Costing
A costing system constitutes one of the most important elements of
the managerial information system. Its presence enables the organization
to meet three objectives. First, it enables the organization to effect
managerial control. Without a costing system, organizations would
not be able to make managers at all levels accountable for the costs
of the resources they consume and identify whether they have been
used efficiently and effectively. Second, cost information is an important
element of the planning and decision-making process. Businesses develop,
produce and market products and services. Identifying which products
and services to bring to market would not be possible without a product
costing system. Third, most organizations are legally bound to provide
reports to external parties. The costing system serves to facilitate
this legal requirement.
Poorly constructed systems can lead to poor or bad decision
making. If the determination of product costs is inadequate, firms may be sourcing inputs
inefficiently and producing products that fail to bring them a competitive advantage.
Furthermore, the system of responsibility accounting may be rewarding managers for making
these poor decisions.
Decentralization of costing, with the establishment of
responsibility centres within the organization, can facilitate managerial planning and
control. Responsibility centres are often classified into two types, production centres
and service centres. Service centres provide services to other centres, and the costs
accumulated in these centres are often reallocated to the responsible production or
operating centres. Overhead costs can also be allocated in different ways: the principal
ones are absorption costing, where fixed production overheads are considered a product
cost, or contribution costing, where overheads are considered a period cost.
The most important costing systems are job costing and
process costing. Job costing is literally the costing of each job; this has its drawbacks
in that it produces only an estimated product cost, as actual overheads are unknown at the
time when the product cost is required. Process costing is used when homogeneous units of
output are produced repeatedly through a sequence of processes, but it too produces only
an estimate product cost, and neither system takes into account the accumulated costs of
other activities such as marketing and distribution. More recently, simpler systems such
as backflush costing and operational costing (a hybrid of job and process costing) have
come into use.
A.R. Appleyard
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