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Assessment requirements: at least 50% obtained from midterm test(s), submitted version of the seminar paper accepted by the teacher Students who fail to score at least 50% of the midterm test(s) can write a summarized test with the passing score of 60%. Students are allowed to resubmit their seminar paper (once).
Exam: written test Only students who obtained assessment (“zápočet”) can take the exam. Last update: Čámská Dagmar (10.02.2021)
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R: GARRISON, R.H., NOREEN, E.W., BREWER, P.C. Managerial Accounting. 16th Ed., New York: McGraw-Hill, 2018. R: MERCHANT, K.A., van der STEDE, W.A. Management Control Systems. 4th Ed., London: Pearson, 2017. R: SAMUELSON, W.F., MARKS, S.G. Managerial Economics. 8th Ed., Hoboken, John Wiley, 2015. A: KAPLAN, R.S., ANDERSON, S.R. Time Driven Activity-Based Costing. Boston: Harvard Business School Press, 2007. A: DAVILA, T., EPSTEIN, K. J., SHELTON, R.: Making Innovation Work, How to Manage It, Measure It and Profit from It. London: Pearson, 2012. Last update: Čámská Dagmar (10.02.2021)
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1. Business objectives, core enterprise activities and their impact on long-term value creation. 2. Business operations, costs and their classification. Short-term and long-term cost functions, technology choice. Break-even and CVP analyses. 3. Production capacity, market capacity, price elasticity, and their impacts on rational production volume decision-making. The price floor in the context of future forecasts. Pricing. 4. Cost management. Impacts of managerial decisions. Operational leverage as a measure of business risk. Relationship between operational and financial leverage, business risk. 5. Costing – costing formula. Absorption costing, variable costing, their advantages and disadvantages, possibilities of application. Variable costing as the tool of portfolio analysis. 6. Absorption costing – different approaches, their application. Single costing, costing based on ratios, allocation base approach, subtraction costing. Specific costing approaches such as target costing and activity-based costing (ABC). 7. Working capital, its structure and optimization in the context of operational cash flow and operational management. 8. Budgets, their classification and applications. Reasons of deviations, deviation analysis, prevention, and corrective actions. 9. Performance analysis, Key Performance Indicators, Benchmarking. 10. Management control, its objectives, principles, and basic concepts. Controller – profile, job description, main tasks, competencies and responsibilities. 11. Management control systems and tools. 12. Management control, its position in operational and strategic management. Product life cycle analysis. 13. Management system feedback, control cycle. 14. Reporting, data processing principles and practical methodology. Last update: Čámská Dagmar (10.02.2021)
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