Basics of Cost Accounting: Product Costing
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Basics of Cost Accounting: Product Costing
This course is part of Cost Accounting Specialization
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What you'll learn
You will learn how to make your company's cost structure transparent and how to record and calculate costs.
You will learn methods of product costing, i.e., how companies calculate costs of their products and services.
You will learn to decide which product costing system is most suitable for your companyβs production program and production type.
You will learn how to determine overhead rates for the allocation of overhead costs to products.
Details to know
34 assignments
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There are 4 modules in this course
The core of the first course is to learn how companies record total costs and calculate unit costs for their individual products or services. For example, how can a car manufacturer figure out the costs of an individual car series? During the first weeks, participants learn what costs are and how to distinguish them from expenses or cash flows. Participants will understand how companies record total costs and distinguish important cost types such as material costs, personnel costs, or depreciation. At the core of their cost-accounting system, companies allocate overhead costs to individual products. We show participants how to allocate the costs incurred to the company's products and introduce them to the most important methods and challenges of product costing.
Welcome to Cost Accounting! In this module, we will introduce you to the basic concepts of cost accounting. You will learn what cost accounting is and how cost accounting relates to corporate accounting. Thereafter, you will get familiar with some basic cost terms that are essential for cost accountants. Finally, we will introduce you to a framework that distinguishes three sub-systems of cost accounting. This framework will guide us through the following modules.
What's included
9 videos6 readings3 assignments1 discussion prompt1 plugin
9 videosβ’Total 39 minutes
- Introduction to the Technical University of Munich β’3 minutes
- Introductionβ’2 minutes
- Cost accounting and corporate managementβ’3 minutes
- Cost accounting, management accounting, and financial accountingβ’6 minutes
- Definition of costsβ’6 minutes
- Cost terms and their meaning: Total and unit costs, direct and indirect costs, fixed and variable costsβ’6 minutes
- Cost terms and their meaning: Inventoriable and period costs, opportunity and sunk costsβ’4 minutes
- Three sub-systems of cost accountingβ’4 minutes
- Absorption costing vs variable costingβ’5 minutes
6 readingsβ’Total 39 minutes
- Course Overviewβ’2 minutes
- Introduce yourself!β’10 minutes
- Lecture slides for this courseβ’2 minutes
- Harmonization of management and financial accountingβ’5 minutes
- Average unit costs: an example from the automotive industry in the COVID crisisβ’10 minutes
- Practical example: Sunk costs when Robert Bosch GmbH exited the solar sectorβ’10 minutes
3 assignmentsβ’Total 13 minutes
- Cost accounting as a part of corporate accountingβ’4 minutes
- Definition of costsβ’5 minutes
- Basic concepts of cost accountingβ’4 minutes
1 discussion promptβ’Total 10 minutes
- How can cost accounting support the management?β’10 minutes
1 pluginβ’Total 10 minutes
- Direct, indirect, variable, and fixed costsβ’10 minutes
In this module, we will introduce you to cost-type accounting - the first of the three cost accounting sub-systems. Cost-type accounting helps companies to make their cost structure transparent. It gives companies an overview of which costs have been incurred. We will take a closer look at three important cost items namely material costs, personnel costs, and machine costs. You will learn how companies record and calculate them.
What's included
8 videos5 readings7 assignments
8 videosβ’Total 53 minutes
- Tasks of cost-type accounting, linkage to financial accounting, and important cost typesβ’4 minutes
- Introduction to material costsβ’4 minutes
- Recording material consumptionβ’6 minutes
- Valuing material consumptionβ’12 minutes
- Personnel costsβ’5 minutes
- Types of machine costsβ’4 minutes
- Depreciationβ’9 minutes
- Interest costsβ’9 minutes
5 readingsβ’Total 40 minutes
- Cost types in business practiceβ’5 minutes
- Comparing the methods for recording material consumptionβ’5 minutes
- Excursus: What crypto taxpayers need to know about FIFO, LIFO, HIFO & specific IDβ’10 minutes
- Deep dive: Personnel costsβ’10 minutes
- Deep dive: Imputed interest costs at BASFβ’10 minutes
7 assignmentsβ’Total 45 minutes
- Material costs: Valuing material consumptionβ’10 minutes
- Machine costs: Depreciationβ’10 minutes
- Interest costs β’10 minutes
- Introduction to cost-type accounting β’3 minutes
- Material costsβ’4 minutes
- Depreciationβ’4 minutes
- Machine costsβ’4 minutes
In this module, we will dive into cost-center accounting. Cost-center accounting creates transparency about where, i.e. in which cost center, the overhead costs of a company have been incurred. It connects cost-type accounting with product costing by performing three allocation steps: First, overhead costs from cost-type accounting are assigned to cost centers. However, ultimately cost accountants want to assign the costs to cost objects. Because this is easier for costs of production-related cost centers ("direct cost centers") than for costs of "indirect cost centers" such as the IT or the canteen, companies allocate overhead costs from indirect to direct cost centers first. Finally, they determine overhead rates for the allocation of overhead costs from direct cost centers to cost objects. In this module, we will introduce you to each of these steps.
What's included
10 videos2 readings11 assignments
10 videosβ’Total 57 minutes
- Tasks of cost-center accounting and structure of cost centersβ’7 minutes
- The three steps of cost-center accountingβ’5 minutes
- Primary cost allocation β’7 minutes
- Overview of the methods for the allocation of service-department costsβ’3 minutes
- Reciprocal method based on equationsβ’11 minutes
- Reciprocal method based on iterationsβ’7 minutes
- Method of credits and debitsβ’3 minutes
- Step-ladder methodβ’7 minutes
- Direct methodβ’3 minutes
- Determining overhead ratesβ’5 minutes
2 readingsβ’Total 10 minutes
- Practical example: Cost-center plan of the Federation of German Industryβ’5 minutes
- Methods for the allocation of service-department costs: Practices in Germany and Austriaβ’5 minutes
11 assignmentsβ’Total 96 minutes
- Allocation of service department costs: Reciprocal method based on equations, direct method, method of credits and debitsβ’20 minutes
- Allocation of service department costs: Step ladder method, reciprocal method based on iterationsβ’15 minutes
- Introduction to cost-center accountingβ’8 minutes
- Assignment of overhead costs to cost centersβ’4 minutes
- Reciprocal method based on equationsβ’9 minutes
- Reciprocal method based on iterationsβ’6 minutes
- Method of credits and debitsβ’6 minutes
- Step-ladder methodβ’12 minutes
- Direct methodβ’6 minutes
- Methods for the allocation of service-department costsβ’4 minutes
- Determining overhead rates for costingβ’6 minutes
In this module, we introduce you to product and service costing. Product and service costing provides companies with information about the costs of individual products or services. It is the final of the three cost accounting sub-systems. We will sometimes just refer to product and service costing as "product costing", but of course some companies offer physical products while others offer services. We explain how companies design product costing systems and we make you familiar with important methods of product costing. We also discuss how well the costing methods are suited for different production processes and program types. To this end, we will distinguish "job shop production" and "mass and batch production".
What's included
12 videos3 readings13 assignments1 discussion prompt3 plugins
12 videosβ’Total 68 minutes
- Tasks of product and service costingβ’6 minutes
- Classification of cost objectsβ’3 minutes
- The relationship between program type, product characteristics, and costing methodβ’5 minutes
- The general approach to job costingβ’9 minutes
- Job costing with multiple overhead ratesβ’9 minutes
- Machine-hour costingβ’9 minutes
- Actual costing, interim costing, and normal costingβ’6 minutes
- Book keeping for job shop productionβ’2 minutes
- Single-stage process costingβ’2 minutes
- Multi-stage process costingβ’9 minutes
- Equivalence number methodβ’5 minutes
- Cost allocation for joint products and byproductsβ’4 minutes
3 readingsβ’Total 30 minutes
- Practical example: Cost cutting in the energy industryβ’10 minutes
- What do I learn in the remaining two courses of the Specialization?β’10 minutes
- Class Central Course Review β’10 minutes
13 assignmentsβ’Total 106 minutes
- Job costing with multiple overhead ratesβ’12 minutes
- Equivalence number methodβ’10 minutes
- Cost allocation for joint products and by-productsβ’20 minutes
- Tasks and design of product and service costingβ’8 minutes
- Allocating overhead costs with single ratesβ’10 minutes
- Schematic structure of an overhead calculationβ’8 minutes
- Allocating overhead costs with multiple ratesβ’6 minutes
- Machine-hour costingβ’4 minutes
- Actual costing, interim costing, and normal costingβ’6 minutes
- Product costing for job shop productionβ’8 minutes
- Single-stage process costingβ’4 minutes
- Multi-stage process costingβ’5 minutes
- Product and service costing for mass and variant productionβ’5 minutes
1 discussion promptβ’Total 10 minutes
- Reduced material costs in car manufacturingβ’10 minutes
3 pluginsβ’Total 45 minutes
- Which products are produced by which program type?β’15 minutes
- Job costing with multiple overhead rates β’15 minutes
- Summary exercise: Overview of product and service costingβ’15 minutes
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Reviewed on Mar 24, 2024
Excellent Course with specific detailed information, really thank you
Reviewed on Dec 22, 2024
Concise and precise. Need to improve on the detailing part (in-depth).
Reviewed on Apr 15, 2025
Itβs really intellectual course and widely explained every topics required to understand basics of Costing.
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