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Comptabilité par activités×Procédures analytiques en audit×Analyse du coût, du volume et du bénéfice×
DomaineComptabilitéComptabilitéComptabilité
FamilleMCDMMCDMMCDM
Année d'origine198719831940s
Auteur d'origineRobert S. Kaplan and Robin CooperAmerican Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA)Managerial accounting theorists and practitioners
TypeAdvanced managerial accounting methodologyAudit procedure methodologyManagerial accounting and decision analysis framework
Source fondatriceCooper, R., & Kaplan, R. S. (1991). Profit priorities from activity-based costing. Harvard Business Review, 69(3), 130-135. DOI ↗American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA). (2015). Analytical Procedures. AU-C Section 520. AICPA Professional Standards. link ↗Garrison, R. H., Noreen, E. W., & Brewer, P. C. (2015). Managerial accounting (15th ed.). McGraw-Hill Education. link ↗
AliasABC System, Activity-Based Management, Activity CostingAnalytical Review, Ratio Analysis, Trend AnalysisBreak-Even Analysis, CVP Analysis, Contribution Margin Analysis
Apparentées242
RésuméActivity-Based Costing (ABC) is an advanced costing method developed by Robert Kaplan and Robin Cooper that allocates overhead and indirect costs to products or services based on their actual consumption of activities. Rather than using arbitrary allocation bases (e.g., machine hours or direct labor), ABC traces costs to specific activities (purchasing, machine setup, quality control) and then to products based on which products actually consume those activities, providing more accurate product costs for decision making.Analytical procedures are evaluations of financial information made by studying plausible relationships among both financial and non-financial data. Rather than testing individual transactions, auditors develop expectations about what numbers should be and compare them to actual results, investigating significant differences. This approach is both required during audit planning and is often more cost-effective than detailed transaction testing.Cost-Volume-Profit (CVP) Analysis is a foundational managerial accounting method that examines the relationships among costs, sales volume, and profit. By analyzing how changes in production volume, selling price, and cost structure affect profitability, managers can make informed decisions about pricing, production, and strategic direction. CVP analysis provides insight into break-even points and the profit generated at various activity levels.
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ScholarGateComparer des méthodes: Activity-Based Costing · Analytical Procedures in Auditing · Cost-Volume-Profit Analysis. Consulté le 2026-06-20 sur https://scholargate.app/fr/compare