Large service organizations, such as banks and hospitals, used to be noted for their lack of standard
Question:
Large service organizations, such as banks and hospitals, used to be noted for their lack of standard costing systems, and their relatively unsophisticated budgeting and control systems compared with large manufacturing organizations. But this is changing and many large service organizations are now revising their use of management accounting techniques.
Requirements:
(a) Explain which features of large-scale service organizations encourage the application of activity-based approaches to the analysis of cost information.
(b) Explain which features of service organizations may create problems for the application of activity-based costing.
Explain the uses for activity-based cost information in service industries.
(c) Many large service organizations were at one time state-owned but have been privatized. Examples in some countries include telecommunication and electricity supply. They are often regulated. Similar systems of regulation of prices by independent authority exist in many countries and are designed to surrogate the market competition in industries where it is difficult to ensure genuinely competitive market.
d) Explain which aspects of cost information and systems in service organizations would be a particular interest a regulator and why these features would be of interest.