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Cost Accounting – I




                    Notes          (iv)  Indirect Labour: The wages of that labour which cannot be allocated but which can be
                                       apportioned to or absorbed by, cost centres or cost units is known as indirect labour. In
                                       other words, wages paid to labour which are employed other than or production constitute
                                       indirect  labour  costs.  Examples  of  indirect  labour  are:  charge  hands  and  supervisors,
                                       maintenance  workers,  labour  employed  in  service  departments,  material  handling  and
                                       internal transport, apprentices, trainees and instructors, factory clerical staff and labour
                                       employed in time and security office, etc.
                                   (v)   Direct or Chargeable Expenses: They include all expenditures other than direct material and
                                       direct labour that are specifically incurred for a particular product or job. Such expenses
                                       are charged directly to the particular cost account concerned as part of the prime cost.
                                       Examples of direct expenses are: excise duty, royalty, surveyor’s fees, cost of rectifying
                                       defective work, travelling expenses to the job, experimental expenses of projects, expenses
                                       of designing or drawings, repairs and maintenance of plant obtained on hire and hire of
                                       special equipment obtained for a contract.
                                   (vi)  Indirect Expenses: Indirect expenses are expenses which cannot be allocated but which can
                                       be apportioned to or absorbed by cost centres or cost units as rent, insurance, municipal
                                       taxes, salary of manager, canteen and welfare expenses, power and fuel, cost of training for
                                       new employees, lighting and heating, telephone expenses, etc.
                                   (vii)  Overheads: Overheads may be defined as the cost of indirect materials, indirect labour and
                                       such other expenses including services as cannot conveniently be charged direct to specific
                                       cost units. Thus, overheads are all expenses other than direct expenses. Overheads may be
                                       divided into following categories:

                                       ™ z  Factory  or  works  overheads  cover  all  indirect  expenditure  incurred  by  the
                                            undertaking from the receipt of the order until its completion is ready for dispatch
                                            either to the customer or to the finished goods store. The overheads also include:
                                            depreciation on plant and machinery, buildings and equipments, insurance charges
                                            on fixed assets, repairs and maintenance of fixed assets, electricity charges, coal and
                                            other fuel charges, rent, rates and taxes of works, etc.
                                       ™ z  Office and administrative overhead consists of all expenses incurred in the direction,
                                            control  and  administration  of  a  factory.  Examples  are  the  expenses  in  running
                                            the  general  office  e.g.,  office  rent,  light,  heat,  salaries,  salary  to  secretaries  and
                                            accountants, general managers, directors, executives, investigations and experiments
                                            and miscellaneous fixed charges.
                                       ™ z  Selling  overheads  comprise  the  cost  of  products  or  distributors  of  soliciting  and
                                            recurring  orders  for  the  articles  of  commodities  dealt  in  and  of  efforts  to  find
                                            and  retain  customers.  It  includes  sales  office  expenses,  salesmen’s  salaries  and
                                            commission, showroom expenses, advertisement charges, fancy packing, samples
                                            and free gifts, after sales service expenses and demonstration and technical advice to
                                            potential customers.

                                       ™ z  Distribution overheads comprise all expenditure incurred from the time the product
                                            is completed in the work until it reaches its destination. It includes warehouse rent,
                                            warehouse staff salaries, insurance, expenses on delivery vans and trucks, expenses
                                            on special packing for bulk transport, losses in warehouse stocks and finished goods
                                            damaged in transit and cost of repairing, etc.

                                   Self Assessment

                                   State whether the following statements are true or false:

                                   4.   The wages of that labour which cannot be allocated but which can be apportioned to or
                                       absorbed by, cost centres or cost units is known as direct labour.



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