Responsibility Accounting
Responsibility Accounting
Responsibility Accounting
Control can be exercised only though managers who are responsible for what the
organization does. It is based on the principle that a manager’s performance, should be
assessed only on the factors that are within his span of control. Each managers’s budget
contains costs and revenues within his span of control. Generally costs are accumulated by
departments. Subsidiary revenue and expense accounts are created for each centre. These
enable accounting transactions to be recorded not only by revenue and expense category, but
also by the responsibility centre incurring the transaction. The accounting system can then
summarize transactions by descriptive category for public reporting purposes, and by
responsibility centre for purposes of performance evaluation. These accounts indicate how,
at the lowest reporting level in an organization, performance reports show costs incurred in a
division by descriptive category. At higher reporting levels, summaries reflect total costs
incurred in subordinate responsibility centres.
2) Limits to Controllable Costs: Once the responsibility centres have been established in a
company, costs and revenues under the control of each therein need be indicated. In
responsibility accounting, the basis of classifying costs is controllability---the capability of the
manager of a responsibility centre to influence (i.e., increase or decrease) them. As such, costs
are accumulated and reported in the two groups of controllable and noncontrollable costs. The
former are those which can be changed by the head of the responsibility centre. He has the
ability to regulate the quantity or price or both of an item by his managerial action.
Uncontrollable costs, obviously, are the costs which cannot be increased or decreased within a
given time span at the discreation of the manager. But these can be changed at higher levels of
management authority. Generally, costs of raw materials, direct labour and operating supplies
are controllable. Fixed costs are non-controllable such as rentals, depreciation, and insurance on
equipment. In this setup, no allocation of common or joint costs takes place, which by their
very nature are quite indirect. Allocation is always an arbitrary process.
3) Flexibile Budgeting: Responsibility accounting starts with the assumption that budgets are
flexible. They have to be prepared for several levels of activity, instead of one static level.
When actual output has been obtained, a fresh budget is prepared thereof. Comparison of actual
results is made against the budget targets freshly prepared for that level. It would be a weak
analysis to use a budget based on a level of activity that differs from the actual level of activity.
A performance budget is the flexible budget adjusted to the actual level attained. Flexible
budgeting permits comparison of actual costs with budgeted costs that have been recast to
changes in production volume. It would be recalled that flexible budgets are prepared either by
the mathematical function or formula method, or the multi-activity method.
4) Performance Reporting: Each responsibility centre has to periodically report about its
performance, the feedback. A report has both financial and statistical parts. It shows income,
expenses and capital expenditures. Statistics such as volume of production, cost per unit, and
manpower data are also provided. Typically, performance reports will disclose the actual costs
incurred, the budgeted costs, and a variance, which is the difference between the actual and
budgeted amounts. Normally these amounts will be summarized by the responsibility centre for
the month being reported and also for the current year-to-date. The purpose is to take timely
and corrective action. Performance reports could be monthly, weekly, or even daily depending
on the size of the organization and significance of the item. In addition, the report must be
given to the manager while the information is still useful. Reports received weeks after the
period are of little value. Further, once the performance reports are prepared, management need
only to consider the significant variances from the budget. This is what is being referred to as
management by exception.