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Reallocation of Departmental Operating Costs May 10, 1999 (SmartPros) As in previous months, this article refers to the internal accounting of a hypothetical company. This month, we will focus on the account that traditional accounting professors refer to as "overhead." As Stanford University's Professor Horngren noted in one of his cost accounting books, why did the professionals not call this account "underfoot"? In other words, Horngren accepted the need to change this unhappy denomination of "overhead" to some term more appropriate to the realities of our companies. These accounts refer to the different departments (or cost centers) that we have. In other words, let us unquestionably change this unhappy term to "departments." In my article published in April, I showed my readers how we should structure Class 3 of our internal accounting. I identified this class as: TO Departments. This means that we allocate our indirect cost elements to these departments. I prefer to record the Administrative and Sales Departments in the beginning of Class 3. Once we have debited these indirect costs to the different departments, we must analyze how these departmental operating costs refer to, and should be applied to, our final Cost Objective, that is, our Production Cost. We know that the Administrative and Sales Departments should not apply their operating costs to the production. These administrative and sales operating costs should be applied to the Cost of Goods Sold. Then we have the Direct Production Departments, where the actual production is realized. Consequently, these departmental operating costs must be applied to the production cost account. We may also express it in following way: The products have to absorb these departmental operating costs. But first let us analyze the operating costs of the following departments: Indirect Production and Service. Indirect Production Departments So we need to structure the Reallocation steps, taking the operating cost of our Indirect Production and Service departments to the Direct Production departments. This Reallocation procedure is a very important step in developing an advanced managerial accounting.
In Activity Based Costing projections and teachings often discuss the need for Reallocation. ABC strongly indicates that we have to charge to the Production Cost account not only the direct related costs of the production but also costs accumulated in different departments that work in some indirect way with our production. I refer to the Indirect Production departments, such as maintenance and repair. These Departmental Operating Costs must be absorbed by the products. We will not directly transfer these costs from credit Class 4 to debit Class 5, but instead take these costs as a reallocation amount from Class 4 back to Class 3: to the departments that use the service of these indirect departments. With this procedure, we increase the total Departmental Operating Cost of the Direct Production Departments and, consequently, the Application Rate will also be increased in these departments. This means that when we multiply this pre-established rate times the production volume, we have then charged to the production not only the operating cost of the Direct Production Department but also the operating costs of these other Indirect and Service Departments. With this procedure we are fulfilling instructions recommended by ABC. Reallocation Procedure The responsible person for each department of the company will have to prepare their specific expenditure budget for the fiscal year and calculate the monthly average amount. Budgeted Procedure This monthly amount will be used during the whole fiscal year, however, if special new conditions arise, we may change these monthly amounts. At the end of each year we should verify if these budgeted amounts are still acceptable or should be changed. We should not reallocate monthly the actual operating cost, but the pre-established budgeted amount. Details of Reallocation The Graphic Another line is leaving the credit side of the Class 4 accounts. This is the line that the applied amounts will use to be charged to the different Production Cost accounts in Class 5. From the Administrative and Sales departments--that is, Class 4--the departmental operating costs will be applied to the Cost of Goods Sold, recorded in Class 7. I will explain how to realize these transactions in future articles. Conclusion |
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