Реферат: The Role Of The Management Accountant Is
Название: The Role Of The Management Accountant Is Раздел: Топики по английскому языку Тип: реферат |
Large And Not Exhaustive Essay, Research Paper The Role of the Management Accountant is Constantly ChangingThe role of the management accountant is large and not exhaustive.? Defining the role of the management account Depends on many factors including: the goal of the organisation, the size of the organisation and the structure of the organisation.? Popular consensus however highlights a number of areas shared by most management accountants.? Most would agree that the management accountants job is concerned with supplying senior management with information.? This information is not limited to financial information it relates to any economic information that will allow senior management to make more informed decisions.Unlike financial accounting, management accounts must look to the future in many cases they need to supply information that will help people in the organisation see the situation in a better light.? A manager may ask a management accountant?Will eliminating this product A increase profit on product B?? ?Can we sell this product at a low price and still make profit?? ?Should we create redundancies or cut down on production?A management account does not often give direct answers but s/he can often make or break decisions.Management accountants have a job to speculate on scenarios and create ideas for people who need the information.? Therefore they need to be in touch with any factor that can determine an outcome.? These factors are both internal and external.? Internally the accountant needs to know about production costs, process, staffing indirect expenses and as the internal operations match the business environment there are constant changes which need to be in the management accountants domain.? Here are a number of examples of factors within the organisation that can change.· New machinery may increase or decrease costs within the firm.? The management account needs to know how much the machine cost and how will it effect costs on the production line and by how much. · New technology is introduced on a monthly basis in some companies the management accountant needs to know how and if this is saving money. · Economies of scale, downsizing, product renovation and up-scaling are terms thrown about by senior management.? With the way people operate and conduct business changing rapidly management accountants need to be able to adapt to new situations.External factors can have an even larger effect on the way things are conducted in the business.· Globalisation means that there are thousands of suppliers, distributors and competitors for the same products.? The management accountant needs to keep an eye out for how these factors effect the market. · Tax is an issue that needs to be addressed by the management account sooner than the financial account and many of the factors s/he deals with are in the future not present or past. · Technology reflects upon competition, suppliers and distributors as well as the company itself.? Accountants need to be aware of factors which may help them cut costs.Product lifecycles and nowadays becoming shorter.? That is the distance of time between product launch and product termination.? Intensive global competition has made customers become sophisticated in their tastes and loyalty and has made the consumer demand more from the products they buy.? There are various stages in the product life cycle? Ü Introduction Ü Growth Ü Maturity Ü ?DeclineAs these stages shorten in an already vague environment the management accountant needs to be able to adapt to the situation readily and prepare for the next step.By establishing global networks for acquiring raw materials and distributing goods overseas, competitors are now able to access domestic markets throughout the world.? For companies to be successful nowadays they need to not only compete with domestic competition but also against the best companies in the world.? This has been added by deregulation in many industries, privatisation and the opening up of markets such as the EU and China joining the WTO.? New markets and globalisation create both opportunities and threats part of the management accounts job will be to analyse situations as they come and help the company what is the best approach for them in regard to globalisation.Management techniques have developed into a complicated approach to running a business.? Many firms favour an approach to running a business placing customer satisfaction a top priority by adopting ?Total Quality Management? (TQM) management employ strategies aimed at cutting costs and boosting production such as v Just in time production management ? Adopting techniques whereby the delivery of materials immediately precedes their use.? Done by creating relationships with suppliers and eliminating any mistakes in batch delivery v Employee empowerment ? Giving a more decision making power to whoever is closest to that process.? Involves the creation of teams and formulating bonus schemes for lower end employees v Total value chain analysis ? A step by step process which aims to eliminate waste or mistakes in each section of the process that goes from conception of idea to customer receiving the product. v Efficiency in ?????????? *Quality *Time *InnovationThis creates an opportunity for management accounts to adjust their analysis in consideration of these factors and help senior management make non-financial decisions with an aim towards long term market share.? Accountants can help this process by suggesting in detail how these options will influence operations in both financial and non-financial terms.? These new strategies are new to many company especially SMEs therefore anticipation and adaptation are important for all management accountants.Manufacturing has seen new trends in recent times.? Researchers have noticed that each production system cannot be lumped into a simple process but that each establishment needs to adopt an approach by them which is best helps save time and money.? As mentioned earlier product life cycles are getting shorter this means that firms can no longer dedicated huge sums of money in developing a single flow line production facility for one product.? Instead, companies are investing in flexible production facilitates that will be used not only on existing product designs but also on future redesigns of these products.? The management accountant can therefore reduce costs based on multiple changeover times and equipment set-ups.Below are several trends in manufacturing systems that will require management accounts to be adaptive in their analysis and use changing approaches to activity based costing, the allocation of overheads and process costing.Ü Group technology?????????????????????????? This involves an arrangement of machines that ?????????????????????????????????????????????????? can adapt to easily to the requirements of ????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????? products which have similar requirements in the ???????????????????????????????????????????????? manufacturing process. Ü Repetitive manufacturing ??????????????? A type of production system that groups ?????????????????????????????????????????????????????????? ????? together facilities required to produce similar ???????????????????????????????????????????????????? components, it is possible to gain some benefits ???????????????????????????????????????????????????????? associated with flow productions systems ???????????????????????????????? ????????????????????????????? through this as can reduce some of the ????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????? associated cost coupled with non flow systems. Ü Just in time scheduling ??????????????????? This helps eliminate non-value added activities ????????????????????????????????????????????????? and gives more space to the organisation and ??????????????????????????????????????????????????? developing a reliable delivery service.Other manufacturing technologies include the use of computer such as ?Computer-aided design? and ?Computer-aided manufacturing? and robots.? This helps eliminate employee costs and often reduces errors.? The management accountant needs to be aware of the fact that new technologies used to replace others often effect other areas and costs indirectly such as maintenance quality control.Attributing direct costs and absorbing overhead costs to the product/service through an ABC approach will result in a better understanding of the true cost of the final outputThe theory of activity based costing is simple in its design.? The principle is that of attributing non direct expenses to the product which is most benefited by that expense.? Such maintenance.Imagine a single factory that produces 2 products A and B.? The machinery used to construct product A has been giving trouble over the last few months and has required 40 hours of maintenance costing £1200 from the beginning of the year.? The machinery used to construct product B is relatively new and has had no problems whatsoever.? In this situation the accountant will attribute the £1200 cost to product A as it was the sole beneficiary of the maintenance whereas no money will be attributed to product B as it did not benefit from any of the maintenance.Traditional cost systems did not use this philosophy a pre-ABC approach would have determined that indirect expenses such as maintenance must be applied to what the plant produces.? The traditional system would have suggested that maintenance costs for the factory amounted to £1200 so this must be taken into consideration when choosing a price for the products in order to cover costs.Activity ?based costing stresses the requirement to obtain a better understanding of the manner of overhead costs, and consequently establishes what causes overhead costs and how they relate to products.? ABC recognises that in the long run most costs are not fixed, and it endeavours to understand the things that cause overhead costs to change over time.ABC systems infer that cash outflows are incurred to acquire a supply of resources such as raw materials and staff that are then employed by activities. It is assumed that activities procure costs and also that products create demands for activities.? A connection is made between activities and products by assigning costs of activities to products based on an individual product?s consumption for each activity.? ABC systems perceive that businesses must understand the components that drive each major activity, the cost of activities and how activities correlate to products. There are several stages in the system1. Determine which activities are most important in the organisationE.g.: Assembly, Labour, Administration?2. Develop a cost centre for each one of the activitiesSuch as the total cost of all maintenance becoming one cost centre for all maintenance related costs.3. Find out what drives the costs for each of the major activitiesCost drivers are the factors that are notable determinants of the cost of activities.? For example if electricity usage was determined by the length of time a machine was running then machine running time would represent the cost driver for electricity4. Assign costs to products according to which cost the product takes advantage of and by how muchThis stage ascertains the cost of the activities to products suiting the products? demand for these activities during the production process.? A product?s demand for the activities is measured by the number of transactions it produces for the cost driver. Traditional product costing systems report a picture of product costs which under analysis is deemed as erroneous. This occurs when an organisation produces a range of products that is large or of low-volume especially when there are many different types of product being produced in the same factory.? ABC a need to obtain a better understanding of the behaviour of overhead costs, and thus ascertains what causes overheads and how they relate to products.? An activity based costing suggests that traditional costing systems can over-cost high volume products and under-cost low volume products when the costs of some product-related activities are unrelated to volume.? This occurs when organisations allocate overheads to production overheads. ?With ABC they are allocated to each major activity and not departments which displaying a more realistic exposition of the real cost of the product.Below is a diagram of how of a traditional system differs to an ABC system Production depts.???????????????????? Dept overhead allocation rates Activity cost pools????????????????? Activity cost driver rates The diagram above illustrates how an ABC system would be constructed (Innes and Mitchell (1990).)ABC systems are examples of resource consumption not spending.? They aspire to measure the absolute organisational resources required to produce a product.? Many people suggest that ABC systems are designed to identify priorities for managerial attention, and not to provide decision-relevant costs.ABC has also attracted a substantial amount of application because it provides not only a foundation for calculating more legitimate product costs but also an instrument for managing overhead costs.? By accumulating and narrating on the significant activities in which a business engages, it is possible to understand and manage costs more effectively.? It is therefore an area of cost management, rather than product costing. It is arguably in this area that activity based costing systems may have their greatest potential.Management Accounting AssessmentYear 3 semester 5TA 102/3 NDBS Management Lee Condell 98710206 |