Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/10321/4670
Title: The adoption of target costing as a contemporary management accounting technique in a public higher education institution : a case study of Durban University of Technology
Authors: Thango, Thobelani Sabelo 
Keywords: Target costing;Management accounting;Public higher education institution
Issue Date: 14-May-2022
Abstract: 
There is a growing need for public higher education institutions (HEIs) to opt for all cost
management tools following the government’s shortfalls in the budget allocation for
public HEIs. The focus should be on the suitable pricing methods that will consider the
students’ perception of the value of education and give fees that are reasonable and
accepted by students, while ensuring that the institution meets target returns. The
biggest concern is that fees are based on the cost-based pricing model. Cost-based
pricing always results in higher prices, where the accurate costs are unknown, despite
the strategy used to implement it. Furthermore, fees are based on historic cost models,
not on a continuously reworked costing model. Following cuts in the budget allocation
to HEIs, the institutions have increased fees rapidly to remain sustainable. A fee
calculated on uncertain historic costs while government support falls results in a rapid
increase in fees.
Target costing can assist in cutting down on unnecessary costs and ensure acceptable
fees for students. Target costing is a known cost management tool that assists in
ensuring costs management and keeping fees low. Despite the cuts in government
spending on HEIs, adoption of target costing will result in reasonable costs to keep the
fees low. Considering the limited empirical studies conducted on the adoption of target
costing in South African public HEIs, study's main aim is to investigate the factors that
influence the adoption of target costing in public HEIs, using the Durban University of
Technology (DUT) as the case study. Therefore, this study will massively contribute to
research pool on the adoption of target costing in HEIs.
The study used the quantitative research method with a sample of 52 Heads of
Departments and 15 finance staff. The research instrument employed was a
questionnaire, which was dominated by close-ended questions. The study was guided
by the positivist philosophy where data analysis was done using the Statistical
Package for Social Science (SPSS version 27 ®), in which descriptive and inferential
statistical analysis were undertaken.
The results have shown that DUT is using the full cost-plus method to account for fees.
The costs are allocated using the traditional absorption method. The results showed that target costing had not been fully used but exists in selected areas of the university.
Findings further reveal that costs to fees are subject to historic judgement, implying
that costs to fees are not reworked annually. While the fees increase, many
respondents perceive the current pricing methods to be the best for the university and
that the cost-plus pricing method is most appropriate to ensure it’s the university’s
sustainability.
Findings revealed that the variables which influenced the adoption of target costing at
the DUT included: size of DUT, management style and staff inclusion, information
system and technological advancement, vertical differentiation and centralisation,
formal support to accounting for adoption of target costing, resource adequacy,
intensity of competition, and government regulations. The respondents have disagreed
that sufficiency in the expertise of target costing has an influence in the partial adoption
of target costing at the DUT. The students’ perception on the value of education is also
not the reason that the concept of target costing exists in some parts of the DUT.
Overall, the results help to understand the current pricing method used at DUT. It has
further brought a clear indication of the factors that influence the adoption of target
costing and whether the elements of target costing exist at the university.
Description: 
Submitted in the fulfilment of the academic requirements of the degree of Master of Accounting (Cost and Management Accounting), Durban University of Technology, Durban, South Africa, 2022.
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10321/4670
DOI: https://doi.org/10.51415/10321/4670
Appears in Collections:Theses and dissertations (Accounting and Informatics)

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