Ae 103: Cost Accounting and Control
Ae 103: Cost Accounting and Control
Ae 103: Cost Accounting and Control
Later in this article, the company will then assign raw materials inventory to work in process and manufacturing overhead.
Assuming that KAIA-MOTO Manufacturing incurs Php32,000 of factory labor costs. Of that amount, Php27,000 relates
to wages payable and Php5,000 relates to payroll taxes payable in January.
The entry to record factory labor cost for the month is:
The company would subsequently assign factory labor to work in process and manufacturing overhead.
MANUFACTURING OVERHEAD COSTS:
There are many types of overhead costs. An entity may recognize these costs daily, as in the case of factory equipment
repairs and the use of factory supplies and indirect labor. Or, it may record overhead costs periodically through adjusting
entries (as in the case of property taxes, depreciation, and insurance) This is done using a summary entry, which
summarizes the totals from multiple transactions.
An example for this would be the following entry (using assumed amounts):
The company may use any of the inventory costing methods (FIFO, LIFO, or average-cost) in costing the requisitions to
the individual job cost sheets. Periodically, the company journalizes the requisitions. For example, if KAIA-MOTO
Manufacturing uses Php 24,000 of direct materials and Php 6,000 of indirect materials in January, the entry is:
AE 103: COST ACCOUNTING AND CONTROL
The requisition slips show total direct materials costs of Php 12,000 for Job No. 101, Php 7,000 for Job No.102,and
Php5,000 for Job No.103.The posting of requisition slip R247 and other assumed postings to the job cost sheets for
materials are shown below. After the company has completed all postings, the sum of the direct materials columns of the
job cost sheets (the subsidiary accounts) should equal the direct materials debited to Work in Process Inventory (the
control account).
(Companies post to control accounts monthly and post to job cost sheets daily.)
FACTORY LABOR COSTS
Companies assign factory labor costs to jobs on the basis of time tickets prepared when the work is performed. The time
ticket indicates the employee, the hours worked, the account and job to be charged, and the total labor cost. Many
companies accumulate these data through the use of bar coding and scanning devices. When they start and end work,
employees scan bar codes on their identification badges and bar codes associated with each job they work on. When direct
labor is involved, the time ticket must indicate the job number, as shown in Illustration 20-8. The employee’s supervisor
should approve all time tickets.
AE 103: COST ACCOUNTING AND CONTROL
The time tickets are later sent to the payroll department, which applies the employee’s hourly wage rate and computes the
total labor cost. Finally, the company journalizes the time tickets. It debits the account Work in Process Inventory for
direct labor, and debits Manufacturing Overhead for indirect labor. For example, if the Php 32,000 total factory labor cost
consists of Php 28,000 of direct labor and Php 4,000 of indirect labor, the entry is:
As a result of this entry, Factory Labor has a zero balance, and gross earnings are assigned to the appropriate
manufacturing accounts. Let’s assume that the labor costs chargeable to KAIA-MOTO’s three jobs are Php 15,000, Php
9,000, and Php 4,000. The illustration below shows the Work in Process Inventory and job cost sheets after posting. As in
the case of direct materials, the postings to the direct labor columns of the job cost sheets should equal the posting of
direct labor to Work in Process Inventory.
Overhead relates to production operations as a whole. To know what “the whole” is, the logical thing is to wait until the
end of the year’s operations. At that time the company knows all of its costs for the period. As a practical matter, though,
managers cannot wait until the end of the year. To price products accurately, they need information about product costs of
specific jobs completed during the year. Using a predetermined overhead rate enables a cost to be determined for the job
immediately.
KAIA-MOTO Manufacturing uses direct labor cost as the activity base. Assuming that the company expects annual
overhead costs to be Php280,000 and direct labor costs for the year to be Php350,000,the overhead rate is 80%,computed
as follows:
Php280,000 / Php350,000= 80%
This means that for every peso of direct labor, KAIA-MOTO will assign 80 cents of manufacturing overhead to a job. The
use of a predetermined overhead rate enables the company to determine the approximate total cost of each job when it
completes the job. Historically, companies used direct labor costs or direct labor hours as the activity base. The reason
was the relatively high correlation between direct labor and manufacturing overhead. Today more companies are using
machine hours as the activity base, due to increased reliance on automation in manufacturing operations. Many companies
now use activity-based costing in an attempt to more accurately allocate overhead costs based on the activities that give
rise to the costs. A company may use more than one activity base. For example, if a job is manufactured in more than one
factory department, each department may have its own overhead rate. For KAIA-MOTO Manufacturing, overhead applied
for January is Php 22,400 (direct labor cost of Php 28,000 80%). The following entry records this application.
The overhead that KAIA-MOTO applies to each job will be 80% of the direct labor cost of the job for the month.
AE 103: COST ACCOUNTING AND CONTROL