An Empirical Analysis of Manufacturing Overhead Cost Drivers


Autoria(s): Banker, Rajiv D.; Potter, Gordon S.; Schroeder, Roger G.
Data(s)

01/04/1992

Resumo

Empirical validity of the claim that overhead costs are driven not by production volume but by transactions resulting from production complexity is examined using data from 32 manufacturing plants from the electronics, machinery, and automobile components industries. Transactions are measured using number of engineering change orders, number of purchasing and production planning personnel, shop- floor area per part, and number of quality control and improvement personnel. Results indicate a strong positive relation between manufacturing overhead costs and both manufacturing transactions and production volume. Most of the variation in overhead costs, however, is explained by measures of manufacturing transactions, not volume.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://scholarship.sha.cornell.edu/articles/920

http://scholarship.sha.cornell.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1916&context=articles

Publicador

The Scholarly Commons

Fonte

Articles and Chapters

Palavras-Chave #manufacturing overhead #overhead costs #cost drivers #transactions #production complexity #Accounting #Industrial Organization
Tipo

text