Joint and By-Product Costing: "Sell As Is
Joint and By-Product Costing: "Sell As Is
Joint and By-Product Costing: "Sell As Is
PRODUCT
COSTING
PATRICK LOUIE E. REYES,
or process further?” CTT, MICB, RCA, CPA
Joint Process
•one during which one product cannot be
manufactured without producing others.
•Joint cost - costs incurred for material, labor, and
overhead during a joint process.
- allocated only to the primary products of a
joint process using either a physical or a
monetary measure
•Separate cost - costs assignable to specific products;
incurred in the later stages of production.
Outputs of a Joint Process
•Joint products - primary outputs of a joint process.
•By-product – an incidental output of a joint process.
•Scrap – another incidental output of a joint process,
but has sales value lower than a by-product.
•Waste – no sales value.
Some notes
•Although by-products and scrap have saleable values,
they are not the reasons why a company pursues a
joint process. Example: Dunkin’ Donuts™ does not
pursue a joint process to produce the donut holes
(which we call munchkins).
•Classifications of products can change over time.
Example: Poultry farms previously considered bones
and beaks as waste, however, these are also now sold
as organic fertilizer.
Split-off points
•Split-off point - the point at which joint process
outputs are first identifiable as individual products.
•A joint process can have one or more split-off points,
depending on the number and type of output
produced.
•Output may be sold at the split-off point (if a market
exists for products at that degree of completion) or
may be processed further and then sold.
The Joint
Process
Model
Additional notes
•At split-off, a decision is made whether to sell as-is or
process further:
• Sell as is if further processing costs exceeds additional
revenue.
• Process further is additional revenue exceeds further
processing costs.
• Example: Meat is harvested to make bacon. The unused parts
can be sold as is for 100/kg, but it can also be processed further
for 20/kg to become lard. If the selling price of a kilogram of lard
is more than 120, process further. If below 120, sell as is.
Allocation of Costs
•Allocation of Joint Costs:
• Physical Measure Allocation
• Monetary Measure Allocation
• Sales Value at split-off
• NRV at split-off
• Approximated NRV at split-off
Joint processing cost for the period: 540,000 for 10,000 kg of output
All costs are included in the cost of joint products. All costs are included in the cost of by-product.
By-products and scrap in Job Order
Costing
• Just use either NRV or Other Income approach to recognize
the value of the by-product or scrap.
• If by-product is created by all/most jobs, credit OH.
• If by-product is created by a few jobs/single job, credit the
job/s causing the production of by-product or scrap.
• Debit Cash (if sold immediately) or Scrap Inventory (if
inventoried, then debit Cash, credit Scrap Inventory when
eventually sold).