Description
Financial Accounting, Management Accounting, and Cost Accounting
As many of you have already seen in your financial accounting class, accounting systems take economic events and transactions, such as sales and materials purchases, and process the data into information helpful to man-agers, sales representatives, production supervisors, and others. Processing any economic transaction means collecting, categorizing, summarizing, and analyzing. For example, costs are collected by category, such as materials, labor, and shipping. These costs are then summarized to determine total costs by month, quarter, or year. The results are analyzed to evaluate, say, how costs have changed relative to revenues from one period to the next. Accounting systems provide the information found in the income statement, the balance sheet, the statement of cash flow, and in performance reports, such as the cost of serving customers or running an advertising campaign. Managers use accounting information to administer the activities, businesses, or functional areas they oversee and to coordinate those activities, businesses, or functions within the framework of the organization. Understanding this information is essential for managers to do their jobs.
Individual managers often require the information in an accounting system to be presented or reported differently. Consider, for example, sales order information. A sales manager may be interested in the total dollar amount of sales to determine the commis-sions to be paid. A distribution manager may be interested in the sales order quantities by geographic region and by customer-requested delivery dates to ensure timely deliver-ies. A manufacturing manager may be interested in the quantities of various products and their desired delivery dates, so that he or she can develop an effective production schedule. To simultaneously serve the needs of all three managers, companies create a database—sometimes called a data warehouse or infobarn—consisting of small, detailed bits of information that can be used for multiple purposes. For instance, the sales order database will contain detailed information about product, quantity ordered, selling price, and delivery details (place and date) for each sales order. The database stores infor-mation in a way that allows different managers to access the information they need. Many companies are building their own Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) systems, single databases that collect data and feed it into applications that support the company’s business activities, such as purchasing, production, distribution, and sales.
Financial accounting and management accounting have different goals. As many of you know, financial accounting focuses on reporting to external parties such as investors, government agencies, banks, and suppliers. It measures and records business transactions and provides financial statements that are based on generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP). The most important way that financial accounting information affects managers’ decisions and actions is through compensation, which is often, in part, based on numbers in financial statements.
Management accounting measures, analyzes, and reports financial and nonfinancial information that helps managers make decisions to fulfill the goals of an organization. Managers use management accounting information to develop, communicate, and imple-ment strategy. They also use management accounting information to coordinate product design, production, and marketing decisions and to evaluate performance. Management accounting information and reports do not have to follow set principles or rules. The key questions are always (1) how will this information help managers do their jobs better, and (2) do the benefits of producing this information exceed the costs?
Exhibit 1-1 summarizes the major differences between management accounting and financial accounting. Note, however, that reports such as balance sheets, income state-ments, and statements of cash flows are common to both management accounting and financial accounting.
Cost accounting provides information for management accounting and financial account-ing. Cost accounting measures, analyzes, and reports financial and nonfinancial information relating to the costs of acquiring or using resources in an organization. For example, calculat-ing the cost of a product is a cost accounting function that answers financial accounting’s inventory-valuation needs and management accounting’s decision-making needs (such as deciding how to price products and choosing which products to promote). Modern cost accounting takes the perspective that collecting cost information is a function of the manage-ment decisions being made. Thus, the distinction between management accounting and cost accounting is not so clear-cut, and we often use these terms interchangeably in the book.
We frequently hear business people use the term cost management. Unfortunately, that term has no uniform definition. We use cost management to describe the approaches and activities of managers to use resources to increase value to customers and to achieve organizational goals. Cost management decisions include decisions such as whether to enter new markets, implement new organizational processes, and change product designs. Information from accounting systems helps managers to manage costs, but the informa-tion and the accounting systems themselves are not cost management.
Cost management has a broad focus and is not only about reduction in costs. Cost management includes decisions to incur additional costs, for example to improve