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Accounting Responsibility Centres

Responsibility centres
Responsibility centres are a feature of responsibility accounting A responsibility centre is a segment of a larger organisation and is placed under the control of a manager A segment could take the form of a department or a division or function or unit or product or even an individual item of equipment The manager of the responsibility centre is directly responsible for its performance Costs, revenue and profit associated with the centre are identified and recorded Responsibility centres are an essential feature of cost accounting and budgeting in all but the smallest business organisations
Accounting Responsibility Centres

Features of responsibility accounting


Segments - the business organisation is broken down into separate identifiable units or segments known as responsibility centres Boundaries - the boundaries of each segment are clearly established Control - a manager is placed in charge of each segment. The manager is expected to take charge of the costs/revenues/profits associated with the centre and be expected to plan and control them Authorization - segmental managers are given the authority to operate segments as autonomously as possible
Accounting Responsibility Centres

4 types of responsibility centre


Cost centre - manager responsible for costs incurred Revenue centre - manager responsible for revenue raised Profit centre - manager responsible for both costs and revenue Investment centre - manager responsible for profit, capital investment and financing
Accounting Responsibility Centres

The unit managers responsibility


Costs Revenue Profits Investment

Cost centre Revenue centre


Profit centre Investment

Y Y
Y Y Y Y Y Y Y

Accounting Responsibility Centres

Example - A level Business Studies


Within a school or college A level Business Studies can be treated as a cost centre It is possible to calculate the cost of offering this A level subject - salary of teaching staff concerned, cost of materials used plus an allocated share of the fixed overhead costs If the college finance manager calculated the revenue generated by A level Business Studies then the course could be treated as a profit centre The examination awarding bodies do treat A level Business Studies (and every other subject) as a profit centre. Data is collected on the cost of offering the subject and the revenue received from examination fees.

Accounting Responsibility Centres

Why organise in terms of centres?


Improved accountability - costs/revenue can be monitored They facilitates delegation by allowing autonomy for managers in the centre Greater autonomy and empowerment of managers improves motivation Greater autonomy aids decision making The performance of the individual unit can be evaluated By analysing the performance of individual units it means there is no hiding place for weak performing units Senior management is able to trace problems Centres are an aspect of budgetary control. By dividing the business up in terms of centres a named post holder is identified as being responsible
Accounting Responsibility Centres

Cost centres
A cost centre is a responsibility centre in which the manager accountable for direct costs only It is a specific and discrete department, area or person within a business from which costs can be ascertained and to which costs can be allocated An individual part of the business where costs are incurred and can easily be recorded The manager responsible for the centre has control over costs but not revenue A significant % of costs will be are directly attributable costs but there is no directly attributable revenue
Accounting Responsibility Centres

Examples of cost centres


Personnel/HRM department Finance department R and D department Transport department Warehouse & stock control department Buying department In all the above cases the department incurs costs but does not earn revenue A item of equipment (such as an office photocopier) can also be regarded as a cost centre
Accounting Responsibility Centres

Revenue centre
A responsibility centre in which the manager responsible for revenue only Example: sales department Most costs will be fixed and will be very small in relation to revenue earned

Accounting Responsibility Centres

Profit centre
A profit centre is a business unit to which costs and revenues are allocated and recorded It is a responsibility centre in which the manager is responsible for costs and revenue and therefore the profits of the unit A profit centre is allowed to control itself as a separate part from the larger organisation As costs and revenue can be attributable it makes sense to see the centre as a business within a business Example: product department or division with a reasonable degree of autonomy
Accounting Responsibility Centres

Profit centres can make a loss!


One common mistake is to see a profit centre as the part of the business that makes a profit whereas all other parts are presumably loss centres This is entirely wrong Profit centres are simply a part of the business for which data on costs, revenue and profit/loss are recorded It is quite possible for a profit centre to produce a negative profit i.e. a loss
Accounting Responsibility Centres

Examples of profit centres


An individual product within the product portfolio A range of products A brand A geographical region within the company A branch office A product division of the company In each case it is possible to identify and calculate the costs incurred and the revenue received

Accounting Responsibility Centres

Investment Centre
This takes responsibility to a greater depth An investment centre is a responsibility centre in which the manager responsible for all aspects of finance - costs, revenue, profit and investment Example: division of a large multinational company The division is assessed in terms of its contribution to overall profits
Accounting Responsibility Centres

Advantages of organising in terms of responsibility centres


Decentralised decision making: faster and more responsive to local conditions Responsibility centres facilitate delegation Motivation is improved Results in improved monitoring of budgets, targets and performance Leads to greater accountability Facilitates budgetary control Prevents the performance of weak elements being hidden within the larger organisation
Accounting Responsibility Centres

Problems and disadvantages


There is a danger that individual centres become too narrowly focussed Managers of responsibility centres tend to be more concerned with unit objectives than corporate objectives Rivalry between centres breaks out Creates problems of co-ordination Creates communications problems The allocation of costs is complex. Any unfairness in the way costs are allocated can lead to be demotivating
Accounting Responsibility Centres

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