Accounting Business Reporting for Decision Making

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476 Accounting: Business Reporting for Decision Making


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objects, the number and type of cost pools, and the appropriate cost drivers by which to allocate the
indirect costs. An overview of the costing system is detailed in figure 11.7. The cost objects are the
three operating departments: home insurance, car insurance, and life insurance. In order to determine
the full cost for each of the operating departments, it is necessary to assign the indirect costs, which
are the total costs of each of the three service departments (i.e. finance, personnel, and computer ser-
vices). Therefore, we have three indirect cost pools classified on a departmental basis measuring costs
on an actual basis. Figure 11.7 highlights the second stage of the allocation process and the one-to-one
relationship that exists between the direct costs and the cost objects, and the one-to-many relationship
between the indirect costs and the cost objects.

Home insurance
department

Car insurance
department

Life insurance
department

Finance department
costs
Cost driver: invoices

Personnel department
costs
Cost driver: employees

Computer services
department costs
Cost driver: computers

Life insurance
direct cost

Car insurance
direct cost

Home insurance
direct cost

F I G U R E 11.7 Second stage allocation — relationships between costs and cost objects

The cost drivers identified to allocate the indirect costs are the number of invoices (finance depart-
ment), the number of employees (personnel department), and the number of computers (computer ser-
vices department). The actual usage of the cost driver is used to allocate indirect costs. The next stage
in the allocation process is calculating the indirect cost rate for each cost pool.
Step 2: Determining indirect cost rates for each cost pool
In this example, there are three cost allocation formulas — one for each of the three service depart-
ment cost pools. Each allocation formula will require determination of the cost to be allocated for the
accounting period, and the total use of the cost drivers. The indirect cost rate can then be calculated,
and the indirect costs allocated according to the use of the cost driver by the individual cost objects,
which in this example are the operating departments.
For the finance department, the total costs are $150 000, with 5000 invoices being processed in the current
accounting period. Each invoice paid by the finance department will lead to a $30 charge being assigned to
the operating department to cover such costs as finance staff salaries, stationery and telephone costs. Using
the same rationale for the personnel department costs and the computer services costs, charges of $1200
per employee and $5000 per computer will be used to assign costs to these operating departments.
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