Академический Документы
Профессиональный Документы
Культура Документы
Responsibility Accounting collects and reports planned and actual accounting information about the inputs and outputs of responsibility centers.It is based on information pertaining to inputs and outputs. The resources utilized in an organization are physical in nature like quantities of materials consumed, hours of labour, etc., are called inputs. They are converted into a common denominator and expressed in monetary terms called costs, for the purpose of managerial control. In a similar way, outputs are based on cost and revenue data. Responsibility Accounting must be designed to suit the existing structure of the organization. Responsibility should be coupled with authority. An organization structure with clear assignment of authorities and responsibilities should exist for the successful functioning of the responsibility accounting system. The performance of each manager is evaluated in terms of such factors.
2 RESPONSIBILITY CENTRES The main focus of responsibility accounting lies on the responsibility centres. A responsibility centre is a sub unit of an organization under the control of a manager who is held responsible for the activities of that centre. The responsibility centres are classified as follows: 1) Cost Centres, 2) Profit Centres and 3) Investment centres. 1) Cost Centres When the manager is held accountable only for costs incurred in a responsibility centre, it is called a cost centre. It is the inputs and not outputs that are measured in terms of money. In a cost centre records only costs incurred by the centre/unit/division, but the revenues earned (output) are excluded form its purview. It means that a cost centre is a segment whose financial performance is measured in terms of cost without taking into consideration its attainments in terms of output. The costs are the planning and control data in cost canters. The performance of the managers is evaluated by comparing the costs incurred with the budgeted costs. The management focuses on the cost variances for ensuring proper control. A cost centre does not serve the purpose of measuring the performance of the responsibility centre, since it ignores the output (revenues) measured in terms of money. For example, common feature of production department is that there are usually multiple product units. There must be some common basis to aggregate the dissimilar products to arrive at the overall output of the responsibility centre. If this is not done, the efficiency and effectiveness of the responsibility centre cannot be measure. 2) Profit Centres When the manager is held responsible for both Costs (inputs) and Revenues (output) it is called a profit centre. In a profit centre, both inputs and outputs are measured in terms of
3 money. The difference between revenues and costs represents profit. The term revenue is used in a different sense altogether. According to generally accepted principles of accounting, revenues are recognized only when sales are made to external customers. For evaluating the performance of a profit centre, the revenue represents a monetary measure of output arising from a profit centre during a given period, irrespective of whether the revenue is realized or not. The relevant profit to facilitate the evaluation of performance of a profit centre is the pre tax profit. The profit of all the departments so calculated will not necessarily be equivalent to the profit of the entire organization. The variance will arise because costs which are not attributable to any single department are excluded from the computation of the departments profits and the same are adjusted while determining the profits of the whole organization. Profit provides more effective appraisal of the managers performance. The manager of the profit centre is highly motivated in his decision-making relating to inputs and outputs so that profits can be maximized. The profit centre approach cannot be uniformly applied to all responsibility centres. The following are the criteria to be considered for making a responsibility centre into a profit centre. A profit centre must maintain additional record keeping to measure inputs and outputs in monetary terms. When a responsibility centre renders only services to other departments, e.g., internal audit, it cannot be made a profit centre. A profit centre will gain more meaning and significance only when the divisional managers of responsibility centres have empowered adequately in their decision making relating to quality and quantity of outputs and also their relation to costs. If the output of a division is fairly homogeneous (e.g., cement), a profit centre will not prove to be more beneficial than a cost centre. Due to intense competition prevailing among different profit centres, there will be continuous friction among the centres arresting the growth and expansion of the whole organization. A profit centre will generate too much of interest in the short-run profit to the detriment of long-term results.
4 3) Investment Centres When the manager is held responsible for costs and revenues as well as for the investment in assets, it is called an Investment Centre. In an investment centre, the performance is measured not by profits alone, but is related to investments effected. The manager of an investment centre is always interested to earn a satisfactory return. The return on investment is usually referred to as ROI, serves as a criterion for the performance evaluation of the manager of an investment centre. Investment centres may be considered as separate entities where the manager are entrusted with the overall responsibility of inputs, outputs and investment.
5 TRANSFER PRICING When profit centres are to be used, transfer prices become necessary in order to determine the separate performances of both the buying profit centres. Generally, the measurement of profit in a profit centre is further complicated by the problem of transfer prices. The transfer price represents the value of goods/services furnished by a profit centre to other responsibility centres within an organization. When internal exchanges of goods and services take place among the different divisions of an organization, they have to be expressed in monetary terms which are otherwise called the transfer price. Thus, transfer pricing is the process of determining the price at which goods are transferred from one profit centre to another profit centre within the same company. If transfer prices are set too high, the selling centre will be favored whereas if set too low the buying centre exercise which does not effect the overall profitability of the firm. However, in certain circumstances, transfer pricing may have an indirect effect on overall company profitability by influencing the decisions made at divisional level. The fixation of appropriate transfer price is another problem faced by the profit centres. The transfer price forms revenue for the selling division and an element of cost of the buying division. Since the transfer price has a bearing on the revenues, costs and profits or responsibility canters, the need for determination of transfer prices becomes all the more important. But the transfer price determination involveschoosing one among the various alternatives available for the purpose.
These are three objectives that should be considered for setting-out a transfer price. (a) Autonomy of the Division. The prices should seek to maintain the maximum divisional autonomy so that the benefits, of decentralization (motivation, better decision making, initiative etc.) are maintained. The profits of one division should not be dependent on the actions of other divisions,
6 (b) Goal congruence: The prices should be set so that the divisional managements desire to maximize divisional earrings is consistent with the objectives of the company as a whole. The transfer prices should not encourage suboptimal decision-making. (c) Performance appraisal: The prices should enable reliable assessments to be made of divisional performance. There are two board approaches to the determination of the transfer price and they are: (1) cost-based and (2) market based. Based on the broad classification, there are five different types of transfer prices they are (1) cost (2) cost plus a normal mark-up; (3) incremental cost; (4) market price and (5) negotiated price..
8 negotiations would result in decisions which were in the interests of the firm as a whole and which were acceptable to the parties concerned.
Relevant points
(1) Transfer pricing is the pricing of internal transfers between profit centres. (2) Ideally the transfer prices should, promote goal congruence, enable effective performance appraisal and maintain divisional autonomy. (3) Economy theory suggests that the optimum transfer price would be the marginal cost equal for buying divisions marginal revenue product. Transfer prices should always be base on the marginal costs of the supplying division plus the opportunity costs to the organization as a whole. (4) Because of information deficiencies, transfers pricing in practice does not always follow theoretical guidelines. Typically prices are market based, cost based or negotiated. (5) Where an appropriate market price exists then this is an ideal transfer price. However, there may be no market for the intermediate product, the market may be imperfect, or the price considered unrepresentative. (6) Where cost based systems are used then it is preferable to use standard costs to avoid transferring inefficiencies. (7) Full cost transfer pricing for full cost plus a mark up) suffers from a number of limitations,; it may cause suboptimal decision-making, the price is only valid at one output level, it makes genuine performance appraisal difficult. (8) Providing that variable cost equates with economic marginal cost then transfers at variable cost will avoid gross sub optimality but performance appraisal becomes meaningless.
10 (9) Negotiated transfer prices will only be appropriate if there is equal bargaining power and if negotiations are not protracted.
11 CONCLUSION
Transfer price policies represent the selection of suitable methods relating to the computation of transfer prices under various circumstances. More precisely, transfer pricing should be closely related to management performance assessment and decision optimization. But the problem of choosing an appropriate transfer pricing for the two functions of management-performance measurement and decision optimization does not hold any simple solution. There is no single measure of transfer price that can be adopted under all circumstances.
12
Bibliography
http://www.basiccollegeaccounting.com/what-is-responsibility-accounting/ http://www.accountancy.com.pk/articles_students.asp?id=55 http://www.accountingweb.co.uk/cgi http://www.bin/item.cgi?id=23118&d=789&h=788&f=785 http://www.atkinson.yorku.ca/~garys/abky17/tsld003.htm http://www.pondiuni.org/DDE/ManagementAccounting.pdf