Activity ANS: Any event, action, transaction, or work sequence that incurs cost when producing
a product or providing a service.
Activity-based Costing ANS: An overhead cost-allocation system that allocates overhead to
multiple activity cost pools and assigns the activity cost pools to products or services by means
of cost drivers that represent the activities used.
Activity Cost Pool ANS: The overhead cost attributed to a distinct type of activity or related
activities.
Batch-Level Activities ANS: Activities performed for each bath of products rather than for each
unit.
Cost driver ANS: Any factor or activity that has a direct cause-effect relationship with the
resources consumed. In ABC, cost drivers are used to assign activity cost pools to products or
services.
Facility-level activities ANS: Activities required to support or sustain an entire production
process.
Just-in-time (JIT) Processing ANS: A processing system dedicated to having the right amount of
materials, parts, or products arrive as they are needed, thereby reducing the amount of inventory.
Non-value added activity ANS: An activity that adds cost to or increases the time spent on a
product or service without increasing its market value.
Product-level activities ANS: Activities performed in support of an entire product line, but not
always performed every time a new unit or batch of products is produced.
Unit-level activities ANS: Activities performed for each unit of production.
Value-added activity ANS: An activity that increases the worth of a product or service.
What is the main difference between Traditional costing and ABC costing? ANS: Tradition
costing only uses one base to determine the amount of overhead to be assigned to a product (such
as direct labor hours or machine hours), ABC costing uses multiple bases to determine the
amount of overhead to allocate.
The reasoning behind ABC cost allocation ANS: Products consume activities, and activities
consume resources.