Comptabilité budget pour entreprise
Étude de cas : Comptabilité budget pour entreprise. Rechercher de 53 000+ Dissertation Gratuites et MémoiresPar lilia93 • 25 Mars 2021 • Étude de cas • 2 835 Mots (12 Pages) • 470 Vues
Group Project AC 311 E – Principles of Accounting II |
OBJECTIVE OF THE ASSIGNMENT
The objective of the assignment is to be able to contribute effectively to a group project which is about applying the concepts and tools introduced during the course by simulating a real-world decision making situation.
OVERVIEW OF THE ASSIGNMENT
Your task is to create a fictitious company that you will inhabit during approximately one year of its life time. You will accompany your business all along its annual planning and control cycle and have to respond to typical problems that arise during this cycle.
Your business unit will be a manufacturing plant that you have completely invented. Of course your business can be inspired by a real-world company (using information from annual reports, newspaper articles, internet searches, personal contacts…). A part of the credits will be awarded for creativity and level of detail (see evaluation sheet on Moodle).
However, don’t spend excessive amounts of time on collecting information. The focus of the project is on the application of the tools, not on the accurate description of existing companies. Make it interesting, not complicated! The figures you invent just need to be plausible estimates; for instance, when determining the material costs for making bread, you do not need to know to the penny the prices of each ingredient!
ORGANISATION OF THE GROUP WORK
Project work will be done in groups of around 4-5 students (to be determined by the instructor, depends on the class size). Please enter the team members also in the group table document on Moodle.
For calculations, it is required to use Excel worksheets. A basic Excel template is available on Moodle. This template needs to be adapted and completed at your convenience.
Each group must hand in in electronic form both a written document and an Excel worksheet including the results of the group work. Both documents are due two weeks after the last class session (to be posted on Moodle).
Enter all responses (except budgets) directly in this document. For the budgeting part, use the Excel template.
DETAILED INSTRUCTIONS FOR THE PROJECT
- Choose a manufacturing product. It doesn’t have to be very complex (e.g. skateboards, pens, trombones, tennis rackets, bagels, soap, caddies…).
- Run a quick internet search to get information about the production process (e.g. “manufacturing process bread”, “How to make a skateboard” …).
I. BUSINESS AND COMPANY PRESENTATION
Enter your responses directly in the spaces provided below. Make sure that the layout is easily readable!
Name of the company: ___________
- Team members:
___________
- Describe your company. (Is it large, medium, or small? Is production labor intensive or capital intensive?)
___________
- What is the product you are producing?
___________
- Who are your customers? (Individuals, retail business, wholesale businesses)? What makes your product attractive to these customers?
___________
- What is considered a unit (of product)?
___________
- How many units are normally produced in a day?
___________
- How many units have been produced last year?
___________
II. MANUFACTURING PROCESS (FLOW CHART)
Present very schematically the production process by simplifying to the most basic elements. Then identify the costs incurred for each activity: materials, labor, plant & equipment, other costs.
Delete the examples and enter your own data!
EXAMPLE – Bread manufacturing
What you might find on the internet:
[pic 1]
This is how you might simplify the chart showing the main steps in the production process. Show under manufacturing support all the resources that cannot be classified under one of the steps in the manufacturing process.
Activities:
[pic 2][pic 3][pic 4][pic 5][pic 6]
Resources needed:
Materials Flour Packaging material Gas, water Office material
Yeast
Labor Cooking workers Oven operator Product handler Plant manager Sales personnel
Cleaning personnel Sales commissions
General manager
Plant& Mixing machine Oven Slicing machine Factory building Computers
Equipment Office furniture
Other costs Plant insurance Advertising fees
It’s up to you to adapt this chart to your company and find more relevant items!
III. ACTUAL COST ANALYSIS
You can immediately start doing Questions 1-4. Questions 4&5 will be covered in detail in Session 4.
- Enter the materials from the flow chart in Table 1. For each material, determine whether it’s direct or indirect (see more explanations in the box on the next page). For the direct materials, determine the quantity per unit (e.g., kilograms required for each unit), cost per quantity (price per kg), total euros per unit of product for each material. For the indirect material costs, indicate the total cost per month (as the indirect costs cannot be identified with individual units of the product, they need to be estimated for a period). Transfer the indirect manufacturing material costs to the manufacturing overhead chart (Table 4), and the selling, general & administrative materials to Table 5.
- Enter the labor from the flow chart in Table 2. For each type of labor, determine whether it’s direct or indirect. For direct labor, determine the hours spent on producing the product, and a wage rate. Then total the direct labor cost per unit of product. For the indirect labor, indicate the cost per month. Transfer the indirect manufacturing labor costs to the manufacturing overhead chart (Table 4), and the selling, general & administrative labor to Table 5.
- For each long-lived asset (property, plant and equipment) you own (that you do not rent) calculate the annual depreciation in Table 3 using the simple straight-line depreciation method. Determine whether the depreciation is a manufacturing overhead cost or a selling, general, and administrative cost. Transfer the costs on the appropriate table (4 or 5).
- For the other costs, decide whether it’s a manufacturing overhead or a selling, general, and administrative cost. Enter the costs on the appropriate table (4 or 5).
How to identify direct and indirect costs
Direct costs are costs that can be easily identified with each unit of the product. The typical examples are direct material and direct labour costs. Direct materials are raw materials, ingredients, or components that become part of the final product. From the product design plans, the production manager knows exactly how much of each material is used to produce the product, e.g. how much flour is needed to produce a given type of bread. Direct labour refers to the production workers who make or assemble individual units of the product, e.g. a baker who kneads and moulds a loaf of bread.
Indirect costs (also called overhead) are costs that are shared by several units or products, so that the cost cannot be easily identified with individual units or products, e.g. the depreciation of a mixing machine that mixes the dough for the bread, the salary of a supervisor who oversees the production workers, packaging or cleaning materials, the rent paid for the factory building. Indirect costs can occur in the manufacturing plant (manufacturing overhead) or in the company’s other support activities (selling, general & administrative costs).
Table 1: Materials – Direct vs. Indirect
Delete the examples and enter your own data!
Material Type | Direct Material | Indirect MANUFACTURING Material | SELLING, G&A Material | ||
Quantity per unit of product | x Cost per unit of input | = Total cost per unit | € per month | € per month | |
Ex. flour | 20 kg per batch of 20 loaves of bread | € 0.5 per kg | € 10 per batch of bread | ||
Ex. cartons | € 150 | ||||
Ex. office material | € 200 | ||||
TOTAL |
Table 2: Labor – Direct vs. Indirect
Delete the examples and enter your own data!
Labour Type | Direct Labour | Indirect Labour | |||
Hours per unit of product | X Rate per hour | = Total cost per unit | MANUFACTURING | SELLING, GENERAL & ADMIN | |
Cooking workers who mould the bread | 2 h per batch of 20 loaves | € 14 | € 28 per batch | ||
Cleaning personnel | € 300 | ||||
General Manager | € 4,400 | ||||
TOTAL |
Table 3: Long-Lived Assets Depreciation Schedule
Delete the examples and enter your own data!
Asset | Acquisition cost | / Lifetime | = Annual depreciation | MANUFACTURING | SELLING, GENERAL & ADMIN |
Oven | € 27,000 | 9 years | € 3,000 | € 3,000 | |
Computer | € 1,800 | 3 years | € 600 | € 600 | |
TOTAL |
Table 4: Manufacturing Overhead Costs
Show in the table below all the manufacturing overhead costs (indirect materials, indirect labor, other indirect manufacturing costs).
Delete the examples and enter your own data!
Cost item | FIXED cost per month | VARIABLE cost per unit | Total ANNUAL amount* in € |
Cartons | € 150 | € 1,800 | |
Cleaning personnel | 300 | 3,600 | |
Plan insurance | 400 | € 4,800 | |
TOTAL |
*) Fixed cost X 12 = Annual Fixed cost
Variable cost per unit X Number of units per year = Annual Variable cost
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