the balances to what they would have been under actual costing. Note that
the proration approach does not adjust individual job cost records.
The write-off to Cost of Goods Sold is the simplest approach for dealing with under allocated or over
allocated overhead. If the amount of under allocated or over allocated overheads is small -- in comparison to
total operating income or some other measure of materiality -- the write-off to Cost of Goods Sold approach
yields a good approximation to more accurate, but more complex, approaches. Modern companies are also
becoming increasingly conscious of inventory control. Thus, quantities of inventories are lower than they
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were in earlier years, and Cost of Goods Sold tends to be higher in relation to the dollar amount of work-in-
process and finished goods inventories. Also, the inventory balances of job-costing companies are usually
small because goods are often made in response to customer orders. Consequently, as is true in our Robinson
example, writing off under allocated or over allocated overhead instead of prorating it is unlikely to cause
significant distortions in financial statements. For all these reasons, the cost-benefit test would favor the
simplest approach -- write-off to Cost of Goods Sold -- because the more complex attempts at accuracy
represented by the other two approaches do not appear to provide sufficient additional useful information.
The Effect of under- and over applied Overhead on Net Income
If overhead is under applied, less overhead has been applied to inventory than has actually been incurred.
Enough overhead must be applied retroactively to Cost of Goods Sold (and perhaps ending inventories) to
eliminate this discrepancy. Since Cost of Goods Sold is increased, under applied overhead reduces net income.
If overhead is over applied, more overhead has been applied to inventory than has actually been incurred.
Enough overhead must be removed retroactively from Cost of Goods Sold (and perhaps ending inventories) to
eliminate this discrepancy. Since Cost of Goods Sold is decreased, over applied overhead increases net income.
The Flow of Costs in Job Order Costing
The basic flow of costs in a job-order system begins by recording the costs of material, labor, and
manufacturing overhead. Direct material and direct labor costs are debited to the Work in Process account. Any
indirect material or indirect labor costs are debited to the Manufacturing Overhead Control account, along with
any other actual manufacturing overhead costs incurred during the period. Manufacturing overhead is applied to
Work In Process using the predetermined rate. The offsetting credit entry is to the Manufacturing Overhead
control account. The cost of finished units is credited to Work In Process and debited to the Finished Goods
inventory account. When units are sold, their costs are credited to Finished Goods and debited to Cost of Good
Sold.
Example 5
A Corporation uses a job-order cost system. The factory overhead rate estimated for the year 2001 was $8 per
DL hrs. The inventory accounts had the following balances on December 1:
Materials………………………………$7,000
Work-in-process (job 210)……………………….. 6,500
Finished Goods (job 209)………………. 7,000
During December, the following events occurred:
a) Material purchased on account $18,000
b) Direct materials and factory supplies were issued as follows:
Job 211………………………$4,500
Job 212……………………… 5,300
Job 213……………………… 6,200
Supplies (indirect materials)….1,800
c) The December direct labor costs were:
Job 210…………………150 hrs at $ 6/hr……………………..$ 900
Job 211………………… 400 hrs at $6/hr…………………….. 2,400
Job 212 ………………... 350 hrs at $6/hr……………………...2,100
Job 213 …………………100 hrs at $6/hr ……………………... 600
Total 1,000 hrs $ 6000
d) Factory indirect labor for December was $2,400.
e) Other overhead costs incurred during December:
Utilities (paid in cash)…………………. $2,500
Factory depreciation………………..…… 1,000
Repairs and maintenance (Paid in cash)… 500
Total……………………..$4,000
f) Job 210, 211, and 212 were completed and transferred to finished goods inventory.
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g) Job 209 and 210 were sold on account for 120% of cost assumes perpetual inventory system.
Instruction:-
1. Journalize the above transactions.
2. Determine ending balance of all inventory accounts.
3. Determine the under or over applied overhead.
Example 6
Consider the following ending balances of some accounts in B Company.
Factory Overhead Control Factory Overhead Applied Cost of Good Sold
70,000 30,000
The amounts of factory overhead applied included in different accounts are as follows:
Account Factory overhead cost
Cost of goods sold…………………………$ 275,400
Finished goods…………………………….. 32,400
Work in process…………………………… 16,200
Instruction:
1. Compute over or under applied.
2. Show the disposition and the necessary journal entries to account for under or over applied OH
using:
a).Proration Approach
b). Write-Off to Cost of Goods sold Approach
Example-7
ABC Furniture Company has two departments and the following data relate to the company for the year 2008.
Inventory January 1, 2008
Direct material---------------------------------130,000
Work in process-------------------------------100,000
Finished goods---------------------------------80,000
Manufacturing overhead costs budgeted for the year in both departments is given below:
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Note: The company applies overhead using machine hours in department-A and direct labor cost in
department-B.
Summary of actual events for the year is given below for both departments and for the company as follows:
No. Items Department-A Department-B Total
A Direct material purchased 3,800,000
B Direct material requisitioned 2,200,000 1,500,000 3,700,000
C Direct labor cost incurred 1,800,000 5,600,000 7,400,000
D FOH incurred 2,200,000 2,200,000 4,400,000
E FOH Applied 1,760,000 X X
F Cost of goods manufactured 15,640,000
G Sales 26,000,000
H Cost of goods sold 15,600,000
Required
A. compute the budgeted overhead rates for both departments
B. Compute the amount of machine hours actually worked in department-A
C. Compute the factory overhead applied in department-B
D. Record transactions A through H
E. Is overhead under applied or over applied and by how much?
Example-8
Alpha limited company produces office equipments in response to its customer’s orders. The company uses
job costing system that has two direct cost categories (DM and DL) and one indirect cost category (OH).
Overhead is allocated based on manufacturing labor costs.
Budgeted data for a given period is given below:
Direct labor cost-------------------------2,100,000
Manufacturing overhead--------------1,260,000
Additional information
At the end of that year, two jobs X and Y were incomplete. Total direct labor and direct material for
job X is $55,000 and $110,000 respectively and for job Y $195,000 and $210,000 respectively.
Machine time for jobs X and Y are 1,435 and 3,235 hours respectively.
Total manufacturing overhead incurred for the period is $1,000,000 and direct labor cost total
$2,000,000 (100,000 direct labor hours)
There were no beginning inventories and in addition to the ending work in process inventory, finished
goods has an ending balance of $780,000 out of which $200,000 is direct labor cost.
Total sales for the period is $11,200,000 and goods are sold at 140% of their cost and operating
expense for the period is $2,200,000
Required
A. What is the balance of W/P, F/G and CGS at the end of the period before adjustment?
B. Compute the cost of goods manufactured
C. Is overhead under or over applied and by how much?
D. Prorate the under or over applied overhead among W/P, F/G and CGS based on
I. Their ending balance before proration
II. The FOH in each item before adjustment
Items Ending Fraction Allocated FOH-in Fraction Allocated
balance OH ending OH
W/P 720,000 720/9,500 15,157.89 150,000 150/1,200 25,000
F/G 780,000 780/9,500 16,421.05 120,000 120/1,200 20,000
CGS 8000,000 8,000/9,500 168,421.06 930,000 930/1,200 155,000
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Total 9,500,000 1,200,000
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C. The has been offered to give professional services to Company X and Y that requires the following
resources:
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Normal Spoilage is spoilage that is an inherent result of the particular production process and arises even
under efficient operating conditions. For a given production process, management must decide the rate of
spoilage it is willing to accept as normal. Costs of normal spoilage are typically treated as component of the
costs of good unit manufactured because good units cannot be made without the simultaneous appearance of
spoiled units. Normal spoilage rates should be computed using total units completed as the base, not total
actual units started in production. Because total units started also include any abnormal spoilage in addition to
normal spoilage. Moreover, the normal spoilage is the amount of expected spoilage associated or related to
the good units produced.
Abnormal Spoilage
Abnormal Spoilage is spoilage that should not arise under efficient operating conditions. It is not an inherent
result of the particular production process. Abnormal spoilage is regarded as avoidable and controllable. Line
operators and other plant personnel can generally decrease abnormal spoilage by minimizing machine break
downs, accidents and the like. Abnormal spoilage costs are written off as losses of the accounting period in
which detection of the spoiled units occurs.
Job Costing and Spoilage
The concepts of normal and abnormal spoilage also apply to job-costing systems. Abnormal spoilage is
usually regarded as controllable by the manager. Costs of abnormal spoilage are not considered as inventor
able costs and are written off as costs of the period in which detection occurs. Normal Spoilage costs in job-
costing systems just as in process costing systems are inventor able costs, although managements are
tolerating only small amounts of spoilage as normal.
Spoilage is an important consideration in any production and cost related to planning and control decision.
Since in most cases spoilage is unavoidable, management must determine the most efficient production
process that will keep spoilage to a minimum possible. When assigning costs, job-costing systems generally
distinguish between normal spoilage attributable to a specific job and normal spoilage common to all jobs.
Generally, as it is mentioned above in this chapter, spoilage is classified into two: normal and abnormal.
1. Normal spoilage:
Is spoilage that results despite efficient production method. The costs of normal spoilage are considered to
be unavoidable cost of producing good units and are therefore treated as a product cost. Normal spoilage
costs are accounted for in two ways:
Applied to a specific job
Applied to all jobs
Normal spoilages are recorded in an asset account like “Spoiled Goods Inventory” account.
2. Abnormal spoilage:
Is spoilage in excess of what is considered normal for a particular production process. The total cost
of abnormal spoilage should be charged to an expense account like “Loss from Abnormal Spoilage”
account.
Example-1
Assume that in ABC Company 10,000 units were put into production for job 09. The total cost of production
was $ 300,000. Normal spoilage for the job is estimated to be 50 units. At the completion of production only
9,910 units were good. All spoiled units are estimated to have a salvage value of $5 each.
Required:
1. Present the required journal entry assuming normal spoilage is-
A. Applied to a specific job
B. Applied to all jobs
2. Compute the unit cost of the remaining finished good units.
Solution
To record normal spoilage:
a) To specific job
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Spoiled Goods Inventory…………250
WIP-job 09…….…………………….250
b) To all jobs:
Spoiled Goods Inventory…………250
FOH- Control…………………….1, 250
WIP- job 09……..……………….1, 500
To record abnormal spoilage:
Spoiled goods inventory...……….200
Loss from Abnormal Spoilage……1,000
WIP-job 09…................................... 1,200
Example-2
In a Machine Shop 5 aircraft parts out of a job lot of 50 aircrafts parts are spoiled. Costs assigned prior to
inspection point are $2,000 per part. The current disposal price of the spoiled parts is estimated to be $600 per
part. When the spoilage is detected, the spoiled goods are inventoried at $600 per part.
Normal Spoilage attributable to a specific job:
Materials Control (5*$600) 30001
Work-in Process Control (specific job) (5*$600) 3000
Note that the Work-in Process Control (specific job) has already been debited $10,000 for the spoiled parts (5
spoiled parts * $2,000 per part). The effect of the $3,000 entry is that the net cost of the normal spoilage,
$7,000 ($10,000-$3,000) becomes an additional cost of the 45(50-5) good units produced. The total cost of
the 45 good units is $97,000. $90,000 (45units*$2,000 per unit) incurred to produce the good units plus the
$7,000 net cost of normal spoilage.
Normal Spoilage common to all jobs
Materials Control (spoiled goods at disposal value 5*$600) 3000
MOH Control (normal spoilage $10,000-$3,000) 7000
Work-in Process Control (specific job 5*$2,000) 10000
Abnormal Spoilage:
Materials Control (spoiled goods at current disposal value: 3000
Loss from Abnormal Spoilage 7000
Work-in Process Control (specific job) 10000
Accounting for defective (rework) units
As with spoiled units, defective units are classified as either normal or abnormal.
Normal defective units: The numbers of defective units in any particular production process that can be
expected despite efficient operations are known as normal defective units. Normal defective rework costs may
be:
A) Applied to a specific job.
B) Applied to all jobs.
Abnormal defective units: The number of defective units in excess of what is considered to be normal for an
efficient productive operation is called abnormal defective units. The total cost of reworking abnormal
defective units should be charged to “Loss from Abnormal Defective” Account.
Example-1
Assume that 40,000 units are placed into production for job 10. Normal defective units for this job are
estimated to be 400 whereas actual defective units were 1000.The total cost to rework the 1000 defective units
was as follows:
Per unit
Direct materials…………..$500……$0.50
1
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Direct labor………………..1000……1.00
FOH-applied……………… 500…….0.50
$2000 $2.00
Required: Present the required entry assuming that normal rework costs are applied to
a. A specific job
b. All jobs
Solution
Abnormal defective = total defective –normal defective.
=1000 units –400 units = 600 units
To record normal defective
A) To specific job
WIP-job 10 (400x Br 2)……………….800
Materials (400x0.5)………....................200
Payroll (400x0.1)………………….…...400
FOH-Applied……….…………...…….200
B) To all jobs
FOH-control………………………..800
Materials…………….……………...200
Payroll……………………………..400
FOH-Applied………….……………200
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3. A/R……………………..1,092
Scrap Material………………945
WIP…………………………147
4. A/R……………………507
WIP…………………....78
Scrap Material……………585
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