Page 1
CHAPTER
12
LEARNING OUTCOMES
SERVICE COSTING
? Discuss the cost accounting method for service sectors.
? State the units used in different service sectors.
? State the KPIs used in different service sectors.
? Calculate the costs for different service industries.
© The Institute of Chartered Accountants of India
Page 2
CHAPTER
12
LEARNING OUTCOMES
SERVICE COSTING
? Discuss the cost accounting method for service sectors.
? State the units used in different service sectors.
? State the KPIs used in different service sectors.
? Calculate the costs for different service industries.
© The Institute of Chartered Accountants of India
COST AND MANAGEMENT ACCOUNTING
12.2
Service Costing
Application of Service
Costing
Service Costing vs
Product Costing
Methods of Ascertaining
Service cost unit
Composite Unit
Equivalent Unit
Service Cost Statement
Costing of Services:
(i)Transport
(ii) Hotels & Lodges
(iii) Hospitals
(iv) IT & ITES
(v) Toll Roads
(vi) Educational Institutes
(vii) Insurance
viii) Financial Institutes
(ix) Others
CHAPTER OVERVIEW
© The Institute of Chartered Accountants of India
Page 3
CHAPTER
12
LEARNING OUTCOMES
SERVICE COSTING
? Discuss the cost accounting method for service sectors.
? State the units used in different service sectors.
? State the KPIs used in different service sectors.
? Calculate the costs for different service industries.
© The Institute of Chartered Accountants of India
COST AND MANAGEMENT ACCOUNTING
12.2
Service Costing
Application of Service
Costing
Service Costing vs
Product Costing
Methods of Ascertaining
Service cost unit
Composite Unit
Equivalent Unit
Service Cost Statement
Costing of Services:
(i)Transport
(ii) Hotels & Lodges
(iii) Hospitals
(iv) IT & ITES
(v) Toll Roads
(vi) Educational Institutes
(vii) Insurance
viii) Financial Institutes
(ix) Others
CHAPTER OVERVIEW
© The Institute of Chartered Accountants of India
SERVICE COSTING
12.3
1. INTRODUCTION
Service sector, being a fastest growing sector and having a significant contribution
towards the GDP in India, is a very important sector where the role of the cost and
management accounting is inevitable. The competitiveness of a service entity is
very much dependent on a robust cost and management accounting system for
competitive pricing and identification of value adding activities. Providers of
services like transportation, hotels, financial services & banking, insurance,
electricity generation, transmission and distribution etc. are very much cost
conscious and thrive to provide services in a cost-effective manner. Irrespective of
regulatory requirements to maintain cost records and get the records audited,
service costing becomes integral and inseparable part of each service entity. In this
chapter we will be discussing how costing is done in service sectors like
Transportation, Toll roads, Electricity generation, transmission and distribution,
Hospitals, Canteen & Restaurants, Hotels & Lodges, Educational institutes, Financial
institutions, Insurance, Information Technology (IT) & Information Technology
Enabled Services (ITES) etc.
Service costing is also known as operating costing.
1.1 Application of Service Costing
Internal: The service costing is required for in-house services provided by a service
cost centre to other responsibility centres as support services. Examples of support
services are Canteen and hospital for staff, Boiler house for supplying steam to
production departments, Captive Power generation unit, operation of fleet of
vehicles for transport of raw material to factory or distribution of finished goods to
the market outlets, IT department services used by other departments, research &
development, quality assurance, laboratory etc.
External: When services are offered to outside customers as a profit centre in
consonance with organisational objectives as an output like goods or passenger
transport service provided by a transporter, hospitality services provided by a hotel,
provision of services by financial institutions, insurance and IT companies etc.
In both the situation, all costs incurred are collected, accumulated for a certain
period or volume, recorded in the cost accounting system and then expressed in
terms of a cost unit of service.
© The Institute of Chartered Accountants of India
Page 4
CHAPTER
12
LEARNING OUTCOMES
SERVICE COSTING
? Discuss the cost accounting method for service sectors.
? State the units used in different service sectors.
? State the KPIs used in different service sectors.
? Calculate the costs for different service industries.
© The Institute of Chartered Accountants of India
COST AND MANAGEMENT ACCOUNTING
12.2
Service Costing
Application of Service
Costing
Service Costing vs
Product Costing
Methods of Ascertaining
Service cost unit
Composite Unit
Equivalent Unit
Service Cost Statement
Costing of Services:
(i)Transport
(ii) Hotels & Lodges
(iii) Hospitals
(iv) IT & ITES
(v) Toll Roads
(vi) Educational Institutes
(vii) Insurance
viii) Financial Institutes
(ix) Others
CHAPTER OVERVIEW
© The Institute of Chartered Accountants of India
SERVICE COSTING
12.3
1. INTRODUCTION
Service sector, being a fastest growing sector and having a significant contribution
towards the GDP in India, is a very important sector where the role of the cost and
management accounting is inevitable. The competitiveness of a service entity is
very much dependent on a robust cost and management accounting system for
competitive pricing and identification of value adding activities. Providers of
services like transportation, hotels, financial services & banking, insurance,
electricity generation, transmission and distribution etc. are very much cost
conscious and thrive to provide services in a cost-effective manner. Irrespective of
regulatory requirements to maintain cost records and get the records audited,
service costing becomes integral and inseparable part of each service entity. In this
chapter we will be discussing how costing is done in service sectors like
Transportation, Toll roads, Electricity generation, transmission and distribution,
Hospitals, Canteen & Restaurants, Hotels & Lodges, Educational institutes, Financial
institutions, Insurance, Information Technology (IT) & Information Technology
Enabled Services (ITES) etc.
Service costing is also known as operating costing.
1.1 Application of Service Costing
Internal: The service costing is required for in-house services provided by a service
cost centre to other responsibility centres as support services. Examples of support
services are Canteen and hospital for staff, Boiler house for supplying steam to
production departments, Captive Power generation unit, operation of fleet of
vehicles for transport of raw material to factory or distribution of finished goods to
the market outlets, IT department services used by other departments, research &
development, quality assurance, laboratory etc.
External: When services are offered to outside customers as a profit centre in
consonance with organisational objectives as an output like goods or passenger
transport service provided by a transporter, hospitality services provided by a hotel,
provision of services by financial institutions, insurance and IT companies etc.
In both the situation, all costs incurred are collected, accumulated for a certain
period or volume, recorded in the cost accounting system and then expressed in
terms of a cost unit of service.
© The Institute of Chartered Accountants of India
COST AND MANAGEMENT ACCOUNTING
12.4
1.2 Service Costing vs Product Costing
Service costing differs from product costing (such as job or process costing) in the
following ways due to some basic and peculiar nature.
(i) Tangibility: Unlike products, services are intangible and cannot be stored,
hence, there is no inventory for the services.
(ii) Cost units: Use of Composite cost units for cost measurement and to express
the volume of outputs.
(iii) Material vs Employee cost: Unlike a product manufacturing, employee
(labour) cost constitutes a major cost element than material cost.
(iv) Traceability of costs: Indirect costs like administration overheads are
generally have a significant proportion in total cost of a service as unlike
manufacturing sector, service sector heavily depends on support services and
traceability of costs to a service may not economically feasible.
2. SERVICE COST UNIT AND KPI
To compute the Service cost, it is necessary to understand the unit for which the
cost is to be computed. All the costs incurred during a period are collected and
analyzed and then expressed in terms of a cost per unit of service.
One specific issue with service costing is the difficulty in defining a realistic cost
unit that represents a suitable measure of the service provided. The cost unit to be
applied needs to be defined carefully and frequently, a composite cost unit may be
deemed more appropriate.
For example, Hotels may use the ‘Occupied Room Days’ as an appropriate unit for
cost ascertainment and control.
Other typical cost unit that may be used include:
Service industry Unit of cost (examples)
Transport Services Passenger- km., (In public transportation)
Quintal- km., or Tonne- km. (In goods carriage)
Electricity Supply service Kilowatt- hour (kWh)
© The Institute of Chartered Accountants of India
Page 5
CHAPTER
12
LEARNING OUTCOMES
SERVICE COSTING
? Discuss the cost accounting method for service sectors.
? State the units used in different service sectors.
? State the KPIs used in different service sectors.
? Calculate the costs for different service industries.
© The Institute of Chartered Accountants of India
COST AND MANAGEMENT ACCOUNTING
12.2
Service Costing
Application of Service
Costing
Service Costing vs
Product Costing
Methods of Ascertaining
Service cost unit
Composite Unit
Equivalent Unit
Service Cost Statement
Costing of Services:
(i)Transport
(ii) Hotels & Lodges
(iii) Hospitals
(iv) IT & ITES
(v) Toll Roads
(vi) Educational Institutes
(vii) Insurance
viii) Financial Institutes
(ix) Others
CHAPTER OVERVIEW
© The Institute of Chartered Accountants of India
SERVICE COSTING
12.3
1. INTRODUCTION
Service sector, being a fastest growing sector and having a significant contribution
towards the GDP in India, is a very important sector where the role of the cost and
management accounting is inevitable. The competitiveness of a service entity is
very much dependent on a robust cost and management accounting system for
competitive pricing and identification of value adding activities. Providers of
services like transportation, hotels, financial services & banking, insurance,
electricity generation, transmission and distribution etc. are very much cost
conscious and thrive to provide services in a cost-effective manner. Irrespective of
regulatory requirements to maintain cost records and get the records audited,
service costing becomes integral and inseparable part of each service entity. In this
chapter we will be discussing how costing is done in service sectors like
Transportation, Toll roads, Electricity generation, transmission and distribution,
Hospitals, Canteen & Restaurants, Hotels & Lodges, Educational institutes, Financial
institutions, Insurance, Information Technology (IT) & Information Technology
Enabled Services (ITES) etc.
Service costing is also known as operating costing.
1.1 Application of Service Costing
Internal: The service costing is required for in-house services provided by a service
cost centre to other responsibility centres as support services. Examples of support
services are Canteen and hospital for staff, Boiler house for supplying steam to
production departments, Captive Power generation unit, operation of fleet of
vehicles for transport of raw material to factory or distribution of finished goods to
the market outlets, IT department services used by other departments, research &
development, quality assurance, laboratory etc.
External: When services are offered to outside customers as a profit centre in
consonance with organisational objectives as an output like goods or passenger
transport service provided by a transporter, hospitality services provided by a hotel,
provision of services by financial institutions, insurance and IT companies etc.
In both the situation, all costs incurred are collected, accumulated for a certain
period or volume, recorded in the cost accounting system and then expressed in
terms of a cost unit of service.
© The Institute of Chartered Accountants of India
COST AND MANAGEMENT ACCOUNTING
12.4
1.2 Service Costing vs Product Costing
Service costing differs from product costing (such as job or process costing) in the
following ways due to some basic and peculiar nature.
(i) Tangibility: Unlike products, services are intangible and cannot be stored,
hence, there is no inventory for the services.
(ii) Cost units: Use of Composite cost units for cost measurement and to express
the volume of outputs.
(iii) Material vs Employee cost: Unlike a product manufacturing, employee
(labour) cost constitutes a major cost element than material cost.
(iv) Traceability of costs: Indirect costs like administration overheads are
generally have a significant proportion in total cost of a service as unlike
manufacturing sector, service sector heavily depends on support services and
traceability of costs to a service may not economically feasible.
2. SERVICE COST UNIT AND KPI
To compute the Service cost, it is necessary to understand the unit for which the
cost is to be computed. All the costs incurred during a period are collected and
analyzed and then expressed in terms of a cost per unit of service.
One specific issue with service costing is the difficulty in defining a realistic cost
unit that represents a suitable measure of the service provided. The cost unit to be
applied needs to be defined carefully and frequently, a composite cost unit may be
deemed more appropriate.
For example, Hotels may use the ‘Occupied Room Days’ as an appropriate unit for
cost ascertainment and control.
Other typical cost unit that may be used include:
Service industry Unit of cost (examples)
Transport Services Passenger- km., (In public transportation)
Quintal- km., or Tonne- km. (In goods carriage)
Electricity Supply service Kilowatt- hour (kWh)
© The Institute of Chartered Accountants of India
SERVICE COSTING
12.5
Hospital Patient per day, room per day or per bed, per opera-
tion etc.
Canteen Per item, per meal etc.
Cinema Per ticket.
Hotels Guest Days or Room Days
Bank or Financial
Institutions
Per transaction, per services (e.g. per letter of credit,
per application, per project etc.)
Educational Institutes Per course, per student, per batch, per lecture etc.
IT & ITES Cost per project, per module etc.
Insurance Per policy, Per claim, Per TPA etc.
The costing should be comprehensive enough to show the effects like off-season
and peak-season demand, full time, part time, etc.
Key Performance Indicator (KPI)
Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) are the quantitative and qualitative factors which
are commonly used to assess the performance of an organization which are
important to achieve its goal. Like calculation of cost for a cost unit, calculation of
cost or revenue per KPI helps to the performance against industry standards. For
example, in case of Telecom industry Average Return per User (ARPU) is a key
indicator, shows average revenue generated from a user of its services. The list
below shows few important KPIs for some Service Industries:
Industry KPI Meaning
Transportation
Number of Shipments, This logistics metric monitors the
number of orders that are shipped out
of the warehouse.
Truck Turnaround Rate
(Truck Turning),
The time from when a delivery truck
enters the warehouse to collect or
deliver products to when it exits the
facility.
Lead Time (Order Cycle
Time)
The amount of time in between order
placement by customer and receipt of
order.
© The Institute of Chartered Accountants of India
Read More