LOS A requires us to:
distinguish between costs included in inventories and costs recognized as expenses in the period in which they are incurred.
Inventory is usually valued based on cost. Cost is the amount paid to acquire or create the inventory.
The inventory cost mainly consists of two types of costs, i.e. product cost and period cost.
1. Product Cost
a. As per both IFRS and U.S. GAAP, the inventoriable product cost includes:
i. Cost of purchase (which includes purchase price, taxes, duties, insurance charges, delivery costs, etc., but the total is reduced by the amount of discounts or rebates availed). It is the dead cost and includes all the costs of bringing the goods to the inventory raw material warehouse.
ii. Cost of conversion (which includes the cost of raw material, direct and indirect labor, direct and indirect overheads, etc.). This cost is generally realized using absorption costing. It includes all the costs that go into getting the goods to the finished goods inventory warehouse.
b. All the conversion cost gets absorbed until the good enter the finished goods inventory warehouse.
c. All the product costs get reflected on the balance sheet first. It gets reflected under the current asset’s section as soon as either the goods are acquired or converted into finished goods.
d. The product cost only enters the income statement, upon the sale of the inventory.
2. Period Cost
a. It is the non-inventoriable cost of production. It includes:
i. abnormal cost from wastage of material, labor, or other production inputs,
ii. storage cost that is not a part of the normal production process,
iii. administrative expenses,
iv. selling and marketing expenses, etc.
b. There are costs that are not capitalized to the value of the product. These costs directly go into the income statement.
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Example of product and period costs A company manufacturing a single product had the following costs incurred as per the cost records:
Now we have to calculate the product cost to be capitalized and the period cost. Now the product cost that needs to be capitalized would be as follows:
The period cost that goes directly to the income statement is as follows:
Thus all the cost that is incurred until the goods get converted into the stock of finished goods is capitalized as product cost and the remaining all cost is entered into the income statement as a period cost. |