Abstract The article is a comment on an article "Matrix Theory and Cost Allocation," by researchers T.H. Williams and C.H. Griffin, published in the July 1964 issue of the journal "The Accounting Review." According to the author, Williams and Griffin were the first to select this topic as an illustration of the application of matrix algebra to accounting problems. The model presented by Williams and Griffin is a matrix formulation of the popular simultaneous equations method of past years. It was pointed out that the aggregate cost of service departments after allocation in the Williams and Griffin model is more than the combined direct cost before allocation. The scope of this paper has two dimensions: first, to attempt to clarify the matrix algebra approaches that have already been posed and place them in perspective; second, to present a new matrix model of reciprocal service cost allocation and relate it to those previously presented. It would be assumed that each service department will have some of its cost allocated to some of the producing departments.
Minch et al. (Sat,) studied this question.