ABC is an accounting system that attaches costs to services and products based on the resources consumed in providing them. Costs of activities are traceable to the product or service for which they are performed. Overhead costs are traced to a particular product or service rather than spread arbitrarily. True cost can be determined more accurately than was previously available with traditional accounting. An ABC system alolows effective measurement of how resources are being used and how all activities contribute to the cost of a product or service.

Information from a given ABC system can be used to determine a competitive price for a product or service, develop budgets, future cost estimates and measuring performance. But ABC is more than a superior accounting system. It allows management to understand what triggers costs and how to manage them. Unlike traditional accounting systems, ABC is a cost management system that provides a matrix to accurately quantify consumed resources triggered by activities and activities triggered by processes. A company thus has clear insight into the efficiency with which it converts resources into value.

Having costs broken out to a detailed level allows cost drivers to stand out. This visibility enables a company to identify activities with disproportionately large cost and little value added so these activities can be eliminated or reduced. ABC can help employees make cost conscious decisions at all levels of the company and promotes proactive cost reduction rather than reactive performance problem investigation. When ABC is used as a management system, it is a powerful tool for rethinking and improving product or service s, services, processes and market strategies. For example, when overhead costs are allocated directly to product or service s, managers often find that a particular product or service is not profitable which may lead to a change in business strategy. ABC provides the means to allow a company to decide if resource consumption for a particular product or service is consistent with its business objectives.

Sources:
1. Burk, Karen B., Webster, Douglas W., Activity Based Costing & Performance, (Fairfax, VA, American Management Systems, Inc. 1994)
2. Dekker, Ltd., Dekker Trakker Activity Based Cost Management System, 1994
3. Ness, Joseph A., Cucuzza, Thomas G., "Tapping the Full Potential of ABC", Harvard Business Review, July-August 1995.
4. O'Guin, Michael C., The Complete Guide to Activity Based Costing, (Englewwod Cliffs, NJ, Prentice Hall, 1991)