No they are not the same
things. So I don’t agree at all and explain it bellow.
Differential
cost: Differential cost is the difference between the cost of two alternative decisions, or of a change in output
levels. The concept is used to reach decisions about which alternatives
to pursue, and which to drop. The concept can be particularly useful in step costing situations, where producing one additional unit of output
may require a substantial additional cost.
Variable
cost: A corporate
expense that varies with production output. Variable costs are those costs that
vary depending on a company's production volume; they rise as production increases
and fall as production decreases. Variable costs differ from fixed costs such
as rent, advertising, insurance and office supplies, which tend to remain the
same regardless of production output. Fixed costs and variable costs comprise
total cost.
Differential costs are ones that differ
between different alternatives. Differential costs are used interchangeably
with the terms avoidable, incremental, and relevant costs. However, variable
costs are simply ones that vary with different activity levels. They do not
necessarily differ between alternatives.
So, Variable costs can’t be differential cost. That’s why I
don’t agree with this statement
tnx
উত্তরমুছুনধন্ন্যবাদ
উত্তরমুছুনgood answer.
উত্তরমুছুনThank u.
উত্তরমুছুনThank you very much... I am so lucky to have this answer
উত্তরমুছুনthanks ..!!
উত্তরমুছুন