3, Inventory Valuation
3, Inventory Valuation
3, Inventory Valuation
Inventory Valuation
Reconciliation
Net income under Variable Costing
Add: FMOH costs in Ending Inventory*
Less: FMOH costs in Beginning Inventory
Net income under Absorption Costing
Timing difference
No change AC net income = VC net income There is no change in the amount of FMOH in
(production = sales) inventory. Therefore, the amount of FMOH expensed
in the income statement is the same under AC and VC.
Decreases AC net income < VC net income Under AC, we expense FMOH from prior periods when
(production < sales) the inventory is sold. Therefore, under AC, we expense
all current-period FMOH as well as some prior-period
FMOH. Conversely, under VC, we only expense
current-period FMOH. Consequently, AC has more
FMOH expensed in the income statement than VC.
Note: These relations may not hold 100% of the time in a multi-product company
o Some ideas:
➢ Read Chapter 4