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9781844800285

Management and Cost Accounting

by
  • ISBN13:

    9781844800285

  • ISBN10:

    1844800288

  • Edition: 6th
  • Format: Paperback
  • Copyright: 2004-05-13
  • Publisher: Cengage Learning EMEA

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Supplemental Materials

What is included with this book?

Summary

The market-leading European text on management accounting and comprehensive authority on all aspects of the subject has been streamlined and substantially redesigned in its 6th edition to make it even more suitable for the needs of today’s student. The aim of the new edition is to explain the principles involved in the design and evaluation of management and cost accounting information systems. The emphasis in the book is on management accounting systems that will be used for internal decision-making purposes within an organisation, however, cost accounting systems for external reporting are also comprehensively covered. It has been brought up to date with the latest developments in the subject. Having been made stronger pedagogically with the addition of the answers to the questions and more real-world mini cases, the text brings home the relevance of the subject matter to the real world of business.

Table of Contents

Preface and walk-through tour xxi
PART 1 Introduction to Management and Cost Accounting
3(52)
Introduction to management accounting
5(24)
The users of accounting information
6(1)
Differences between management accounting and financial accounting
7(1)
The decision-making process
8(4)
Changing competitive environment
12(1)
Changing product life cycles
13(1)
Focus on customer satisfaction and new management approaches
13(3)
The impact of information technology
16(2)
International convergence of management accounting practices
18(1)
Functions of management accounting
18(2)
A brief historical review of management accounting
20(1)
Summary of the contents of this book
21(1)
Guidelines for using this book
22(1)
Summary
22(2)
Note
24(1)
Key terms and concepts
24(1)
Key examination points
25(2)
Assessment material
27(2)
An introduction to cost terms and concepts
29(26)
Cost objects
30(1)
Direct and indirect costs
30(2)
Period and product costs
32(1)
Cost behaviour
32(5)
Relevant and irrelevant costs and revenues
37(1)
Avoidable and unavoidable costs
38(1)
Sunk costs
38(1)
Opportunity costs
39(1)
Incremental and marginal costs
39(1)
Job costing and process costing systems
40(1)
Maintaining a cost database
40(2)
Summary
42(1)
Key terms and concepts
43(1)
Recommended reading
43(1)
Key examination points
43(2)
Assessment material
45(10)
PART 2 Cost Accumulation for Inventory Valuation and Profit Measurement
55(206)
Cost assignment
57(54)
Assignment of direct and indirect costs
58(1)
Different costs for different purposes
58(2)
Cost--benefit issues and cost systems design
60(1)
Assigning direct costs to cost objects
61(1)
Plant-wide (blanket) overhead rates
61(2)
Cost centre overhead rates
63(1)
The two-stage allocation process
64(1)
An illustration of the two-stage process for a traditional costing system
64(8)
An illustration of the two-stage process for an ABC system
72(3)
Extracting relevant costs for decision-making
75(2)
Budgeted overhead rates
77(1)
Under-and over-recovery of overheads
77(1)
Maintaining the database at standard costs
78(1)
Non-manufacturing overheads
79(1)
Summary
80(2)
Appendix 3.1: Inter-service department reallocations
82(5)
Appendix 3.2: Other allocation bases used by traditional systems
87(2)
Key terms and concepts
89(1)
Recommended reading
90(1)
Key examination points
90(1)
Assessment material
91(20)
Accounting entries for a job costing system
111(42)
Materials recording procedure
112(1)
Pricing the issues of materials
112(2)
Control accounts
114(1)
Recording the purchase of raw materials
115(3)
Recording the issue of materials
118(1)
Accounting procedure for labour costs
119(1)
Accounting procedure for manufacturing overheads
120(1)
Non-manufacturing overheads
121(1)
Accounting procedures for jobs completed and products sold
122(1)
Costing profit and loss account
123(1)
Interlocking accounting
123(1)
Accounting entries for a JIT manufacturing system
124(2)
Contract costing
126(5)
Work in progress valuation and amounts recoverable on contracts
131(1)
Summary
132(2)
Key terms and concepts
134(1)
Recommended reading
134(1)
Key examination points
134(1)
Assessment material
135(18)
Process costing
153(44)
Flow of production and costs in a process costing system
154(1)
Process costing when all output is fully complete
154(8)
Process costing with ending work in progress partially complete
162(3)
Beginning and ending work in progress of uncompleted units
165(4)
Partially completed output and losses in process
169(1)
Process costing for decision-making and control
170(1)
Batch/operating costing
171(1)
Surveys of practice
172(1)
Summary
172(2)
Appendix 5.1: Losses in process and partially completed units
174(5)
Key terms and concepts
179(1)
Key examination points
180(1)
Assessment material
181(16)
Joint and by-product costing
197(32)
Distinguishing between joint products and by-products
198(1)
Methods of allocating joint costs
198(8)
Irrelevance of joint cost allocations for decision-making
206(2)
Accounting for by-products
208(2)
By-products, scrap and waste
210(1)
Summary
210(1)
Key terms and concepts
211(1)
Recommended reading
211(1)
Key examination points
212(1)
Assessment material
213(16)
Income effects of alternative cost accumulation systems
229(32)
External and internal reporting
230(1)
Variable costing
231(2)
Absorption costing
233(1)
Variable costing and absorption costing: a comparison of their impact on profit
234(2)
A mathematical model of the profit functions
236(1)
Some arguments in support of variable costing
237(1)
Some arguments in support of absorption costing
238(1)
Alternative denominator level measures
239(3)
Summary
242(2)
Appendix 7.1: Derivation of the profit function for an absorption costing system
244(1)
Key terms and concepts
245(1)
Key examination points
245(2)
Assessment material
247(14)
PART 3 Information for Decision-making
261(326)
Cost--volume--profit analysis
263(50)
The economist's model
264(3)
The accountant's cost--volume--profit model
267(2)
Application to longer-term time horizons
269(1)
A mathematical approach to cost--volume--profit analysis
269(5)
Margin of safety
274(1)
Constructing the break-even chart
274(2)
Alternative presentation of cost--volume--profit analysis
276(2)
Multi-product cost--volume--profit analysis
278(3)
Cost--volume--profit analysis assumptions
281(3)
Cost--volume--profit analysis and computer applications
284(1)
Separation of semi-variable costs
284(1)
Summary
285(1)
Appendix 8.1: CVP analysis applied to absorption costing
286(3)
Key terms and concepts
289(1)
Key examination points
289(2)
Assessment material
291(22)
Measuring relevant costs and revenues for decision-making
313(56)
The meaning of relevance
314(1)
Importance of qualitative factors
315(1)
Special pricing decisions
315(5)
Product-mix decisions when capacity constraints exist
320(2)
Replacement of equipment -- the irrelevance of past costs
322(2)
Outsourcing and make or buy decisions
324(4)
Discontinuation decisions
328(2)
Determining the relevant costs of direct materials
330(1)
Determining the relevant costs of direct labour
331(2)
Misconceptions about relevant costs
333(1)
Summary
334(1)
Appendix 9.1: The theory of constraints and throughput accounting
335(5)
Key terms and concepts
340(1)
Recommended reading
340(1)
Key examination points
340(3)
Assessment material
343(26)
Activity-based costing
369(42)
The need for a cost accumulation system in generating relevant cost information for decision-making
370(1)
Types of cost system
371(1)
A comparison of traditional and ABC systems
372(2)
The emergence of ABC systems
374(1)
Volume-based and non-volume-based cost drivers
374(3)
Designing ABC systems
377(4)
Activity hierarchies
381(2)
Activity-based costing profitability analysis
383(1)
Resource consumption models
384(3)
Selecting the cost driver denominator level
387(2)
Cost versus benefits considerations
389(1)
Periodic review of an ABC data base
389(1)
ABC in service organizations
390(1)
ABC cost management applications
391(1)
Pitfalls in using ABC information
392(1)
Summary
393(3)
Key terms and concepts
396(1)
Recommended reading
396(1)
Key examination points
396(1)
Assessment material
397(14)
Pricing decisions and profitability analysis
411(40)
Economic theory
412(4)
Calculating optimum selling prices using differential calculus
416(1)
Difficulties with applying economic theory
417(1)
The role of cost information in pricing decisions
418(1)
A price setting firm facing short-run pricing decisions
418(1)
A price setting firm facing long-run pricing decisions
419(6)
A price taker firm facing short-run product-mix decisions
425(1)
A price taker firm facing long-run product-mix decisions
425(2)
Cost-plus pricing
427(5)
Pricing policies
432(1)
Customer profitability analysis
433(2)
Summary
435(3)
Note
438(1)
Key terms and concepts
438(1)
Recommended reading
438(1)
Key examination points
438(1)
Assessment material
439(12)
Decision-making under conditions of risk and uncertainty
451(42)
A decision-making model
452(1)
Risk and uncertainty
453(1)
Probabilities
454(1)
Probability distributions and expected value
455(1)
Measuring the amount of uncertainty
456(3)
Attitudes to risk by individuals
459(1)
Decision-tree analysis
460(2)
Cost--volume--profit analysis under conditions of uncertainty
462(1)
Buying perfect and imperfect information
463(1)
Maximin, maximax and regret criteria
463(2)
Portfolio analysis
465(1)
A more complex illustration
466(3)
Summary
469(1)
Appendix 12.1: Cost--volume--profit analysis under conditions of uncertainty
470(4)
Note
474(1)
Key terms and concepts
474(1)
Recommended reading
474(1)
Key examination points
474(3)
Assessment material
477(16)
Capital investment decisions: 1
493(48)
Objectives of capital budgeting
494(1)
The opportunity cost of an investment
495(1)
Compounding and discounting
496(2)
The concept of net present value
498(1)
Calculating net present values
499(2)
The internal rate of return
501(3)
Relevant cash flows
504(1)
Timing of cash flows
504(1)
Comparison of net present value and internal rate of return
504(4)
Profitability index
508(1)
Techniques that ignore the time value of money
509(1)
Payback method
509(2)
Accounting rate of return
511(3)
The effect of performance measurement on capital investment decisions
514(1)
Qualitative factors
515(1)
The capital investment process
516(4)
Summary
520(2)
Note
522(1)
Key terms and concepts
522(1)
Recommended reading
523(1)
Key examination points
523(2)
Assessment material
525(16)
Capital investment decisions: 2
541(46)
The evaluation of mutually exclusive investments with unequal lives
542(2)
Capital rationing
544(2)
Taxation and investment decisions
546(3)
The effect of inflation on capital investment appraisal
549(3)
Calculating risk-adjusted discount rates
552(4)
Calculating the required rates of returns on a firm's securities
556(1)
Weighted average cost of capital
556(1)
Traditional methods of measuring risk
557(5)
A summary of risk measurement techniques
562(4)
Summary
566(1)
Notes
567(1)
Key terms and concepts
568(1)
Recommended reading
568(1)
Key examination points
568(1)
Assessment material
569(18)
PART 4 Information for Planning, Control and Performance Measurement
587(354)
The budgeting process
589(54)
Stages in the planning process
590(3)
The multiple functions of budgets
593(2)
Conflicting roles of budgets
595(1)
The budget period
595(1)
Administration of the budgeting process
596(1)
Stages in the budgeting process
597(3)
A detailed illustration
600(3)
Sales budget
603(1)
Production budget and budgeted stock levels
604(1)
Direct materials usage budget
605(1)
Direct materials purchase budget
605(1)
Direct labour budget
606(1)
Factory overhead budget
606(1)
Selling and administration budget
607(1)
Departmental budgets
607(1)
Master budget
608(1)
Cash budgets
609(1)
Final review
610(1)
Computerized budgeting
610(1)
Activity-based budgeting
611(4)
The budgeting process in non-profit-making organizations
615(3)
Zero-based budgeting
618(3)
Summary
621(2)
Note
623(1)
Key terms and concepts
623(1)
Recommended reading
623(1)
Key examination points
623(2)
Assessment material
625(18)
Management control systems
643(52)
Control at different organizational levels
644(1)
Different types of controls
644(4)
Cybernetic control systems
648(1)
Feedback and feed-forward controls
649(1)
Harmful side-effects of control
650(2)
Advantages and disadvantages of different types of controls
652(1)
Management accounting control systems
652(1)
Responsibility centres
653(2)
The nature of management accounting control systems
655(1)
The controllability principle
656(5)
Setting financial performance targets
661(4)
Participation in the budgeting and target setting process
665(3)
Side-effects arising from using accounting information for performance evaluation
668(2)
Summary
670(2)
Notes
672(1)
Key terms and concepts
673(1)
Recommended reading
673(1)
Key examination points
673(2)
Assessment material
675(20)
Contingency theory and organizational and social aspects of management accounting
695(30)
An overview of contingency theory
696(2)
The impact of contingent factors on management accounting information systems
698(7)
Types of controls in relation to the transformation process and output measurement
705(1)
Scorekeeping and uncertainty
706(2)
Programmed and non-programmed decisions
708(1)
Accounting information, decision-making and uncertainty
709(2)
Purposes of management accounting
711(5)
Summary
716(2)
Key terms and concepts
718(1)
Recommended reading
718(1)
Key examination points
719(2)
Assessment material
721(4)
Standard costing and variance analysis 1
725(52)
Operation of a standard costing system
726(3)
Establishing cost standards
729(3)
Types of cost standards
732(3)
Variance analysis
735(1)
Material variances
735(2)
Material price variances
737(2)
Material usage variance
739(1)
Joint price usage variance
740(1)
Total material variance
740(1)
Labour variances
741(1)
Wage rate variance
741(1)
Labour efficiency variance
742(1)
Total labour variance
742(1)
Variable overhead variances
743(1)
Variable overhead expenditure variance
743(1)
Variable overhead efficiency variance
744(1)
Similarities between materials, labour and overhead variances
744(1)
Fixed overhead expenditure or spending variance
745(1)
Sales variances
746(1)
Total sales margin variance
746(1)
Sales margin price variance
747(1)
Sales margin volume variance
747(1)
Difficulties in interpreting sales margin variances
748(1)
Reconciling budgeted profit and actual profit
748(1)
Standard absorption costing
748(2)
Volume variance
750(1)
Volume efficiency variance
751(1)
Volume capacity variance
752(1)
Summary of fixed overhead variances
753(1)
Reconciliation of budgeted and actual profit for a standard absorption costing system
754(1)
Performance reports
754(3)
Summary
757(1)
Key terms and concepts
758(2)
Key examination points
760(1)
Assessment material
761(16)
Standard costing and variance analysis 2: further aspects
777(60)
Direct materials mix and yield variances
778(4)
Sales mix and sales quantity variances
782(4)
Recording standard costs in the accounts
786(7)
Accounting disposition of variances
793(2)
Ex post variance analysis
795(3)
Variance analysis and the opportunity cost of scarce resources
798(3)
The investigation of variances
801(1)
Types of variances
802(1)
Simple rule of thumb cost investigation models
803(1)
Statistical models not incorporating costs and benefits of investigation
804(2)
Decision models with costs and benefits of investigation
806(2)
Quantity variances
808(1)
Criticisms of standard costing
809(3)
The future role of standard costing
812(3)
Summary
815(2)
Notes
817(1)
Key terms and concepts
818(1)
Recommended reading
818(1)
Key examination points
818(1)
Assessment material
819(18)
Divisional financial performance measures
837(46)
Functional and divisionalized organizational structures
838(2)
Profit centres and investment centres
840(1)
Advantage of divisionalization
840(1)
Disadvantages of divisionalization
841(1)
Pre-requisites for successful divisionalization
841(1)
Distinguishing between the managerial and economic performance of the division
842(1)
Alternative divisional profit measures
842(3)
Return on investment
845(1)
Residual income
846(2)
Economic value added (EVA™)
848(2)
Determining which assets should be included in the investment base
850(1)
The impact of inflation
851(1)
The impact of depreciation
851(2)
The effects of performance measurement on capital investment decisions
853(2)
Determining the divisional cost of capital charge
855(1)
Addressing the dysfunctional consequences of short-term financial performance measures
856(2)
Summary
858(2)
Appendix 20.1: Reconciling short- and long-term residual income/EVA(™) measures
860(5)
Notes
865(1)
Key terms and concepts
865(1)
Recommended reading
866(1)
Key examination points
866(1)
Assessment material
867(16)
Transfer pricing in divisionalized companies
883(58)
Purposes of transfer pricing
884(1)
Alternative transfer pricing methods
885(1)
Market-based transfer prices
886(4)
Marginal cost transfer prices
890(1)
Full cost transfer prices
891(1)
Cost-plus a mark-up transfer prices
892(1)
Negotiated transfer prices
893(1)
Marginal cost plus opportunity cost
894(1)
An illustration of transfer pricing
895(3)
Proposals for resolving transfer pricing conflicts
898(6)
Domestic transfer pricing recommendations
904(1)
International transfer pricing
904(3)
Economic theory of transfer pricing
907(6)
Summary
913(2)
Appendix 21.1: Economic analysis of transfer pricing
915(5)
Notes
920(1)
Key terms and concepts
920(1)
Recommended reading
920(1)
Key examination points
921(2)
Assessment material
923(18)
PART 5 Cost Management and Strategic Management Accounting
941(92)
Cost management
943(48)
Life-cycle costing
944(1)
Target costing
945(5)
Kaizen costing
950(1)
Activity-based management
951(5)
Business process re-engineering
956(1)
Cost of quality
957(4)
Cost management and the value chain
961(4)
Benchmarking
965(1)
Environmental cost management
965(2)
Just-in-time systems
967(4)
Summary
971(2)
Key terms and concepts
973(1)
Recommended reading
973(1)
Key examination points
974(1)
Assessment material
975(16)
Strategic management accounting
991(42)
What is strategic management accounting?
992(5)
Surveys of strategic management accounting practices
997(2)
The balanced scorecard
999(4)
The balanced scorecard as a strategic management system
1003(1)
Benefits and limitation of the balanced scorecard approach
1003(1)
Establishing objectives and performance measures
1004(1)
The financial perspective
1004(2)
The customer perspective
1006(3)
The internal business perspective
1009(4)
The learning and growth perspective
1013(1)
Performance measurement in service organizations
1014(3)
Summary
1017(2)
Note
1019(1)
Key terms and concepts
1019(1)
Recommended reading
1019(1)
Key examination points
1019(2)
Assessment material
1021(12)
PART 6 The Application of Quantitative Methods to Management Accounting
1033(114)
Cost estimation and cost behaviour
1035(40)
General principles applying to estimating cost functions
1036(2)
Cost estimation methods
1038(7)
Multiple regression analysis
1045(2)
Factors to be considered when using past data to estimate cost functions
1047(1)
Relevant range and non-linear cost functions
1048(1)
A summary of the steps involved in estimating cost functions
1049(2)
Cost estimation when the learning effect is present
1051(2)
Estimating incremented hours and incremental cost
1053(1)
Learning curve applications
1054(1)
Cost estimation techniques used in practice
1055(1)
Summary
1056(1)
Appendix 24.1: Tests of reliability
1057(7)
Key terms and concepts
1064(1)
Recommended reading
1064(1)
Key examination points
1064(1)
Assessment material
1065(10)
Quantitative models for the planning and control of stocks
1075(32)
Why do firms hold stocks?
1076(1)
Relevant costs for quantitative models under conditions of certainty
1076(1)
Determining the economic order quantity
1077(3)
Assumptions of the EOQ formula
1080(1)
Application of the EOQ model in determining the optimum size for a production run
1081(1)
Quantity discounts
1082(1)
Determining when to place the order
1083(1)
Uncertainty and safety stocks
1084(1)
The use of probability theory for determining safety stocks
1085(2)
Control of stocks through classification
1087(1)
Other factors influencing the choice of order quantity
1088(1)
Materials requirement planning
1089(2)
Just-in-time purchasing arrangements
1091(1)
Summary
1091(2)
Note
1093(1)
Key terms and concepts
1093(1)
Recommended reading
1093(1)
Key examination points
1093(2)
Assessment material
1095(12)
The application of linear programming to management accounting
1107(40)
Single-resource constraints
1108(1)
Two-resource constraints
1108(1)
Linear programming
1109(2)
Graphical method
1111(5)
Simplex method
1116(4)
Interpreting the final matrix
1120(1)
Opportunity cost
1120(1)
Substitution process when additional resources are obtained
1121(1)
Uses of linear programming
1122(3)
Summary
1125(1)
Appendix 26.1: The application of linear programming to capital budgeting
1126(2)
Notes
1128(1)
Key terms and concepts
1128(1)
Key examination points
1128(3)
Assessment material
1131(16)
PART 7 Case studies
1147(18)
Bibliography
1165(22)
Appendices
Appendix A
1174(4)
Appendix B
1178(4)
Appendix C
1182(1)
Appendix D
1183(1)
Appendix E
1184(3)
Answers to Review problems 1187(86)
Index 1273

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