Subject: Principles of Accounting
Overheads are the common expenses incurred for a number of departments and cost centers or cost units. Certain items of overheads can be directly identified with a particular department or cost centre. The process of charging such items of overhead to a particular department or cost centre is known as allocation of overhead. Allocation of overhead can be made only when the amount of overhead incurred by a particular department or cost centre is known. Therefore, allocation of overheads means charging all the amount of cost to a particular department or cost centre. For example repairs and maintenance for a machine should be charged or allocated to that department where the machine is installed.
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Allocation of overhead is important for the following reasons:
There are certain overheads, which are common to a number of departments or cost centres. They cannot be directly identified or allocated to a particular department or cost centre. The distribution of such overhead to several departments or cost centers proportionately on some equitable basis is known as apportionment of overheads. For example, salary paid to the general manager should be distributed to the production, administration and selling departments as the general manager looks after all the departments. Some other common expenses are electricity, rent, lighting, etc.
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The overheads which cannot be associated with the specific department distributed among the related departments on suitable basis are technically known as apportionment. Apportionment of overheads is made on the basis of:
Bases of difference | Allocation | Apartments |
1. Distribution | The expenses are directly allocated to the departments. | The expenses are proportionately distributed to different departments. |
2. Activity | The expenses incurred in a particular department are an allocation to that department. | The cost is incurred by two or more departments are apportioned on some equipment bases. |
3. Burden | Under allocation, the entire expenditure is distributed to a particular department. | Under apportionment, the total expenditures are distributed among the departments. |
4. Application | Allocation is made if the expenditure is related to a particular department. | Apportionment is made if the expenditure is related to a number of departments. |
5. Use of suitable bases | For allocation, no base is required to include the cost to a particular department. | Under it, the expenses are distributed among the department on some suitablebases. |
The process of the overhead of a cost center or department to different cost units or product is called absorption of overhead. In other words, it is the process of sharing of overheads by all products or jobs of the department. A basis for absorption of overhead for each department is found out so that each job or product gets due share of overhead for each department when it passes through that department.
To determine the amount of overhead shared by the product or job of a particular department, the overhead absorption rate or overhead rate should be found out. There are several methods of absorption of overhead. The two common methods are explained as under:
Under this, the overheads are apportioned on the basis of labour hours consumed by a job. Labour hour rate is calculated by dividing the total overhead by total labour hours for a certain period of time.
Overhead rate per labour hour = \(\frac{Total overheads}{Total labour hours}\)
Under this, the overheads are apportioned on the basis of machine hours charged to a job. It is calculated by dividing the total machine hours.
Overhead rate per machine hour = \(\frac{Total overheads}{Total machine hours}\)
References:
Koirala, Madhav et.al., Principles of Accounting-XII, Buddha Prakashan, Kathmandu
Shrestha, Dasharatha et.al., Accountancy-XII, M.K. Prakashan, Kathmandu
Bajracharya, Puskar, Principle of Accounting-XII, Asia Publication Pvt. Ltd., Kathmandu
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