Traditional costing system vs activity-based costing system / Musliha Musman and Dr Salwa Muda

The business environment has changed dramatically over the last two decades as the result of intense global competition. Businesses that had previously used the traditional costing system were forced to switch to the activity-based costing (ABC) system, a more recent cost system. ABC and traditional...

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Main Authors: Musman, Musliha, Muda, Salwa
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universiti Teknologi MARA, Negeri Sembilan 2024
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Online Access:https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/105725/1/105725.pdf
https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/105725/
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spelling my.uitm.ir.1057252024-11-30T23:06:03Z https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/105725/ Traditional costing system vs activity-based costing system / Musliha Musman and Dr Salwa Muda Musman, Musliha Muda, Salwa L Education (General) The business environment has changed dramatically over the last two decades as the result of intense global competition. Businesses that had previously used the traditional costing system were forced to switch to the activity-based costing (ABC) system, a more recent cost system. ABC and traditional costing are two competing approaches for allocating overhead costs to products and services. The ABC technique was developed in the 1980s for assisting firms to improve their cost management and competitive positioning, and it has since become extensively used due to its broad industry applicability (Quesado et.al., 2021; Mahesha, 2022). Both approaches estimate overhead costs related to production and then assign these costs to products based on a cost-driver rate. The traditional costing system uses a single cost driver, whereas the ABC system uses numerous cost drivers, making it more complex than the traditional approach (Quesado, 2021). The traditional allocation system assigns manufacturing overhead based on a single cost driver, such as direct labour hours, direct labour cost, or machine hours, and is optimal when there is a relationship between the activity base and overhead. There is only one overhead cost pool and a single measure of activity, such as direct labour hours, which makes the traditional method simple and less costly to maintain (Mahesha, 2022). The predetermined overhead rate is based on estimated costs at the budgeted level of activity. Therefore, the overhead rate is consistent across products, but overhead may be over or under applied. Universiti Teknologi MARA, Negeri Sembilan 2024 Article PeerReviewed text en https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/105725/1/105725.pdf Traditional costing system vs activity-based costing system / Musliha Musman and Dr Salwa Muda. (2024) Buletin FPN S3 <https://ir.uitm.edu.my/view/publication/Buletin_FPN_S3/>, 7. ISSN 2805-4539
institution Universiti Teknologi Mara
building Tun Abdul Razak Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Teknologi Mara
content_source UiTM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://ir.uitm.edu.my/
language English
topic L Education (General)
spellingShingle L Education (General)
Musman, Musliha
Muda, Salwa
Traditional costing system vs activity-based costing system / Musliha Musman and Dr Salwa Muda
description The business environment has changed dramatically over the last two decades as the result of intense global competition. Businesses that had previously used the traditional costing system were forced to switch to the activity-based costing (ABC) system, a more recent cost system. ABC and traditional costing are two competing approaches for allocating overhead costs to products and services. The ABC technique was developed in the 1980s for assisting firms to improve their cost management and competitive positioning, and it has since become extensively used due to its broad industry applicability (Quesado et.al., 2021; Mahesha, 2022). Both approaches estimate overhead costs related to production and then assign these costs to products based on a cost-driver rate. The traditional costing system uses a single cost driver, whereas the ABC system uses numerous cost drivers, making it more complex than the traditional approach (Quesado, 2021). The traditional allocation system assigns manufacturing overhead based on a single cost driver, such as direct labour hours, direct labour cost, or machine hours, and is optimal when there is a relationship between the activity base and overhead. There is only one overhead cost pool and a single measure of activity, such as direct labour hours, which makes the traditional method simple and less costly to maintain (Mahesha, 2022). The predetermined overhead rate is based on estimated costs at the budgeted level of activity. Therefore, the overhead rate is consistent across products, but overhead may be over or under applied.
format Article
author Musman, Musliha
Muda, Salwa
author_facet Musman, Musliha
Muda, Salwa
author_sort Musman, Musliha
title Traditional costing system vs activity-based costing system / Musliha Musman and Dr Salwa Muda
title_short Traditional costing system vs activity-based costing system / Musliha Musman and Dr Salwa Muda
title_full Traditional costing system vs activity-based costing system / Musliha Musman and Dr Salwa Muda
title_fullStr Traditional costing system vs activity-based costing system / Musliha Musman and Dr Salwa Muda
title_full_unstemmed Traditional costing system vs activity-based costing system / Musliha Musman and Dr Salwa Muda
title_sort traditional costing system vs activity-based costing system / musliha musman and dr salwa muda
publisher Universiti Teknologi MARA, Negeri Sembilan
publishDate 2024
url https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/105725/1/105725.pdf
https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/105725/
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score 13.222552