Limited Offer Get 25% off — use code BESTW25
No AI No Plagiarism On-Time Delivery Free Revisions
Claim Now

Holmes Online Learning

This lecture does not include any audio as it was created prior to going online
Holmes Online Learning
HA2011 Management Accounting
New Supplementary Assessment
Guidelines:
All students are entitled to a Supplementary
Assessment if their overall result in a unit
is less than 50%.
A student will no be eligible for
Supplementary Assessment
•If any assessment item has not been
submitted or
•The student has been recorded for
academic misconduct in the unit
Supplementary Assessments 2020
HA2011 MANAGEMENT ACCOUNTING
Topic 1
Introduction to Management
Accounting
Outline
• What is Management Accounting and
Management Accounting Systems
• Evolution and Changes in Management
Accounting and Business Environment
• Management Accounting vs Financial
Accounting
• Common Cost Classifications
• Cost Flows in Manufacturing Business
Welcome to HA2011 Management Accounting
In this unit, a range of concepts and techniques
used by management accountants including costing,
controls, performance measurement, tactical
decision-making, pricing and product mix decisions
will be discussed.
Introduction
The processes and techniques that focus on
the effective and efficient use of organisational
resources to support managers in their task of
enhancing both customer value and
shareholder value
What is Management Accounting?
• Customer value
• The value that a customer places on particular
features of a product or service
• Shareholder value
• The value that shareholders or owners place on a
business
• Trade-offs between actions that increase
customer value and actions that increase
shareholder value
What is Management Accounting? (cont.)
• Resources

  • Financial and non-financial
  • Organisational capabilities and competencies
    • Effective use of resources
  • Successful achievement of an objective
    • Efficient use of resources
  • The least possible consumption of resources to
    achieve an objective
    What is Management Accounting? (cont.)
    • Systems that produce information required by
    managers to create value and manage resources
    • Information provided on a regular basis
  • Estimates of costs of producing goods and services
  • Information for planning and controlling operations
  • Information for measuring performance
    • Ad-hoc information to satisfy managers’ shortand
    long-term decision-making needs
    Management Accounting Systems
    • Increasing global competition and trade
    liberalisation
    • Digital and information technologies are rapidly
    transforming the business environment
    • Customers are more vocal and demanding
    • Rise of the service sector including knowledgebased
    industries
    • Fallout from the global financial crisis
    • Sustainability has become a key issue
    Australian Organisations in the 21st Century
    Responses to the Changing Business
    Environment
    • Contemporary business practices
  • Better product & service quality
  • Delivery responsiveness & cost performance
    • Adoption of new management structures,
    systems and practices, including new
    management accounting techniques and
    systems
    • Modern management accounting systems
  • Support the adoption of new structures, systems and
    practices
  • Include activity-based costing, performance
    measurement systems, cost management systems,
    new approaches to customer profitability analysis
    and supplier cost analysis
    Conventional
    • Budgeting
    • Costing systems
    • Financial performance
    measurement systems
    • In wide use for many
    decades, & still used in
    many organisations
    Contemporary
    • Activity-Based Costing
    • Performance
    measurement systems
    (such as balanced
    scorecards),
    • Cost management
    systems (such as
    business process reengineering),
    • New approaches to
    customer profitability
    analysis & supplier
    cost analysis
    Responses to the Changing Business
    Environment (cont.)
    Evolution and Change in Management
    Accounting
    • Focuses on the needs of managers within the
    organisation
    • Flexibility in types of information provided
    • Influenced by managers’ information needs and
    differences in production and service
    technologies
    • Used by senior managers through to operational
    managers
    Management Accounting Information
    • Financial accounting
  • Preparing and reporting accounting information for
    parties outside the organisation
  • Constrained by rules and regulations
  • Uses historical information
    • Management accounting
  • Content and design determined by managers’ needs
    Management Accounting and Financial Accounting
    Information
    • Costing systems
  • Systems that estimate the cost of goods and services
    as well as the cost of organisational units, such as
    departments
  • Used for both management and financial accounting
    Management Accounting and Financial Accounting
    Information (cont.)
    Management Accounting vs Financial Accounting
    • Support the organisation’s formulation and
    implementation of strategy
    • Contribute to improving competitive
    advantage
    • Provide information for managing resources
    through planning and control systems
    • Provide estimates of the costs of outputs
    Management Accounting Processes and Techniques
    Management Accounting Systems
    • Management accounting systems are tailored
    to an organisation’s needs
    • Components may include:
  • Costing systems
  • Budgeting systems
  • Performance measurement systems
  • Cost management systems
    Designing Management Accounting Systems
    • Behavioural issues
  • Information may impact on individuals’ behaviour,
    so management accounting systems may have
    both expected and unexpected outcomes
    • Motivation
  • A key purpose of management accounting
    systems is to motivate managers and employees
    to direct their efforts towards achieving the
    organisation’s goals
  • Rewards and performance targets may be used to
    motivate individuals
    Designing Management Accounting Systems (cont.)
    • Costs include
  • Salary of accounting personnel
  • Purchasing and operating computers
  • Gathering, storing and processing data
  • Managers’ time reading, understanding and using
    the information
    • Benefits include
  • Improved management decisions
  • More effective planning
  • Improved operational efficiency at lower cost
  • Improved customer and shareholder value
    Professional Accounting Organisations
    • In Australia, management accountants may
    join:
  • CPA Australia
  • Chartered Accountants Australia and New Zealand
  • Institute of Public Accountants
  • Institute of Certified Management Accountants
    • Membership enables accountants to keep up
    to date with key developments.
    Professional Ethics
    • Code of Ethics for Professional Accountants
    • Fundamental principles of the code
  • Integrity
  • Objectivity
  • Professional competence and due care
  • Confidentiality
  • Professional behaviour
    What are Costs?
    • Resources given up to achieve a particular
    objective
    • In financial accounting
     Asset—benefits extend beyond current period
     Expense—benefits are used within the current
    period
    • Measured in monetary terms
    Emphasis on Costs
    • Why do management accountants pay so
    much attention to costs?
  • Historic focus on manufacturing costs
  • To value inventory and COGS for external
    reporting
  • Non-manufacturing costs are more significant in the
    current business environment
  • Availability of cost data
  • Importance of cost information
    • In modern businesses non-financial information
    is increasingly important
  • Used to make decisions and manage various
    sources of customer value and shareholder wealth
    Cost Classifications
    • Cost classification depends on how the
    information is to be used
    • Different costs and classifications are used for
    different purposes
    • The same cost can be classified in a number
    of ways depending on the intended use of the
    cost information
    Common Cost Classifications
    Classifying Costs According to their Behaviour
    • Managers need to understand how costs
    change as the activity level (cost driver) in the
    business changes
    • Variable costs – costs that change
    proportionally when the activity level changes
    • Fixed costs – costs that remain the same when
    the activity level changes
    Cost Objects
    • An important function of management
    accounting is to measure the cost of cost
    objects
  • Cost objects are anything for which management
    wants a separate measure of costs (e.g. products,
    divisions, customers)
    Direct and Indirect Costs
    • Direct costs can be identified with or traced to
    a particular cost object
  • Direct costs are directly traced to the cost object
    • Indirect costs cannot be economically
    identified or traced to a cost object
  • Indirect costs are allocated to the cost object
    Direct and Indirect Costs (cont.)
    • Responsibility centres
  • A responsibility centre is a unit of an organisation
    where the manager is held accountable for the
    unit’s activities and performance
  • Responsibility accounting involves using cost
    information to hold managers accountable for their
    unit’s performance
    Direct and Indirect Costs (cont.)
    • Product costs
  • Whether a product cost is a direct cost or an indirect
    cost depends on what the cost object is
  • A product cost can be a direct cost of one cost
    object and an indirect cost of another cost object
    Controllable and Uncontrollable Costs
    • Controllable costs can be controlled or
    significantly influenced by the manager
    • Uncontrollable costs cannot be controlled or
    significantly influenced by the manager
    • Ideally, managers should be held responsible
    only for costs they can control or significantly
    influence
    e.g. costs that have been determined by others
    (such as Head Office) that impact on a manager’s
    costs.
    • Some costs are controllable in the long term but
    not in the short term
    Controllable and Uncontrollable Costs (cont.)
    Costs Across the Value Chain
    • The value chain
  • A set of linked processes or activities that begins with
    acquiring resources and ends with providing and
    supporting products and services that customers value
  • Provides a useful framework for examining the areas
    where costs are incurred
    Costs across the Value Chain (cont.)
    Costs across the Value Chain (cont.)
    • Upstream costs
  • Research and development, design and supply costs
    • Production costs
  • The costs incurred to collect and assemble the
    resources used to produce a product
    • Downstream costs
  • Marketing, distribution and customer service costs
    Manufacturing Costs
    • Manufacturing costs
  • All costs incurred to manufacture the product
  • Incurred within the factory area
    • Non-manufacturing costs
  • Costs incurred outside the manufacturing process
  • Upstream and downstream costs
    Manufacturing Costs (cont.)
    • Manufacturing costs include:
  • Direct material
  • Direct labour
  • Manufacturing overhead
    • Direct or indirect cost classification assumes
    that products are the relevant cost objects
    Manufacturing Costs (cont.)
    • Direct material is raw material that is:
  • Consumed in the manufacturing process
  • Physically incorporated into the finished products
  • Can be economically traced to products
  • A variable cost
    Manufacturing Costs (cont.)
    • Direct labour
  • The cost of salaries and wages for personnel who
    work directly on the manufactured product
  • Directly traced to a product
  • Usually treated as a variable cost unless contractual
    arrangements are in place
    Manufacturing Costs (cont.)
    • Manufacturing overheads include:
  • Indirect material and indirect labour
  • Depreciation and insurance on factory equipment
  • Utilities and the costs of support departments for
    manufacturing
  • Overtime premium and idle time
  • Costs incurred by support departments that are
    necessary for the manufacturing to occur
    Also called indirect manufacturing costs or factory
    burden
    Manufacturing Costs (cont.)
    • Conversion costs
  • Direct labour cost + Manufacturing overhead
  • Costs of converting materials into a product
    • Prime costs
  • Direct material cost + Direct labour cost
  • Major costs of producing a product
    Manufacturing Costs (cont.)
    • In many modern manufacturing settings, direct
    material is the largest proportion of the
    manufacturing cost and direct labour costs are
    relatively small
    • Modern costing systems therefore analyse
    costs in greater detail than traditional costing
    systems:
  • Activity based costing
    Product Costs for Financial Reporting
    • In financial accounting reports:
  • Product costs determine cost of goods sold
  • Product costs help value inventory on hand
  • AASB 102 specifies the costs to be included as
    product costs for financial reporting purposes
  • Product costs can also be called inventoriable
    costs
  • All costs that are not product costs are called
    period costs
    Period Costs for Financial Reporting
    • Period costs
  • All costs that are not product costs
  • Are expensed in the period in which they are
    incurred
  • Can be classified by line item or function (e.g.
    selling and administrative expenses)
    Cost Flows in a Manufacturing Business
    • Material is purchased: the cost is added to raw
    materials inventory
    • Direct materials are consumed in production:
    cost is removed from raw materials inventory
    and added to work in process inventory
    • Direct labour and manufacturing overhead are
    accumulated in work in process inventory
    Cost Flows in Manufacturing Business (cont.)
    • Products are completed: costs are transferred
    from work in process inventory to finished
    goods inventory
    • Products are sold: costs are transferred from
    finished goods inventory to cost of goods sold
    expense
    • Cost of goods sold is deducted from sales
    revenue to determine gross profit
    Cost Flows in Manufacturing Business (cont.)
    • Raw materials, work in process and finished
    goods inventory balances are reported in the
    balance sheet
    • Cost of goods sold expense is reported in the
    income statement
    • The schedule of cost of goods manufactured
    and schedule of cost of goods sold summarise
    the flow of manufacturing costs
    Cost flows in
    manufacturing
    business

The post Holmes Online Learning appeared first on My Assignment Online.

Plagiarism Free Assignment Help

Expert Help With This Assignment — On Your Terms

Native UK, USA & Australia writers Deadline from 3 hours 100% Plagiarism-Free — Turnitin included Unlimited free revisions Free to submit — compare quotes
Scroll to Top