Variable Costing System
Under variabkle
costing system, only those costs are treated as product costs that vary with
output. All fixed manufacturing costs are treated as period costs.
Variable costing is very important element of cost and management
accounting. Variable costing charges products with only those manufacturing
costs that vary directly with volume.
Only prime costs (direct materials and direct labor) plus variable
factory overhead expenses are assigned to inventories,
both work in process and finished goods, and to the cost of
goods sold. Thus, these variable costs are charged to the product while fixed
manufacturing costs are totally expensed in the current period.
Manufacturing costs such as depreciation, insurance, and taxes that
are a function of time rather than of production are excluded from the cost of
the product. Also excluded are salaries factory supervisors and office
employees as well as wages of certain factory employees, such as maintenance
crews and guards, which are considered period costs rather than product costs.
Direct costing focuses attention on the product and its costs. This
interest moves in two directories: (1) to internal uses of the fixed variable
cost relationship and the contribution margin concept; and to (2) to external
uses involving the costing of inventories, income determination, and financial
reporting. The internal uses deal with the application of direct costing in
profit planning, product pricing, other phases of decision making, and in cost
control. Executive management, including marketing executives, production
managers, and cost analysts, has generally praised, control, and analytical
potentialities of direct costing. Fixed costs calculated on a unit cost tend to
vary. On the other hand, direct unit costs and the contribution margin per unit
tend to remain constant for various volume of production and sales.
In cost volume profit Analysis, contribution margin or marginal
income is the result of subtracting all variable costs from sales revenue. In
direct costing, an income per unit not calculated; only an income on total
sales of all products is determined by subtracting the total fixed cost from
the contribution margin.
Summary: Variable
costing charges products with only those manufacturing costs that vary directly
with volume. Only prime costs (direct materials and direct labor) plus variable
factory overhead expenses are assigned to inventories, both work in process and
finished goods, and to the cost of goods sold.
Source: Free Guest Posting Articles from
ArticlesFactory.com
Jun 6, 2011 - Rashid Javed
The article has been reprinted from the site Articles Factory, in
terms of the source site’s copyright requirements and allowances.
Rashid Javed is an Asian author. He writes
articles about various topics of accounting and economics such as debt equity ratio and elasticity of demand.
Article image: Pixabay


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