3 Types of Manufacturing Costs (Direct Materials, Direct Labor, Manufacturing Overhead)

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 29. 06. 2024
  • This videos identifies and defines the three types of manufacturing costs: Direct Materials, Direct Labor, and Manufacturing Overhead. The video also provides examples of each type of manufacturing cost to better illustrate the concepts.
    -
    Edspira is the creation of Michael McLaughlin, an award-winning professor who went from teenage homelessness to a PhD. Edspira’s mission is to make a high-quality business education freely available to the world.
    -
    SUBSCRIBE FOR A FREE 53-PAGE GUIDE TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS, PLUS:
    • A 23-PAGE GUIDE TO MANAGERIAL ACCOUNTING
    • A 44-PAGE GUIDE TO U.S. TAXATION
    • A 75-PAGE GUIDE TO FINANCIAL STATEMENT ANALYSIS
    • MANY MORE FREE PDF GUIDES AND SPREADSHEETS
    * eepurl.com/dIaa5z
    -
    SUPPORT EDSPIRA ON PATREON
    * / prof_mclaughlin
    -
    GET CERTIFIED IN FINANCIAL STATEMENT ANALYSIS, IFRS 16, AND ASSET-LIABILITY MANAGEMENT
    * edspira.thinkific.com
    -
    LISTEN TO THE SCHEME PODCAST
    * Apple Podcasts: podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast...
    * Spotify: open.spotify.com/show/4WaNTqV...
    * Website: www.edspira.com/podcast-2/
    -
    GET TAX TIPS ON TIKTOK
    * / prof_mclaughlin
    -
    ACCESS INDEX OF VIDEOS
    * www.edspira.com/index
    -
    CONNECT WITH EDSPIRA
    * Facebook: / edspira
    * Instagram: / edspiradotcom
    * LinkedIn: / edspira
    -
    CONNECT WITH MICHAEL
    * Twitter: / prof_mclaughlin
    * LinkedIn: / prof-michael-mclaughlin
    -
    ABOUT EDSPIRA AND ITS CREATOR
    * www.edspira.com/about/
    * michaelmclaughlin.com

Komentáře • 62

  • @JamesBallUSA
    @JamesBallUSA Před 7 lety +51

    Indirect materials could include disposable gloves put on at the beginning of a shift. Re-usage applicators that you can use over the course of assembling several products. anti-static matting put on a bench at the beginning of a shift. Each of these items aren't directly tied to the production of a single unit.

    • @commonsense4993
      @commonsense4993 Před 3 lety +1

      Correct. James Ball - Thank you for correcting that. Glue for the mirror is direct materials. Rather than steel and rubber, he should be talking about steel panels and rubber tires - things that the car factory would have and use.
      Gloves, wipes, shelving to hold parts, computers to track inventory, etc are all indirect materials.
      Importantly, indirect labor is mfg management, quality assurance, shipping and receiving, data entry etc who do not actually assemble, configure, and test the car but work in the mfg side.
      Then administration costs include accounting, sales, marketing, non-mfg managment etc., which are not included in indirect costs.

  • @Edspira
    @Edspira  Před 9 lety +16

    Great question Steve! Corporate office staff such as H.R. or accountants would be classified as SG&A expense (selling, general, and administrative expense) which is a period expense. Period expenses are different from product expenses (such as direct labor and indirect labor) in that they do not attached themselves to the product. Thus, when you pay the corporate accountant, you expense his or her salary when you incur it (it does not become part of inventory or flow through cost of goods sold). Indirect labor is a product cost, not a period cost like SG&A, so it does attach itself to the product and flow through inventory and cost of goods sold. An example of indirect labor expense would be the salary of a janitor who sweeps the floor in the factory. This is contrasted with direct labor, in that direct labors typically touch or handle the product in some way (although not necessarily). Although a janitor is working in the factory, he or she isn't directly making the product so their salary is indirect labor. An example of direct labor would be a factory worker who assembles vehicles at an automotive manufacturing plant.

    • @ixus1001
      @ixus1001 Před 8 lety

      +Education Unlocked So we don't include the wages paid to labors who are hired for certain period?

  • @DanielPerez-jv7nm
    @DanielPerez-jv7nm Před 5 lety +6

    I owe you big time. These videos are helping me better than my CPA courses. GREAT CONTENT!

  • @amflippy1134
    @amflippy1134 Před 10 lety +8

    Thank you for this. I finally have a better understanding about the "Manufacturing Overhead." I needed this for our test. :)

  • @2012jakm7
    @2012jakm7 Před 3 lety +3

    Im 2 years out of Post-secondary, I used to *have to* watch these types of videos for economics courses regularly. its interesting now being out in the real world, and being currently exposed to issues in pricing of goods at the Manufacturing company I work for. Now I am voluntarily coming back to watch the same videos I *had to* watch 3/4 years ago. This is interesting stuff, but more so now that I'm using it in the the workplace.

    • @Edspira
      @Edspira  Před 3 lety

      Glad to hear you're still finding it useful!

  • @jordanmott8165
    @jordanmott8165 Před 8 lety +4

    You are actually a saviour!!!!!! Keep it up! So good!

  • @chuckstertv
    @chuckstertv Před 9 lety +4

    Thank you so much for this video, it clearly answered a lot of questions I had on Manufacturing Costs.

  • @sohaibahmed226
    @sohaibahmed226 Před 5 lety +1

    Very well and simply explained.

  • @Millionsbyfaith
    @Millionsbyfaith Před 9 lety +3

    Thank you so much!!

  • @kerrydickinson4446
    @kerrydickinson4446 Před 4 lety

    Thank you for your great videos, I have been studying for a while now and your videos are the most interesting and comprehensive. You make very difficult concepts easy to understand. Thank you

  • @kimmoyt189
    @kimmoyt189 Před 7 lety

    thanks this video is amazing

  • @sandesh1036
    @sandesh1036 Před 8 lety +1

    Thanks a bunch....

  • @LeviAndersen
    @LeviAndersen Před 9 lety +1

    thanks pal!

  • @harveylu1264
    @harveylu1264 Před 7 lety

    Wow, this helps. Thanks :-)

  • @ericasmith2387
    @ericasmith2387 Před 6 lety +1

    Great video! Thanks!

    • @Edspira
      @Edspira  Před 6 lety

      Glad you liked it, hope your course is going well!

  • @MsSuperspirit
    @MsSuperspirit Před 9 lety +1

    Thanks 😊

  • @itumelenglefafa7111
    @itumelenglefafa7111 Před 9 lety +3

    thanks a lot for the insight.

  • @theboombody
    @theboombody Před 4 lety +1

    Accounting is like a lot of other things. It can start out really simple, and it can get a whole lot more complicated once you start adding on a bunch of layers.

  • @ellag3997
    @ellag3997 Před 8 lety +1

    this really helped! thanksss

  • @myfaizahmad9782
    @myfaizahmad9782 Před 6 lety

    Hi
    can you plz describe why the overhead cost behaviour is so complex and how it became the part of the product cost?

  • @MyFinancialFocus
    @MyFinancialFocus Před 2 lety +1

    Time to build machines to reduce labor costs :)

  • @somsreynut5407
    @somsreynut5407 Před 2 lety

    Good explanation, thanks

  • @smoeun8859
    @smoeun8859 Před 7 lety

    When I calculate total manufacturing cost, do I include all of the indirect cost such as indirect materials, indirect labour and indirect overhead?

  • @shahwaizbinmahmood8142

    Tysm

  • @stanfordmunampamba5831

    great

  • @SteveSuriadjaja
    @SteveSuriadjaja Před 9 lety

    Are employees in the Corporate Office (Accountants, HR, Finance, Executives, Project Managers, etc) considered to be Indirect Labours? Thus, they contribute to the Overheads? Cheers.

  • @RHAishwarya
    @RHAishwarya Před 2 lety

    Why do classify direct labor as product cost it is expensed as and when the period for example a labor working in factory for assembling his wages will expensed when the period ends not when the product is sold.... please clarify

  • @karthikyadavb3706
    @karthikyadavb3706 Před 7 lety

    I want to know how to calculate direct material rate per unit

  • @ecosystems
    @ecosystems Před 6 lety +1

    What about excess factory capacity Costs (EFCC)? How are EFCC figured in calculating unit cost and also where should they be presented? I assume in the COS section but possibly there is guidance that they be placed in SG&A? Any thoughts would be appreciated.

    • @Edspira
      @Edspira  Před 6 lety

      Sometimes it would be in COS, this is a major issue that department heads will fight about. No one wants to pay for excess of idle capacity.

  • @yoshinegus4019
    @yoshinegus4019 Před 8 lety +14

    Please do not tie (or glue) the janitor to your car!

    • @nawafXjohn
      @nawafXjohn Před 4 lety +2

      🤣😂 "You can't fire me, that's what they taught be in accounting"

  • @thedavish0m3t3am
    @thedavish0m3t3am Před 6 lety

    Would Manufacturing Overhead include period costs?

  • @heranzekarias1995
    @heranzekarias1995 Před rokem

    Grinder used to cut the steel

  • @alberthandly7630
    @alberthandly7630 Před 8 lety

    where would usage electricity goes into

  • @oddthehuman4294
    @oddthehuman4294 Před 2 lety

    so could you replace the word "Manufacturing Overhead" with Factory overhead?

  • @IBU113T5
    @IBU113T5 Před 6 lety +1

    Is the manufacturing overhead the sum of fixed and variable overheads?

    • @Edspira
      @Edspira  Před 6 lety +1

      Yes, there is a fixed component of manufacturing overhead and a variable component of manufacturing overhead. When people simply say "manufacturing overhead" they typically mean both the fixed and variable component together (unless they state otherwise).

  • @MisterR82
    @MisterR82 Před 8 lety +1

    How do I calculate direct labor when the figures aren't presented and i need to complete a partially completed sheet?

    • @rhenlovesth
      @rhenlovesth Před 7 lety +1

      I have the same question also.

    • @bcet4422
      @bcet4422 Před 2 lety

      You could use the labels to determine if the cost is direct or indirect. So if it says manager of sales department, for example, that would only be direct if the cost object is 'sales'.

  • @EricaFioriGentry
    @EricaFioriGentry Před 6 lety +1

    What category would a floor supervisor fall into?

    • @Edspira
      @Edspira  Před 6 lety +1

      Direct Labor is also known as "touch" labor. The floor supervisor would not be considered direct labor because they aren't physically touching the products being produced and their labor can't be traced to an individual product being produced. Instead, the floor supervisor would be considered indirect labor, which is a part of Manufacturing Overhead. It's very similar to the example of the janitor in the video. Great question!

  • @sortitus
    @sortitus Před 8 lety

    Would glue still not be considered direct materials even if you could trace specific amounts to each car? Lubricant for a machine that makes parts seems a little closer to your description, since the lubricant wouldn't end up on the car, though you could still find a way to average the amount of lubricant you need for the machine per car and split it out that way if you wanted to. Maybe you'd have to go to something a bit less direct like the janitor's supplies to find an overhead that couldn't easily be attributed to specific cars.
    Maybe you'd have to decide at what point something becomes overhead somewhat arbitrarily, and this is an example of managerial accounting's flexibility.

    • @dineomogoru3
      @dineomogoru3 Před 7 lety +1

      Glue is an overhead because we estimate how much we would use its not exact and when you look at the final product you cant see the glue but its there used to attach the final product. That is how I understand it. An overhead is used in coordination with the final product.

  • @tuan2558
    @tuan2558 Před 8 lety

    is property, plant equipment is it in manufacturing overhead? please help me

    • @dineomogoru3
      @dineomogoru3 Před 7 lety

      here we are discussing product cost so for example if a machine is used to convert a good (which would be our final inventory ) the depreciation of the machine would be allocated as a depreciation cost (an overhead) on that specific job

  • @RumbleLab
    @RumbleLab Před 5 lety

    Other Indirect materials... Welding rods to fix equipment when it breaks and anything mtce will use.

  • @norah.benr23
    @norah.benr23 Před 2 lety

    so the manufacturing overhead --> is the indirect costs.

  • @sajahmed4u
    @sajahmed4u Před 5 lety +1

    Will unit cost of machine used for the manufacturing be a direct cost? for example I need to use a drilling machine to drill a hole in the product and the cost of the drill machine is $ 2.00 per hour. So if I use the drill machine for half an hour, will $ 1.00 be included in the direct cost ?

  • @pets4489
    @pets4489 Před 4 lety

    This guy when he figures out how Lotus frames are built 😳 (They're glued aluminum)

  • @ben33584
    @ben33584 Před 6 lety +1

    car paint is direct material right

    • @Edspira
      @Edspira  Před 6 lety +1

      You are correct. If it is part of the final product that goes out the door, then I'd consider it a direct material. Even though it isn't easy to trace the exact amount of paint used, the company could have a standard such as 1.5 gallons of paint is used per vehicle in order to track the costs per vehicle. More examples of indirect materials would be cleaning supplies for the factory and oil to lubricate the machines.

  • @sunflower3384
    @sunflower3384 Před 5 lety +1

    "we can tie them to the car"

  • @yoshinegus4019
    @yoshinegus4019 Před 8 lety

    Please do not tie (or glue) the janitor to your car!