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Chapter 3
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Chapter 3 Learning Objectives
When you have finished studying this chapter, you
should be able to:
1. Explain management influences on cost behavior.
2. Measure and mathematically express cost functions
and use them to predict costs.
3. Describe the importance of activity analysis for
measuring cost functions.
4. Measure cost behavior using the engineering
analysis, high-low, visual-fit, and least-squares
regression methods .
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Cost Drivers and Cost Behavior
Accountants and managers often assume that
cost behavior is linear over some relevant range
of activity or cost-driver levels.
We can graph linear-cost behavior with a straight
line because we assume each cost to be either
fixed or variable.
Recall that the relevant range specifies the
interval of cost-driver activity within which a
specific relationship between a cost and its driver
will be valid.
Managers usually define the relevant range
based on their previous experience operating the
organization at different levels of activity.
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Linear-Cost Behavior
Costs are assumed to be fixed or variable
within the relevant range of activity
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Learning
Objective 1
Management’s Influence on Cost Behavior
Product and service decisions
and the value chain
Capacity
Technology
Policies to create incentives to control costs
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The Value Chain
Managers influence cost behavior throughout
the value chain through their choices of:
• process and product design,
•quality levels,
•product features,
•distribution channels, etc..
Each decision contributes to the organization’s
performance.
Managers must consider the costs and benefits
of each decision.
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Capacity Decisions
They are the fixed costs of being able
to achieve a desired level of production or
to provide a desired level of service while
maintaining product or service attributes.
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Committed Fixed Costs
Committed fixed costs arise
from the possession of facilities,
equipment, and a basic organization.
Lease payments
Property taxes
Salaries of key personnel
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Discretionary Fixed Costs
Discretionary fixed costs are costs fixed at certain levels
only because management decided that these levels of cost
should be incurred to meet the organization’s goals.
These discretionary fixed costs have no obvious
relationship to levels of output activity but
are determined as part of the periodic planning process.
Each planning period, management will determine
how much to spend on discretionary items. These costs
then become fixed until the next planning period.
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Examples of Committed
and Discretionary Fixed Costs
Fixed Costs
Amounts
Advertising and promotion
Depreciation
Employee training
Management salaries
Mortgage payment
Property taxes
Research and development
Total
Planned
$ 50,000
400,000
100,000
800,000
250,000
600,000
1,500,000
$3,700,000
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Examples of Committed
and Discretionary Fixed Costs
Fixed Costs
Committed
Depreciation
Mortgage payment
Property taxes
Total committed
Planned Amounts
$ 400,000
250,000
600,000
$1,250,000
Discretionary (potential savings)
Advertising and promotion
$ 50,000
Employee training
100,000
Management salaries
800,000
Research and development
1,500,000
Total discretionary
$2,450,000
Total committed and discretionary
$3,700,000
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Technology Decisions
Choosing the type of technology an
organization will use to produce products
or deliver services is a critical decision
for management.
Choice of technology (e-commerce versus
in-store or mail-order sales) positions the
organization to meet its current goals and
to respond to changes in the environment.
The use of high-technology methods rather
than labor usually means a much greater
fixed-cost component to the total cost.
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Cost-Control Incentives
Managers use their knowledge of
cost behavior to set cost expectations.
Employees may receive rewards that
are tied to meeting these expectations.
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Learning
Objective 2
Cost Functions
Managers will use cost functions often as
a planning and control tool.
Planning and controlling the activities of
an organization require useful and
accurate estimates of future fixed and
variable costs.
Cost measurement involves estimating or
predicting costs as a function of
appropriate cost drivers.
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Cost Functions
Understanding relationships between costs
and their cost drivers allows managers to...
Make better operating, marketing,
and production decisions
Plan and evaluate actions
Determine appropriate costs for
short-run and long-run decisions.
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Cost Functions
The first step in estimating or predicting
costs is measuring cost behavior as a
function of appropriate cost drivers.
The second step is to use these cost
measures to estimate future costs at
expected levels of cost-driver activity.
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Cost Function Equation
Let:
Y = Total cost
F = Fixed cost
V = Variable cost per unit
X = Cost-driver activity in number of units
The mixed-cost function is called a linear-cost function.
Mixed-cost function:
Y = F + VX
Y = $10,000 + $5.00X
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Developing Cost Functions
The cost function must be believable.
A cost function’s estimates of costs
at actual levels of activity must reliably
conform with actually observed costs.
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Learning
Objective 3
Choice of Cost Drivers: Activity Analysis
Choosing a cost function starts
with choosing cost drivers.
Managers use activity analysis to
identify appropriate cost drivers.
Activity analysis directs management
accountants to the appropriate
cost drivers for each cost.
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Choice of Cost Drivers: Activity Analysis
Northwestern Computers makes two
products: Mozart-Plus and Powerdrive
In the past, most of the support costs
were twice as much as labor costs.
Northwest has upgraded the production
function, which has increased support
costs and reduced labor cost.
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Choice of Cost Drivers: Activity Analysis
Using the old cost driver, labor cost, the
prediction of support costs would be:
Mozart-Plus
$ 8.50
Labor cost
Support cost:
2 × Direct labor
cost
$17.00
Powerdrive
$130.00
$260.00
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Choice of Cost Drivers: Activity Analysis
Using the more appropriate cost driver,
the number of components added to products,
companies can predict support costs more accurately.
Support cost at $20
per component
$20 × 5 components
$20 × 9 components
Difference in predicted
support cost
Mozart-Plus
$100.00
$ 83.00
higher
Powerdrive
$180.00
$ 80.00
lower
Managers will make better decisions with this more
accurate information.
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Learning
Objective 4
Methods of Measuring Cost Functions
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Engineering analysis
Account analysis
High-low analysis
Visual-fit analysis
Least-squares regression analysis
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Engineering Analysis
Engineering analysis measures cost behavior
according to what costs should be,
not by what costs have been.
Engineering analysis entails a systematic
review of materials, supplies, labor,
support services, and facilities
needed for products and services.
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Account Analysis
The simplest method of account analysis selects a plausible
cost driver and classifies each account as a variable or fixed cost.
Parkview Medical Center
Monthly cost
Amount
Fixed Variable
Supervisor’s salary and benefits
$ 3,800 $3,800
Hourly workers’ wages and benefits 14,674
$14,674
Equipment depreciation and rentals
5,873
5,873
Equipment repairs
5,604
5,604
Cleaning supplies
7,472
7,472
Total maintenance costs
$37,423 $9,673 $27,750
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Account Analysis Example
3,700 patient-days
Fixed cost per month = $9,673
Variable cost per patient-day
= $27,750 ÷ 3,700
= $7.50 per patient-day
Y = $9,673 + ($7.50 × patient-days)
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High-Low Method
Plot historical data points on a graph.
Focus on the highest- and lowest-activity points.
High month: April
Maintenance cost: $47,000
Number of patient-days: 4,900
Low month: September
Maintenance cost: $17,000
Number of patient-days: 1,200
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High-Low Method Example
The point at which the line intersects the Y axis is
the intercept, F, or estimate of Fixed Costs, and the
slope of the line measures the variable cost.
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High-Low Method Example
What is the variable cost (V)?
Using algebra to solve for variable and fixed costs.
Variable costs = Change in costs
change in activity
V = ($47,000 – $17,000) ÷ (4,900 – 1,200)
= $30,000 ÷ 3,700 = $8.1081
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High-Low Method Example
What is the fixed cost (F)?
F = Total mixed cost – total variable cost
At X (high): F = $47,000 - ($8.1081× 4,900 patient-days)
= $47,000 – $39,730
= $7,270 a month
At X (low): F = $17,000 = ($8.1081× 1,200 patient-days)
= $17,000 – $9,730
= $7,270 a month
Cost function measured by high-low method:
Y = $7,270 per month + ($8.1081 × patient-days)
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Visual-Fit Method
In the visual-fit method, the cost analyst
visually fits a straight line through a plot
of all of the available data, not just
between the high point and the
low point, making it more reliable
than the high-low method.
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Least-Squares Regression Method
Regression analysis measures
a cost function more objectively
by using statistics to fit a cost
function to all the data.
Regression analysis measures
cost behavior more reliably than
other cost measurement methods.
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Least-Squares Regression Method
Y = $9,329 + ($6.951 × patient-days)
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Coefficient of Determination
One measure of reliability,
or goodness of fit, is the
coefficient of determination,
R² (or R-squared).
The coefficient of determination
measures how much of the
fluctuation of a cost is explained
by changes in the cost driver.
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