2011
DOI: 10.1287/mnsc.1100.1293
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Evaluating Heuristics Used When Designing Product Costing Systems

Abstract: The academic and practitioner literature justifies firms' use of product costs in product pricing and capacity planning decisions as heuristics to address an otherwise intractable problem. However, product costs are the output of a cost reporting system, which itself is the outcome of heuristic design choices. In particular, because of informational limitations, when designing cost systems firms use simple rules of thumb to group resources into cost pools and to select drivers used to allocate the pooled costs… Show more

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Cited by 35 publications
(40 citation statements)
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“…The first effect has been found in many prior numerical experiments (Labro and Vanhoucke 2007;Balakrishnan et al 2011). The parameters at the beginning of the costing system, the resource-to-activity mapping parameters, have much less influence on product costing errors than the parameters from near the end of the costing system, the activity-to-product mapping.…”
mentioning
confidence: 82%
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“…The first effect has been found in many prior numerical experiments (Labro and Vanhoucke 2007;Balakrishnan et al 2011). The parameters at the beginning of the costing system, the resource-to-activity mapping parameters, have much less influence on product costing errors than the parameters from near the end of the costing system, the activity-to-product mapping.…”
mentioning
confidence: 82%
“…They find that the hybrid TDABC system results in more accurate cost estimates than the aggregated ABC system. Balakrishnan et al (2011) (hereafter BHL) is the most important prior paper for our work. They incorporate simulations to compare different heuristics used to generate cost pools and select allocation bases.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…More fatal are the results presented with respect to pricing errors: the simulation experiments show that prices are 50-70 percent higher compared to "correct" prices. Balakrishnan et al (2011) also focus on the design of costing systems. In particular, they argue that practitioners utilize rules of thumb when grouping resources into cost pools, and when selecting drivers for cost allocation.…”
Section: Management Accounting Systemsmentioning
confidence: 99%