Advantages and disadvantages 5 / 5

Absorption & Marginal Costing

Advantages of absorption costingAdvantages of marginal costing
Complies with ias 2 “inventories”Contribution per unit is constant over different sales volumes
Better cost control due to analysing under-/over- absorptionNo over- or under- absorption
Recognises that selling price must cover all costsHighlights contribution so appropriate for decision-making
Profit depends on sales and efficiency not on production levels
Simple to operate
Disadvantages of absorption costingDisadvantages of marginal costing
Profits can be manipulated by changing production levelsContribution may not cover fixed costs
It is based on the assumption that overheads are volume-relatedDoes not comply with ias 2
Fixed production overheads are not shared between units of production but written off in full

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