CHAPTER 11 Costing and pricing in an entity 479
Process
Indirect manufacturing costs
Direct material costs
Inventoriable
product cost per unit
Total process
costs
Number of units of
products
FIGURE 11.8 Overview of a process costing system
Traditionally, manufacturing costing systems pooled indirect costs on a departmental basis or into
a single factory-wide cost pool. As noted earlier, the indirect cost rate can be determined using either
actual costs or budgeted costs. As the inventoriable product cost is used for financial reporting pur-
poses, it is necessary to identify any variances caused by allocating costs on a predetermined basis using
budgeted costs. A variance is the difference between a budget cost and an actual cost. Such variances
arise when an entity over- or under-estimates either the expenditure level of indirect costs assigned to
the cost pool or the expected usage of the cost driver. The variances are recorded in the financial records
as either overapplied or underapplied overhead. Overapplied overhead refers to a situation where the
indirect costs applied to an inventoriable product cost are greater than the actual costs incurred. For
underapplied overhead, the applied indirect costs are lower than actual costs.
Indirect manufacturing costs
Job A Job B Job C
Direct material
Direct labour
Direct material
Direct labour
Direct material
Direct labour
Inventoriable
product cost per unit
Individual job cost
Number of units
F I G U R E 11. 9 Overview of a job costing system