Responsibility Accounting Module
Responsibility Accounting Module
Responsibility Accounting Module
LECTURE OUTLINE
Lesson Objectives:
1. Discuss the role of a management control system.
2. List the advantages and disadvantages of decentralization.
3. Enumerate the three types of responsibility centers.
4. Understand how managers evaluate performance of responsibility centers
3. Budgetary control works best when a company has a formalized reporting system. This
system should do the following:
a. Identify the name of the budget report.
b. State the frequency of the report, such as weekly or monthly.
c. Specify the purpose of the report.
d. Indicate the primary recipient(s) of the report.
3. A static budget report is appropriate for fixed manufacturing costs and fixed selling and
administrative expenses.
C. Flexible Budgets.
1. A flexible budget projects budget data for various levels of activity. In essence, the
flexible budget is a series of static budgets at different levels of activity.
2. To develop the flexible budget, it is necessary to:
a. Identify the activity index and the relevant range of activity.
b. Identify the variable costs, and determine the budgeted variable cost per unit of
activity for each cost.
c. Identify the fixed costs, and determine the budgeted amount for each cost.
d. Prepare the budget for selected increments of activity within the relevant range.
3. Flexible budget reports are another type of internal report. The flexible budget report
consists of two sections:
a. Production data for a selected activity index, such as direct labor hours.
b. Cost data for variable and fixed costs.
4. The flexible budget report provides a basis for evaluating a manager’s performance in
two areas:
a. Production control.
b. Cost control.
5. Flexible budget reports are appropriate for evaluating performance since both actual
and budgeted costs are based on the actual activity level achieved.
D. Management by Exception.
1. Management by exception means that top management’s review of a budget report is
focused either entirely or primarily on differences between actual results and planned
objectives.
2. For management by exception to be effective, there must be guidelines for identifying
an exception. The usual criteria are:
a. Materiality—usually expressed as a percentage difference from budget.
b. Controllability of the item—exception guidelines are more restrictive for
controllable items than for items that are not controllable by the manager.
Variance*
Unfavorable
Cost Items Actual Budget (Favorable) Remarks
Direct Costs P xxx P xxx P xxx U/F
Controllable Costs
________ xxx xxx xxx
________ xxx xxx xxx
________ xxx xxx xxx
Total xxx xxx xxx
Non-Controllable Costs
________ xxx xxx xxx
________ xxx xxx xxx
________ xxx xxx xxx
TotalTotal Direct Costs xxx xxx xxx
Indirect Costs
_______ xxx xxx xxx
_______ xxx xxx xxx
Total Indirect Costs xxx xxx xxx
Total Costs P xxx P xxx P xxx
=== === ===
Note: Material variance, favourable or unfavourable, are analyzed to determine their causes and
why they are controllable or not. Efficiency of the manager is evaluated on the basis of the results
of the analysis.
2. Profit Center – is any responsibility center that has control over both revenues and costs
Revenue P xxx
Less: Direct Variable Costs xxx
Contribution Margin xxx
Less: Direct Fixed Costs xxx
Segment Margin P xxx
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ROI – measures the turnover of assets as well as the margin earned on sales
Criticisms of ROI
1. ROI tends to emphasize short-run rather than long-term performance.
Managers can often improve short-term profitability by taking actions that
hurt the company in the long-term
2. A manager who takes over an investment center typically inherits many
committed costs over which the manager has little control
3. A division whose ROI is larger than the ROI for the entire company may
reject an alternative that would lower its own ROI even though it would
increase the ROI for the entire company.
B. Residual Income
Residual Income – is the net operating income which an investment center is able
to earn above some minimum rate of return on operating assets. Ideally, the
minimum required rate of return should be the firm’s cost of capital or opportunity
cost of funds. When residual income is used to measure performance, the goal is to
maximize the total amount of residual income generated for a period.
1. Motivation for the residual income approach. Profitable investments may
be rejected if a segment is evaluated based on the ROI
2. Divisional Comparison and Residual Income. A major disadvantage of
residual income approach is that it cannot be easily used to compare the
performance of divisions of different sizes. Residual income can be used to
track the performance of a division over time and actual residual income
can be compared to target residual income.
Economic Value Added (EVA) – this calculates the excess of after tax operating profit
over the total annual cost of capital; if EVA is positive, wealth is created
E. Total Shareholder Return (TSR) = Change in the Stock Price plus Dividend per Share
Initial Stock Price
• Break-even Time – the time when the cumulative value of the cash inflows is equal
to the cumulative present value of the cash outflow
• Customer-Response-Time (Delivery Cycle Time) – the time period from the
placement of an order to the delivery of the goods or services, composed of
1. Order-Receipt time – period of time between placement of an order to its
readiness for set-up
2. Manufacturing Cycle time(Manufacturing Lead time or Throughput time)
– period of time from the moment the order is ready for set-up to its
completion
3. Order-Delivery time
• Manufacturing Cycle Efficiency = Value-added Production time
Manufacturing Cycle time
TRANSFER PRICE
The term transfer price means the price exchanged for a transfer or goods or services
between units of the same organization, such as two departments or divisions. Transfer prices are
needed for performance evaluation purposes.
Formula: Transfer Price = Variable cost per unit + Lost contribution margin per unit on
outside sales
2. Maximum Transfer Price – transfer price that would leave the buying division no worse
off if an input is purchased from an internal division (Purchase price from outside supplier)
3. Market-based Price – Transfer price is the selling price of the product to outside market.
4. Cost-based Price – Transfer price is based either on variable cost, full cost, price cost or
other basis chosen by management
5. Negotiated Price or Cost Plus Transfer Price – transfer price is the sum of costs incurred
by the producing division plus an agreed-on-profit percentage
Suboptimization
Suboptimization results if transfer prices are set in a way that benefits a particular division,
but works to the disadvantage of the company as a whole. Suboptimization can also result, if
transfer pricing is so inflexible that one division buys from the outside when there is substantial
idle capacity to produce the item internally. If divisional managers are given full autonomy in
setting, accepting and rejecting transfer prices, then either of these situations can be created,
through selfishness, desire to look good, pettiness or bickering.
Management by Objective
Under the management-by-objective (MBO) philosophy, managers participate in setting
goals that they strive to achieve. These goals may be achieved in financial or other qualitative
terms, and the responsibility accounting system is used to evaluate performance in achieving them.
The MBO approach is consistent with an emphasis on obtaining goal congruence throughout an
organization.
Balanced Scorecard
The balanced scorecard is an accounting report that includes the firm’s critical success
factors in four areas: customer satisfaction, financial performance, internal business processes and
innovation and learning (human resources). The primary objective of the balanced scorecard is to
serve as an action plan, a basis for implementing the strategy expressed in the critical success
factors.
The balanced scorecard is constructed to support the company’s strategy which is a theory
about what actions will further the company’s goals. Assuming that the company has financial
goals, measures of financial performance must be included in the balanced scorecard as a check
on the reality of the theory. If the internal business processes improve but the financial outcomes
do not improve, the theory may be flawed and the strategy should be changed.
It is an approach to performance measurement that combines traditional financial measures
with non-financial measures.
Problem 1
The supervisor of Department X purchases supplies, authorizes repairs and maintenance
service, and hires labor for the department. Various costs for the month of March 2021 are given
below:
Sales salaries and commission P 9,850
Salary, supervisor of Department X 1,800
Factory, heat and light 650
General office salaries 14,200
Depreciation, factory 750
Supplies, Department X 1,430
Repairs and maintenance 820
Factory insurance 460
Labor cost, Department X 17,220
Salary of factory superintendent 2,400
Total P 49,850
Required:
1. List the costs that can be controlled by the supervisor of Dept. X
2. List the costs that can be directly identified with Department X
3. List the costs that will have to be allocated to the factory departments
4. List the costs that do not pertain to factory operations.
Problem 2
Francesca Company has three divisions – marketing, production, and personnel. There is
a manager in charge of each division. The flexible budget for each division follows:
Marketing Production Personnel
Controllable Costs
Direct materials - P 20,000 -
Direct labor - 50,000 -
Salaries P 80,000 - P 70,000
Supplies 20,000 6,000 4,000
Maintenance 2,000 4,000 2,000
Total P102,000 P 80,000 P 76,000
Problem 3
Gaylan Company has two investment centers and has developed the following information:
Head Division Foot Division
Departmental controllable margin P90,000 ?
Average operating assets ? P400,000
Sales 1,000,000 1,250,000
ROI 12% 8%
Instructions
Answer the following questions about the two divisions:
a. What was the amount of the Head Division's average operating assets?
b. What was the amount of Foot Division’s controllable margin?
c. If the Foot Division is able to reduce its operating assets by P100,000, how much would its
new ROI be?
d. If the Head Division is able to increase its controllable margin by P20,000 as a result of
reducing variable costs, how much would its new ROI be?
Problem 4
The Candle Division of Dax Wax Company reported the following results for 2020:
Sales P800,000
Variable costs 420,000
Controllable fixed costs 100,000
Average operating assets 4,000,000
Management is considering the following independent alternative courses of action in 2021 in
order to maximize the return on investment for the division.
1. Reduce controllable fixed costs by 50% with no change in sales or variable costs
2. Reduce average operating assets by 30% with no change in controllable margin
3. Increase sales P200,000 with no change in the contribution margin percentage
Instructions
a. Compute the return on investment for 2021.
b. Compute the expected return on investment for each of the alternative courses of action.