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Idle time variance

The idle time variance is the cost of direct-labour hours paid but not productively worked, calculated as idle hours multiplied by the standard wage rate; separating it from the efficiency variance prevents uncontrollable stoppages from.

ByHoang TruongUpdated

FrameworkStandard costing and variance analysis

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A machine breakdown leaves the line idle for 40 hours that workers are still paid for at the €18 standard wage rate. The idle time variance is 40 hours times €18, giving €720, always adverse because paid time produced no output. Removing it from the efficiency variance leaves a residual that reflects only genuine workforce performance.

Where it fits
SubjectManagerial AccountingAdvancedTopicStandard Costing & Variance AnalysisAdvanced

The formula

LaTeX
ITV=HI×SR\text{ITV} = H_I \times SR

Variables

idle hours — direct-labour hours paid but not productively worked during the period (hours)
standard wage rate per hour for the grade of labour concerned (€ per hour)

Always adverse (cost incurred with no productive output). Separating idle time from the efficiency variance prevents uncontrollable stoppages — machine breakdowns, material shortages — from distorting the assessment of workforce performance.

Idle time variance — Edlintics Glossary