3. The giving out of information about the business which should be kept private.

It should always be borne in mind that any satisfactory method of account-keeping must be adapted to individual conditions. If efficient results are expected, a business man should beware of ready-to-wear accounting systems. There are conditions in which the voucher system gives excellent results. There are also conditions to which it is entirely unadaptable and inadequate.

CHAPTER III
FACTORY COSTS

Difference between Factory and Financial Accounting

As was stated in Chapter II, the accounting records of a concern making its own product are much more complex than those of a concern which limits its activities to the buying and selling of stock-in-trade. A much larger mass of detailed information is needed for the proper conduct of the business. In this chapter it is purposed to study in a broad way the fundamental principles involved in factory accounting and to examine some of its distinctive problems. Factory accounting does not differ in the real fundamentals of account-keeping from any other kind of accounting. Its principles of debit and credit are the same; it employs the same or similar kinds of accounting records; and the same general use is made of the records, viz., to serve as a guide in the proper management and control of the business. Its distinctive features are seen in the application of certain principles to secure special information. To understand the problems peculiar to factory accounting, it will be necessary to consider the nature of this information.

Definitions of Terms

Three elements enter into the manufacture of a product. These are material, labor, and expense. The problems of factory accounting are therefore those connected with the accounting for the costs of material, labor, and expense. Some terms used in this connection will need explanation. A standard terminology for cost-keeping is becoming fairly well established. Direct and indirect costs, prime cost, factory burden, or overhead expenses, factory cost, full cost or cost to make and sell—these are some of the terms needing definition. Direct costs are those which can be allocated directly to a specific product. They are items which can be separated from all other cost items and applied solely to a particular product. Indirect costs are those which are shared in common by the various products and so must be distributed over them on some equitable basis. Direct costs are sometimes called prime costs. The cost elements which can almost invariably be applied directly to the product are material and labor. The sum of these two items constitute, therefore, the prime or first cost of the product. The other items of cost which are incurred in the factory or with which the factory is chargeable are variously called factory expense, overhead, or burden. These indirect costs cannot be charged directly to any specific product, and so they are shared by the entire factory output.

The sum of prime cost plus factory expense constitutes factory cost, i.e., the entire cost of manufacture up to the point at which the product is turned over to the selling department for sale. This is sometimes called total manufacturing cost.

Full cost is the price at which the manufactured article can be made and sold. In other words, to the factory cost of the article must be added its equitable share of all the other costs of conducting the business and also a margin of profit in order to arrive at a selling price. These definitions indicate some of the purposes of cost-keeping. Other purposes are given below.

Special Purposes of Cost Records