Main object of cost accounting is ascertaining of costs of a cost object.
Cost object may be a product, service or any cost centre.
The process involves:-
(i) Element wise collection of costs
(ii) Accumulation of costs so collected for a certain period or product or cost unit.
(iii) Arranging accumulated costs in a sheet to arrive at the total cost of the period or product or cost centre. Generally costs are arranged on functional classification of elements of costs. Other basis may also be adopted based on the need.
Methods of costing are customizations applied to otherwise same costing procedure in order to make costing suitable for particular type of industry, which results in (I) processing costing information speedily and conveniently (ii) making costing information easily understood and usable for management.
For this purpose, two types of manufacturing or work
patterns are generally identified to classify types of industries for costing
purposes:
(i)
Those which are engaged in mass production of standardized units using a
continuous flow of manufacturing process. [Service industry having standard operating procedures are also classified under this category]
(ii)
Those which are engaged in production based upon the specifications of the
customer. Here the production or output or work is different every time
Type I
|
Type II
|
|
Description
|
Those which are
engaged in mass production of standardized units or goods using a continuous
flow of manufacturing process
|
Those which are
engaged in production based upon the specification of the customer. Here the
production or work is different every time
|
Type of Costing
Method
|
Unit or Single or
Output Costing
Process Costing
Operating Costing
(Service Costing)
|
Job Costing
Contract Costing
(Terminal Costing)
|
Examples
|
||
Unit Costing: FMCG items like wheat flour, Edible
Salt, Biscuits, Bakery products, Stationery items, Bricks etc.
Process Costing: Chemicals, Metals, Crude oil refining
to get petroleum products, Sugar industry
Operating costing
aka Service Costing:
Banking,
Insurance, Transport, Electricity distribution, Hospitals, Hotels etc.
|
Job Costing: Softwares/applications/ websites
development, furniture industry, dental and orthopedic implants, Tailoring,
interior designing, styling, jobs associated with film industry i.e. script
writing, music, camera work etc
Contract Costing: Fly-overs, Bridges, Air-ports, Harbors,
Shopping Complexes, Residential flats etc.
|
I Unit
costing
Unit Costing is a method of costing used where the output produced by an
entity is identical and each unit of output require identical cost. Unit
costing is synonymously known as single or output costing.
Total cost per unit is ascertained
by dividing total cost by number of units. It finds application in industries
like paper, cement, steel works, mining, breweries. These industries produce
identical products and therefore units have identical costs. This costing method is also known as Single or Output costing.
Generally costing is presented in a statement commonly known as cost sheet.
Job
and batch costing
Consider where separate work or tasks are the cost units or centres. For example a tailor of gents cloth sewing suits will treat different orders differently. This is because each suit will be distinct from the other due to different sizes, different individual preferences, quantity and quality of raw materials use, time factors etc. As a consequence, each such 'job' is a separate cost centre or cost unit for which cost is ascertained and analyzed. Generally no two jobs shall be identical.
This identification of each such job is ascertained by use of specific job or batch numbers usually taken from the specific authorization number of each such job.
Process of Job Costing:
(i) Prepare a separate cost sheet for each job
(ii) Ascertain cost of material i.e. material consumed in each job
(iii) Ascertain cost of labour and other direct costs i.e. wage bill associated to each such job
(iii) Add overheads by methods of allocation and apportionment
(iv) Aggregate of this shall be cost of the specified job.
Suitable for (i) Printing press (ii) Event Managers (iii) Caterers (iv) Furniture
(v) Interior designing (vi) specified implants (vii) Customized software.
Batch costing is derived from the word 'Batch'. Cambridge dictionary of English language defines 'batch' as "a group of things that are dealt with or produced at the same time, or a group of people who are similar in some way" Each batch of same or similar goods is given a unique batch number through which the constituent products are traced to a particular batch. All data and costs are identified, accumulated and grouped keeping various batches as the cost centre or cost unit. Thus where identical, same or similar units of a product are manufactured, fabricated, assembled or produced and considered as a 'batch' due to similarity of all cost elements viz. material, labour, overheads and time of production, Batch costing method is conveniently applied. We have seen batch numbers at the labels of tomato ketchup, hair shampoo, drugs and even day-to-day gadgets.
This identification of each such job is ascertained by use of specific job or batch numbers usually taken from the specific authorization number of each such job.
Process of Job Costing:
(i) Prepare a separate cost sheet for each job
(ii) Ascertain cost of material i.e. material consumed in each job
(iii) Ascertain cost of labour and other direct costs i.e. wage bill associated to each such job
(iii) Add overheads by methods of allocation and apportionment
(iv) Aggregate of this shall be cost of the specified job.
Suitable for (i) Printing press (ii) Event Managers (iii) Caterers (iv) Furniture
(v) Interior designing (vi) specified implants (vii) Customized software.
Batch costing is derived from the word 'Batch'. Cambridge dictionary of English language defines 'batch' as "a group of things that are dealt with or produced at the same time, or a group of people who are similar in some way" Each batch of same or similar goods is given a unique batch number through which the constituent products are traced to a particular batch. All data and costs are identified, accumulated and grouped keeping various batches as the cost centre or cost unit. Thus where identical, same or similar units of a product are manufactured, fabricated, assembled or produced and considered as a 'batch' due to similarity of all cost elements viz. material, labour, overheads and time of production, Batch costing method is conveniently applied. We have seen batch numbers at the labels of tomato ketchup, hair shampoo, drugs and even day-to-day gadgets.
S.No.
|
Job Costing
|
Batch Costing
|
1
|
Method of costing
used for non-repetitive, non-standard products produced as per customer’s
specification against specific orders
|
Where same or
identical products are produced in specific lots known as batch
|
2.2
|
Cost is
determined for each job
|
Cost is
determined for each batch
|
3
|
Used in
Furniture, Software, Tailoring, Printing industry
|
Used in
Pharmaceuticals, Cosmetics, Stationery, electronics industry
|
Contract
costing is a form of specific order costing (job costing) where job
undertaken is relatively large and normally takes period longer than
a year to complete. Contract costing is usually adopted by the
contractors engaged in works like construction of building, roads,
bridge, erection of tower, setting up of plant, Air-ports etc.
Contract costing is also known as
Terminal Costing.
Types of contracts:
(I) Fixed Price Contracts : Here the
consideration i.e the price of contract work is settled in advance
and both contractee and contractor know in advance the price of the
contract work. Contractee - what he has to pay and contractor - what
he is to receive for contract work. for routine contract work this is
the common practice.
(II) Cost Plus Contracts: These are
contract where price is not fixed in advance but is settled as an
amount arrived at by adding a suitable percentage of profit to the
cost incurred in completing the contract work. This method is
suitable where contract work is of unknown nature i.e. there is no
previous knowledge or experience for such type of work. It is also
used where factors of cost are uncertain for any reason or the nature
of work is going to keep on changing.
Important terms and conventions in
contract costing
Contract, contractor, contractee and
sub-contractor :
Contract refers to the agreement and
responsibility to undertake a work and complete it as per the
specifications for which specified consideration i.e. contract
price shall be paid to contractor by contractee.
The person who promises to undertake or
execute the contract or work is known as contractor while who
awards the contract and provide specifications as to the requirements
of the work is known as contractee.
As
the project or work is generally of long duration exceeding one year
and sometimes stretching from five to ten years, there arises a need
for:
(i) Interim payments i.e. provisional payments of contract price in installment. This is because for meeting revenue as well as capital expenditure with respect to contract work, contractor has to input funds but it can not cover entire expenses of the contract. In order to maintain the liquidity of funds, contractor raises claim for intermediate payments on provisional basis. Theses interim payments can be ad-hoc or as per payment schedule of the contract or as per the level of work completed. The level of work completed i.e. say 15% or 50% of the total contract work is certified by valuers, engineers or architects on behalf of the contractee. This is known as work certified. Contractee can pay full amount of work certified or retain a part of work certified.
Work
Certified = Contract price X level of work completed i.e. % of
completion
Cost
of Work Certified = Cost incurred till date - (cost of work
uncertified + material and plant in hand)
Cost
of Work Uncertified = Cost incurred till date -
(cost of work certified + material and plant in hand)
The
portion of work certified which is retained by contractee to check
the quality or completeness of work completed and is released at a
later date is known as retention money.
Retention
Money = Value of work certified - Cash paid towards work certified
Example: Suppose the contract Value is Rs.10,00,00,000. Payment is supposed to be made at 90% of work certified. Now, if work is certified to be completed as 30% then work certified is Rs.3,00,00,000/- and payment to be made is 90% of Rs.3,00,00,000/- i.e. Rs.2,70,00,000/-. Here balance Rs.30,00,000/- is retention money which shall be released after fulfillment of some condition or after settled number of days etc.
Work uncertified: Sometimes contractor has incurred lot of expenses both revenue and capital but work is not certified or certified to a lesser extent due to some procedural or technical difficulty. Thus work done actually is greater than work certified leading to a situation where there is substantial advancement in work which remains to be certified by engineers over and above work certified. So it can be safely said that:
Total
Work done = Work Certified + Work Uncertified
Work
in progress: Work in progress happens because at any given
date, may be 31st March of the financial year the project would not
have been completed.
value
of the work-in-progress
consists of:
(i)
the cost of work completed, both certified and uncertified;
(ii)
the cost of work not yet completed; and
(iii)
the amount of estimated/ notional profit.
(ii)
Calculation of Profit: Just like any other business, profit is calculated by matching costs angaint revenue. Single year contract do not pose any problem in this. Contracts which span more than one year
present a very special and interesting scenario with regards to
calculation of profit and its recognition. Accounting concepts of
'realizaion' and 'matching' limit recognition of full contract price
as revenue in income side. This is because revenue of future periods
cannot be matched against expenses of current period. Further revenue
which is not conclusively accrued can not be recognized.
Revenue
i.e. contract price is related to work completed and certified by the
engineers of the contractee.
So
long the contract is not completed and work is not certified, it is
said that contract work is in progress i.e. work-in-progress.
Work-in-progress is divided into (i) Work done and certified or
simply work certified (ii) Work done but not certified yet or simply
work uncertified (iii) Work not done yet.
Value of work certified is definitely recognizable as it has been accepted by engineers of contractee as completed and thus fallen due for payment. Same cannot be said for work uncertified. However a substantial expenditure is incurred and work is done which remains pending for certificate at the time of drawing of profit or loss statement. So consensus is to recognize it also as income.
On expense side there are two challenges. First, the applicability or relation of a particular expense to the work certified or uncertified and also to the period of the contract has to be decided . Then there is issue of full or partial. Second question is that the benefit of expense running over for more than one year needs to be tackled.
General Format of Contract Account:
(When the contract is in progress) :
To Materials (Direct) -- By Material returned to Stores --
To Materials (Indirect) -- By Material Trf to other sites --
To Wages -- By Material Sales --
To Other Direct Expenses -- By Abnormal Loss --
To Sub-contract payments -- By Closing stock of Materials --
To Allocated indirect expenses -- By Closing value of Plant --
To Plant (original cost) -- By Work in progress
To P&L A/c (bal fig being profit -- - Work Certified --
- Work Uncertified --
By P&L A/c (bal fig being Loss) --
(When the work is completed) :
To Work in progress (opening) By reserve for future contingencies --
- Work Certified -- By Materials returned --
- Work Uncertified -- By Plant returned --
To Plant (opening bal) -- By Contractee(with the contract price) --
To other costs --
To P&L A/c (Profit) --
Conventions
for recognizing revenue and resultant profit are based on the level
of completion of contracts, conservatism and realization. In cases
where contract is not complete, entire book profit is not recognized,
instead a portion is transferred to reserve. For this contracts are
divided into three types:
(i)
Contracts which have just commenced
(ii)
Contracts which are mid-way
(iii)
Contracts which are nearly complete.
(i)In
case of contracts which have just begun, normally there is no
recognition of revenue and profit as no substantial work has
been done in comparison to total contract price. Conventionally
contracts where work completed is less than 25% i.e 1/4 th of
contract price, no profit is recognized
(ii) Contracts which are mid way are classified as those
(a)
which have completed 1/4th or more but less than 1/2 or 50%, here
notional profit is taken at 1/3rd value and remaining balance is
transferred to reserves
(b)
those which have completed 50% or more of contract value. In such
cases notional profit is taken as 2/3rd value and balance is
transferred to reserve.
(iii) Contracts which are in advanced stages or nearly complete:
COMPUTE
estimated profit on a contract (which has been 90% complete) from the
following particulars:
Total
expenditure to date 22,50,000; Estimated further expenditure to
complete the contract (including contingencies) 2,50,000; Contract
price 32,50,000; Work certified 27,50,000
Calculation of Estimated Profit:
Total expenditure to date 22,50,000
Estimated further expenditure to complete the contract
(including contingencies) 2,50,000
Total costs 25,00,000
Contract price 32,50,000
Estimated profit on contract (Balancing figure) 7,50,000
Contract
costing has the following distinct features:
1.
The major part of the work in connection with each contract is
carried out at the site of the contract.
2.
The bulk of the expenses incurred by the contractor are considered as
direct.
3.
The indirect expenses mostly consist of office expenses, stores and
works.
Escalation
clause in a contract provides
a right to the contractor to revise the price of the contract by
adding an amount calculated as per the terms of the contract towards
increase in the prices of inputs and other factors say on account of
inflation.
Q.0
The following particulars are available in respect of a contract
as on 31 March, 2008 (all figures in rupees).
(i)
Contract price 5,00,000
(ii)
Total cost of contract up to date 2,87,500/-
(iii)
Cost of uncertified work 12,500
(iv)
Cash received 2,65,625/-
(v)
Retention money @15%
Q.1The
following expenses were incurred on a contract:
(Rs.)
Materials
purchased
6,00,000
Material
drawn from stores
1,00,000
Wages
2,25,000
Plant
issued
75,000
Chargeable
expenses
75,000
Apportioned
indirect expenses
25,000
The
contract was for Rs.20,00,000 and it commenced on January 1, 20X8.
The value of the work completed and certified upto 30th November,
20X8 was Rs.13,00,000 of which Rs.10,40,000 was received in cash, the
balance being held back as retention money by the contractee. The
value of work completed subsequent to the architect’s certificate
but before 31st December, 20X8 was Rs.60,000. There were also lying
on the site materials of the value of Rs.40,000. It was estimated
that the value of plant as at 31st December, 20X8 was Rs.30,000.
You
are required to COMPUTE value of work certified, cost of work not
certified and notional profit on the contract till the year ended
31st
December,
20X8.
Ans:
Notional Profit Rs.3,30,000/-
Q.2
A
contractor prepares his accounts for the year ending 31st December
each year. He commenced a contract on 1st April, 20X8.
The
following information relates to the contract as on 31st December,
20X8:
(Rs.)
Material
issued
2,51,000
Wages
5,65,600
Salary
to Foreman
81,300
A
machine costing Rs.2,60,000 has been on the site for 146 days, its
working life is estimated at 7 years and its final scrap value at
Rs.15,000.
A
supervisor, who is paid Rs.8,000 p.m. has devoted one-half of his
time to this contract.
All
other expenses and administration charges amount to Rs.1,36,500.
Material
in hand at site costs Rs.35,400 on 31st December, 20X8.
The
contract price is Rs.20,00,000. On 31st December, 20X8 two-third of
the contract was completed. The architect issued certificates
covering 50% of the contract price, and the contractor had been paid
Rs.7,50,000 on account.
PREPARE
Contract A/c and show the notional profit or loss as on 31st
December, 20X8.
Ans:
Notional Profit Rs.2,13,250/- Cost of Work Uncertified: Rs.2,62,250/-
Q.3
M/s.
Bansals Construction Company Ltd. took a contract for Rs.60,00,000
expected to be completed in three years. The following particulars
relating to the contract are available:
20X6
(Rs.)
|
20X7
(Rs.)
|
20X8
(Rs.)
|
|
Materials
|
6,75,000
|
10,50,000
|
9,00,000
|
Wages
|
6,20,000
|
9,00,000
|
7,50,000
|
Transportation
cost
|
30,000
|
90,000
|
75,000
|
Other
expenses
|
30,000
|
75,000
|
24,000
|
Cumulative
work certified
|
13,50,000
|
45,00,000
|
60,00,000
|
Cumulative
work uncertified
|
15,000
|
75,000
|
—
|
Plant
costing Rs.
3,00,000
was bought at the commencement of the contract. Depreciation was to
be charged at 25% per annum, on the written down value method. The
contractee pays 75% of the value of work certified as and when
certified, and makes the final payment on completion of the contract.
You are required to PREPARE a contract account for three years and
total estimated profit/ loss from the contract.
Ans Profit Yr20X6: (-)65000; Profit Yr 20X7:-1038750; Profit Yr 20X8
Rs.-(-)366188
Q.4
A
contractor has entered into a long term contract at an agreed price
of `
17,50,000
subject to an escalation clause for materials and wages as spelt out
in the contract and corresponding actual are as follows:
Standard
|
Actual
|
|||
Materials
|
Qty
(tons)
|
Rate
(Rs.)
|
Qty
(tons)
|
Rate
(Rs.)
|
A
|
5,000
|
50.00
|
5,050
|
48.00
|
B
|
3,500
|
80.00
|
3,450
|
79.00
|
C
|
2,500
|
60.00
|
2,600
|
66.00
|
Wages
|
Hours
|
Hourly
Rate (Rs)
|
Hours
|
Hourly
Rate (Rs)
|
X
|
2,000
|
70.00
|
2,100
|
72.00
|
Y
|
2,500
|
75.00
|
2,450
|
75.00
|
Z
|
3,000
|
65.00
|
3,100
|
66.00
|
Reckoning
the full actual consumption of material and wages, the company has
claimed a final price of Rs.17,73,600.
Give your ANALYSIS of admissible escalation claim and indicate the
final price payable.
Hint:
An escalation clause covers inflation and not inefficiencies of
contractor.
III Process Costing
Process costing is applied where
(i)
Production is carried through more than one stages or processes
(ii)
These processes run either continuously or sequentially or simultaneously or
even selectively.
(iii)
Output of one process becomes the input of another till the last process.
(iv)
End products are homogenous i.e. not distinguishable from one another
(v)
Output product can not be generally linked to specific input raw material
(vi)
There is a possibility of emergence of by-products and joint products.
(vii)
Examples include refining of crude oil, sugar production, production of all
metals i.e. iron and steel, aluminium, copper, textile etc
In case of crude oil refining broad process is :
(i)
Input : Crude Oil
(ii)
Desalting: Removal of corrosive salts and suspended solids
(iii)
Fractional Distillation of Crude oil resulting in separation of major
fractions
(iv)
Downstream processing bringing change in molecular structure by adding
other chemicals or altering existing molecular structure
(v)
Purification: removing nitrogen, Sulphur or other metal contents
Here all processes from desalting to purification can be
treated as separate processes i.e. cost centres for which material, labour and
expenses are accumulated to ascertain the costs of each individual process
separately as well as cumulatively to arrive at the total cost of the final
output.
Similarly processes involved in textile manufacturing can be
(i)
Yarning / threading
(ii)
Dyeing
(iii)
Spinning
(iv)
Weaving
In case of sugar industry, process flow broadly may be:
(i)
Crushing of cane
(ii)
Cleaning and purification
(iii)
Crystallization
(iv)
Centrifuge process to separate grains and molasses
(v)
Purification and conditioning of crystals
Joint and By-products
Joint Product:
When two or more products are either
simultaneously or sequentially produced during a manufacturing process, they
are known as Joint products emerging out of that process.
Normally joint products:
(I) have significant sale value, and
(ii) emerge in considerable
proportion during the manufacturing process
As a consequence, no joint product
can be said as the major product or minor product.
Example:
In the crude oil refinery industry, LPG, Aviation fuel, Kerosene, Petroleum,
Diesel, Paraffin, Asphalt, lubricant oil, Coal-tar etc. are produced. These all
can be referred to as Joint products.
By-Products:
When during a manufacturing process,
a product of small value as a waste or on account of inherent nature of the
production arises, such product is known as by product of main product for
which the manufacturing process was carried out.
Thus, by-product emerges without any
specific effort. It is of small quantity and value as compared to the main product.
Example:
Bagasse and Molasses while manufacturing cane sugar (white sugar), Bagasse is
used in the paper industry while molasses is used by distilleries in
manufacture of liquor
Co-products: They are
interchangeably used with joint products. However, they are produced from a
different raw material and mostly through a separate process
The cost issue with Joint and
By-product:
Costs in the case of by-products and
joint products are:
(I) common or joint costs I.e.
before the emergence of by-product and joint-product
(ii) Separate costs or additional
costs incurred on by=products or joint products after separation whick is also
known as the split-off point
Costs incurred exclusively on
by-products or joint products after split off point are easily allocated to the
by-products or joint products to which costs are attributable.
Common costs pose problem of
apportionment of costs between main product and by-product or between joint
products
Methods for apportioning joint
costs:
(I) Net realizable value at split
off point
(ii) Physical units method
(iii) Using technical estimates
(iv) Market value at the point of
separation
(v) Market value after further
processing
Losses during Processes:
Loss represent shortfall in output
as compared to input I.e. when output is less than input, we assess the
difference as loss.
Losses can be normal or abnormal.
Normal loss is inherent, natural,
unavoidable and accepted and arises due to the nature of raw material,
production process, technology used, machinery used etc. This is common
experience that certain materials like aromatic liquids I.e. petroleum, spirit
etc loose quantity due to evaporation, another example is that of cutting
circles out of square steel sheet invariably results in the loss of some steel
as scrap. Similar is the case with manufacturing garments out of textiles, some
cloth is rendered useless while cutting the desired shape and size out of
cloth. Similarly, when spices are grinded for getting powder form, there is
bound to be some loss of output.
Abnormal loss can be both avoidable
(for eg. Use of faulty tools and machines, inappropriate drawings and dies,
inferior raw material etc.) and unavoidable I.e. on account of untimely rain,
flood, earthquake, fire etc.
Treatment of Normal loss
in cost accounting: Normal loss is charged to production as any other cost,
this is done by making the reduced output bear the entire cost including the
cost of normal loss. Any realisable value from sale of scrap is credited to
production account I.e. normal loss is reduced by that extent.
Treatment of Abnormal loss:
Abnormal loss is charged to costing profit and loss account, instead of
production account as abnormal loss is not regarded as a routine event or
feature I.e. it is thought of as avoidable or non-recurring. Any recovery from
insurance company or sale of scrap etc is credited to costing profit and loss
account or the abnormal loss is reduced by that extent.
Operation or Hybrid Costing:
Some time Manufactuing entities manufacture two or more grades of same product
say for example economy, regular and deluxe shaving creams. This entail use of
different ingredients in different quantity, however the process of
manufacturing I.e. conversion costs covering labour costs and overheads remain
same for all the grades. To manage costing in this scenario, batch costing
method may be used for collecting material costs while process costing may be
used for remaining coste I.e. labour and overheads. This also gives rise to
another term known as hybrid costing
IV Service Costing or Operating Costing
The
service costing is required either for in-house services provided by a service
cost centre to other responsibility centres as support services. Examples of
support services are Canteen and hospital for staff, Boiler house for supplying
steam to production departments, IT department services used by other
departments, or when services are offered to outside customers as a profit
centre in consonance with organisational objectives as an output like goods or
passenger transport service provided by a transporter, hospitality services
provided by a hotel, provision of services by financial institutions, insurance
and IT companies etc.
In both the situation, all costs
incurred are collected, accumulated for a certain period or volume, recorded in
the cost accounting system and then expressed in terms of a cost unit of
service.
Service
costing differs from product costing (such as job or process costing) in
the following ways due to some basic and peculiar nature.
(i)
Unlike products, services are intangible and cannot be stored, hence, there is
no inventory for the services.
(ii)
Use of Composite cost units for cost measurement and to express the volume of
outputs.
(iii)
Unlike a product manufacturing, employee (labour) cost constitutes a major cost
element than material cost.
(iv)
Indirect costs like administration overheads are generally have a significant
proportion in total cost of a service as unlike manufacturing sector, service
sector heavily depends on support services.
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