Managerial Accounting Concepts
1.1 Introduction
🧭 Overview
🧠 One-sentence thesis
Managerial accounting provides customized, timely financial information to internal users—managers and employees—to support planning, decision making, and performance evaluation, unlike financial accounting which serves external parties with standardized historical reports.
📌 Key points (3–5)
- Core distinction: Financial accounting serves external groups with standardized historical reports (GAAP-compliant); managerial accounting serves internal users with customized, flexible reports that include past data, current estimates, and future projections.
- Manager responsibilities: Planning (setting goals and strategies), leading (directing daily operations), and controlling (comparing expected vs. actual results and taking corrective action).
- Four broad categories of managerial accounting: accumulating costs, analyzing costs, evaluating performance, and comparing alternatives.
- Common confusion: Not all costs are equal—some are unavoidable, others controllable; managerial accounting separates them so managers can focus on what they can influence.
- Why it matters: Limited resources force managers to choose among alternatives; managerial accounting provides the financial information needed to optimize collective outcomes and profitability.
📊 Two branches of accounting
📊 Financial accounting
Financial accounting: producing periodic reports (financial statements) to inform external groups—investors, boards of directors, creditors, government/tax agencies—about a company's financial performance and status.
- Who uses it: External parties (investors, creditors, regulators).
- What it includes: Income statement, retained earnings statement, balance sheet, statement of cash flows.
- Key characteristics: Published at fixed intervals; summarizes historical earnings and current financial position; follows Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP).
- GAAP ensures:
- Relevant: useful and timely for making decisions.
- Reliable: accurate and unbiased.
- Consistent: prepared the same way each time.
- Comparable: prepared the same way by different companies.
📊 Managerial accounting
Managerial accounting: gathering and summarizing information customized for a company's managers and employees to provide feedback for planning, decision making, and evaluation.
- Who uses it: Internal users (managers, employees).
- Format: Does not follow any particular format; uniquely designed to meet specific user needs.
- Scope: May focus on targeted segments (departments, products, territories) rather than the company as a whole.
- Timing: Published over periodic intervals or on an as-needed basis.
- Content: Includes actual financial data from past periods, current estimates, and future projections (not just historical data).
- Don't confuse: Managerial accounting is forward-looking and flexible; financial accounting is backward-looking and standardized.
🏭 Business types and operations
🏭 Three types of businesses
The excerpt classifies business operations into three types based on what they sell:
| Type | What it sells | Key activity |
|---|---|---|
| Service | Expertise, advice, assistance, professional skills, or an experience | Delivers intangible value |
| Merchandising | Finished and packaged products purchased from other companies | Buys, marks up, and resells products |
| Manufacturing | Products assembled and packaged for sale | Assembles and packages products for merchandisers or end users |
- Managerial accounting is relevant to all three types.
- The excerpt focuses on manufacturing because it involves the most in-depth facets and examples of managerial accounting.
🎯 Manager responsibilities
Managers have three core responsibilities:
- Planning: Identifying goals and strategies for accomplishing them.
- Leading: Directing daily operations and carrying out plans.
- Controlling: Comparing expected and actual results and taking action for improvement.
- Resource constraints: Human, financial, and time resources are limited, so managers must select from among many alternatives and forgo other options.
- Goal: Optimize the collective outcome of their choices.
- Managerial accounting provides timely and relevant financial information that contributes to effective decision making.
💰 Costs and profitability
💰 What costs are
Cost: a current or future expenditure of cash for something that will ultimately generate revenue.
- Costs result from paying cash or committing to pay cash in the future in order to earn revenue.
- Costs may be accumulated for a product, sales territory, department, or activity.
💰 Why costs matter
- Profitability: The goal of a business is to generate profit, which is the difference between income and costs in a particular time period.
- Controlling costs directly impacts profitability: Analyzing costs is critical because it affects the bottom line.
- Uses of cost information:
- Determine selling prices of products.
- Monitor over time to evaluate progress and discover irregularities.
- Accuracy requirement: Costs must be determined and recorded accurately, systematically, and on a timely basis; otherwise, the information is not useful for effective planning and informed decisions.
💰 Not all costs are equal
- Some costs are unavoidable; others are somewhat controllable.
- Separating them allows managers to focus on controllable costs that should be monitored to contain or lower them.
- Example: A manager can influence spending on supplies (controllable) but may not be able to change rent (unavoidable in the short term).
🗂️ Four broad categories of managerial accounting
🗂️ Accumulating costs
- Purpose: Determine and record costs accurately, systematically, and on a timely basis.
- Methods mentioned:
- Job order costing: A method of systematically accumulating costs on manufactured products.
- Process costing: Another method of systematically accumulating costs on manufactured products.
- Activity-based costing: A system combined with the other two methods to identify and measure costs more specifically.
🗂️ Analyzing costs
- Purpose: Separate unavoidable costs from controllable costs so managers can focus on what they can influence.
- Uses:
- Mathematically determine sales required to achieve desired levels of volume and profitability.
- Break-even analysis and other cost relationships, as well as variable costing, address these issues.
🗂️ Evaluating performance
- Budgeting: Looking into the future and estimating what a business's financial activities will look like; projects sales, costs, production, cash flows, etc. at a future point in time.
- Variance analysis: A controlling method that compares expected outcomes to actual results and analyzes overall progress in meeting goals.
- Example: A budget predicts costs of 100,000; actual costs are 110,000 → variance analysis investigates the 10,000 difference and identifies causes.
🗂️ Comparing alternatives
- Differential analysis: Compares alternatives to determine which choice will yield either the greatest benefit or the least cost.
- Decision scenarios mentioned:
- Whether to make or buy a component part.
- Whether to continue manufacturing a product or not.
- Capital investment analysis: A type of differential analysis that involves evaluating proposed investments in property, plant, and equipment that a company will use in its operations.
- Why it matters: Managers must choose one option over others; differential analysis provides the financial basis for these decisions.
🔑 Key terminology
🔑 Accounting as "the language of business"
- Accounting is often referred to as "the language of business" because business people communicate, evaluate performance, and determine value using dollars and amounts generated by the accounting process.
- It is the system of recording and keeping track of financial transactions in a business and summarizing this information in reports.
- These reports provide information to people interested in knowing about the financial aspects of a business and guide business managers, investors, and creditors in planning and decision making.
🔑 Period costs
- The excerpt mentions period costs but does not provide a complete definition (the sentence is cut off).
- Context: Period costs include selling and administrative expenses that are unrelated to [the excerpt ends here].