Accounting For Labor
Accounting For Labor
Accounting For Labor
Learning Objectives:
1. Distinguish between features of hourly rate and piece-rate plans
2. Specify procedures for controlling labor costs
3. Account for labor costs and payroll taxes
4. Prepare accruals for payroll earnings and taxes
FACTORY PAYROLL
1. Direct Labor represents payroll costs traced directly to an individual job
2. Indirect Labor – consists of labor costs incurred for a variety of jobs related to the production
process but not readily traceable to the individual jobs worked on during the period. It includes the
salaries and wages of factory superintendent, supervisors, janitors, clerks and factory accountants
who support all jobs worked on during the period.
Payroll xxx
Withholding Taxes Payable xxx
SSS Premiums Payable xxx
Philhealth Premiums Payable xxx
Pag-Ibig Premiums Payable xxx
An employee worked 45 hours this week. His regular wage is P 20 per hour and he is paid time and a half
for overtime hours. (hours beyond 40 per week)
Regular wage [P20/hr] (40 x P 20) P 800
Overtime Wage ( 5 x P 20) 100
Overtime Premium [P 10/hr] (5 x P 10) 50
Journal entry:
1. Charged to Specific Job – if the job is taken as a rush order with the knowledge that overtime
will be necessary.
2. Charged to factory overhead. When the regular orders cannot be completed in the regular
working hours, the overtime premium should be charged to factory overhead
Bonus
A bonus is additional compensation generally given in recognition of exceptional productivity.
Bonuses may be a set amount, a percentage of profits, or a percentage of an employee’s salary.
Theoretically, a bonus is a direct cost of production. However, because the purpose of cost accumulation is
the establishment of a standard unit cost, bonuses are charged to factory overhead. Ideally, a bonus should
be charged to a liability each week the eligible employee works. In practice, this can rarely be done so a
single entry at the end of a period is made.
Example. Each employee is entitled to a bonus of 1% of the company’s prior year’s profits. Assume that
the weekly pay is P 500, profits of prior year were P 260,000 to record the wages for the week including
the accrual of bonus.
Bonus (1% x P 260,000) P 2,600
Bonus per week (P2,600 /52 weeks) P 50
To record the weekly pay including the bonus, the entry will be
Sample. Joy has worked for X Manufacturing Co. for five years and is therefore entitled to two weeks
vacation with pay. Her weekly pay is P 6,000. The computation and journal entry to accrue Joy’s vacation
pay for the week, assuming that she is not on vacation now will be
Total Vacation Pay (P 6,000 x 2) P 12,000
Weeks over which vacation pay is accrued: 52 weeks – 2 weeks = 50 weeks
Weekly accrual = P 12,000/50 = P 240 per week
Journal Entry:
Fringe Costs
Wages and salaries plus any fringe benefits constitute employer’s payroll expense. Other common
fringe costs are SSS, Philhealth and Pag-Ibig Premiums
Journal Entry:
Factory Overhead – Fringe Costs xxx
SSS Premiums Payable xxx
Philhealth Premiums Payable xxx
Pag-Ibig Contributions Payable xxx
Incentive Plans
Some companies adopt incentive plans to encourage increases in production. Employees are not
penalized for producing less than the specified amount but are paid for extra for producing more. Wages
paid but not earned on a piecework basis are charged to factory overhead.
Sample:
X Company manufactures ladies bags. The average weekly salary is P 1,000 per week. To increase
production, the company adopted an incentive plan. The piecework rate per bag is P 50. Any employee who
produces fewer than 20 bags per week will still receive his or her original pay. Production above this amount
will earn the employee P 50 for each additional bag. One week after the plan was implemented, the
following data were collected.
Journal Entry:
Work In Process – Labor P 4,200
Factory Overhead Control – Incentives 50
Payroll P 4,250