Accounting Business Reporting for Decision Making

(Ron) #1

480 Accounting: Business Reporting for Decision Making


Illustrative examples 11.3 and 11.4 demonstrate the use of both costing systems by a manufacturing entity.


ILLUSTRATIVE EXAMPLE 11.3

Determination of inventoriable product cost — single product
(process costing)
Joanne (Jo) Geter established a private company, Coconut Plantations Pty Ltd, located on the Sunshine
Coast in Queensland, to manufacture and sell a range of sustainable coconut-based products such as soaps,
candles and detergents. The company commenced operations in September 2016. Assume that Jo made
a cautious, risk-averse decision to manufacture only soaps initially to reduce production complexity, and
planned to increase the range of products gradually as feedback was obtained on production processes.
In the first four months of operation, Coconut Plantations Pty Ltd produced 15 000 soaps, of which
12 500 were sold. The following costs were recorded:
Direct material
Direct labour
Manufacturing overhead

$ 180 000
100 000
50 000
Total manufacturing costs
Warehouse and distribution expenses
Selling and marketing expenses
Administrative and finance expenses

$
$

330 000
42 000
3 000
35 000
Total non-manufacturing $ 80 000

Determining the inventoriable product cost for Coconut Plantations Pty Ltd is relatively simple as the
company produced only one product, soap. A process costing system is therefore suitable as all manu-
facturing costs will be consumed in the same way by all units of output. The total manufacturing costs
incurred in the production process for the first four months were $330 000, being direct material, direct
labour, and manufacturing overhead. This amount excludes the selling and administrative expenses, in
line with the IFRS, as they are not ‘costs’ of the inventory.
The determination of the unit cost enables Coconut Plantations to value cost of sales and inventory
on hand at the end of the period as follows: $275 000 (12 500 units × $22) will be expensed to cost of
sales; and $55 000 (2500 units × $22) will be recorded as a current asset (inventory). (Further discussion
of the effect of opening and closing inventories on the determination of inventoriable product costs in a
process costing system can be found in management accounting texts.)

Assume that Coconut Plantations extended its range of products in 2017 to include candles as well as


soaps. The choice of costing system now depends on how resources are consumed by each product. If the


indirect costs are consumed differently, an averaging approach to product costing will no longer be appro-


priate. In order to recognise the difference in resource consumption, Coconut Plantations would have


to adopt a job costing system to determine the inventoriable product cost for each product. Illustrative


example 11.4 illustrates how the costing system would change for Coconut Plantations with the introduction


of the new product line, candles, which consumes resources differently to the existing product, soaps.


ILLUSTRATIVE EXAMPLE 11.4

Determination of inventoriable product cost — multi-product
(job costing)
Coconut Plantations Pty Ltd has extended its product range, and now manufactures both soaps
(30 000 units) and candles (20 000 units).
Soaps Candles
Units
Direct costs
Labour hours per unit
Machine hours per unit

30 000
$613 125
.25
1

20 000
$276 875
.125
1.5
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