No. Depreciation would be considered an uncontrollable cost because it is fixed
payroll is not controllable cost.
Electricity cost not a controllable cost. The manager cannot influence this type of expense. To the extent where a cost cannot be managed it is indeed a non controllable, now for electricity, to the extent where consumption can be raised or lowered it becomes a controllable cost. If the consumption can be optimized through processes or equipments it then is a controllable cost.
no
Please refer to the following Web site for a complete explanation on how depreciation affects the cost of capital: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Depreciation
controllable cost
payroll is not controllable cost.
Electricity cost not a controllable cost. The manager cannot influence this type of expense. To the extent where a cost cannot be managed it is indeed a non controllable, now for electricity, to the extent where consumption can be raised or lowered it becomes a controllable cost. If the consumption can be optimized through processes or equipments it then is a controllable cost.
Depreciation is a period cost and not a product cost as depreciation is still charged even if there is no production or sale of goods.
Depreciation is an indirect cost as there is no separate identification in product cost that which cost is depreciation as deprecation is a overhead cost that’s why it is indirect cost.
no
Cost of depreciation assets and accumulated depreciation is same as accumulated depreciaton calculates how much depreciation is charged till date while remaining is current book value of assets.
Please refer to the following Web site for a complete explanation on how depreciation affects the cost of capital: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Depreciation
controllable cost
yes, depreciation is an implicit cost. but this implicit cost is added to total costs in calculating accounting profits.
Discretionary cost is that amount which is at somebody's discretion like manager etc. Controllable cost is that amount which is in the hands of management to be controlled or not like advertisement expenses etc.
Controllable costs are costs that a manager or department has authority and responsibility over, such as direct material cost. With uncontrollable costs, management has no control over the cost or when they must be paid, such as liability insurance.
Depreciation is called a notional cost because it cannot be measured in real terms.