Managerial Accounting: Tools for Business Decision Making Exercises

E4-11 (a,b) |
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Sorce Instrument, Inc. manufactures two products: missile range instruments and space pressure gauges. During April, 50 range instruments and 300 pressure gauges were produced, and overhead costs of $89,500 were estimated. An analysis of estimated overhead costs reveals the following activities.
Activity |
Cost Driver |
Total Cost |
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1. Materials handling |
Number of requisitions |
$35,000 |
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2. Machine setups |
Number of setups |
27,500 |
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3. Quality inspections |
Number of inspections |
27,000 |
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$89,500 |
The cost driver volume for each product was as follows.
Cost Driver |
Instruments |
Gauges |
Total |
||||
Number of requisitions |
400 |
600 |
1,000 |
||||
Number of setups |
200 |
300 |
500 |
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Number of inspections |
200 |
400 |
600 |
a) Determine the overhead rate for each activity.
b) Assign the manufacturing overhead costs for April to the two products using activity-based costing.
P4-3A (a,c) |
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Skaros Stairs Co. of Moore designs and builds factory-made premium wooden stairs for homes. The manufactured stair components (spindles, risers, hangers, hand rails) permit installation of stairs of varying lengths and widths. All are of white oak wood. Budgeted manufacturing overhead costs for the year 2011 are as follows.
Overhead Cost Pools |
Amount |
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Purchasing |
$ 57,000 |
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Handling materials |
82,000 |
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Production (cutting, milling, finishing) |
210,000 |
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Setting up machines |
85,000 |
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Inspecting |
90,000 |
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Inventory control (raw materials and finished goods) |
126,000 |
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Utilities |
180,000 |
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Total budget overhead costs |
$830,000 |
For the last 4 years, Skaros Stairs Co. has been charging overhead
to products on the basis of machine hours. For the year 2011, 100,000 machine
hours are budgeted.
Anthony Morse, owner-manager of Skaros Stairs Co., recently directed his
accountant, Neal Seagren, to implement the activity-based costing system that
he has repeatedly proposed. At Anthony Morse's request, Neal and the production
foreman identify the following cost drivers and their usage for the previously
budgeted overhead cost pools.
Activity Cost Pools |
Cost Drivers |
Expected |
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Purchasing |
Number of orders |
600 |
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Handling materials |
Number of moves |
8,000 |
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Production (cutting, milling, finishing) |
Direct labor hours |
100,000 |
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Setting up machines |
Number of setups |
1,250 |
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Inspecting |
Number of inspections |
6,000 |
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Inventory control (raw materials and finished goods) |
Number of components |
168,000 |
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Utilities |
Square feet occupied |
90,000 |
David Hannon, sales manager, has received an order for 280 stairs from Community Builders, Inc., a large housing development contractor. At David's request, Neal prepares cost estimates for producing components for 280 stairs so David can submit a contract price per stair to Community Builders. He accumulates the following data for the production of 280 stairways.
Direct materials |
$103,600 |
|
Direct labor |
$112,000 |
|
Machine hours |
14,500 |
|
Direct labor hours |
5,000 |
|
Number of purchase orders |
60 |
|
Number of material moves |
800 |
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Number of machine setups |
100 |
|
Number of inspections |
450 |
|
Number of components |
16,000 |
|
Number of square feet occupied |
8,000 |
Compute the predetermined overhead rate using traditional costing with machine hours as the basis.(Enter answer to 2 decimal places, e.g. 10.50.)
What is the manufacturing cost per stairway under traditional costing?(Use rounded amount from part (a). Round answer to 2 decimal places, e.g. 10.50.)
P4-4A (a-d) |
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Polzin Corporation produces two grades of wine from grapes that it
buys from California growers. It produces and sells roughly 3,000,000 liters
per year of a low-cost, high-volume product called CoolDay. It sells this in
600,000 5-liter jugs. Polzin also produces and sells roughly 300,000 liters per
year of a low-volume, high-cost product called LiteMist. LiteMist is sold in
1-liter bottles. Based on recent data, the CoolDay product has not been as
profitable as LiteMist. Management is considering dropping the inexpensive
CoolDay line so it can focus more attention on the LiteMist product. The
LiteMist product already demands considerably more attention than the CoolDay
line.
Greg Kagen, president and founder of Polzin, is skeptical about this idea. He
points out that for many decades the company produced only the CoolDay line,
and that it was always quite profitable. It wasn't until the company started
producing the more complicated LiteMist wine that the profitability of CoolDay
declined. Prior to the introduction of LiteMist, the company had simple
equipment, simple growing and production procedures, and virtually no need for
quality control. Because LiteMist is bottled in 1-liter bottles, it requires
considerably more time and effort, both to bottle and to label and box than
does CoolDay. The company must bottle and handle 5 times as many bottles of
LiteMist to sell the same quantity as CoolDay. CoolDay requires 1 month of
aging; LiteMist requires 1 year. CoolDay requires cleaning and inspection of
equipment every 10,000 liters; LiteMist requires such maintenance every 600
liters.
Greg has asked the Accounting department to prepare an analysis of the cost per
liter using the traditional costing approach and using activity-based costing.
The following information was collected.
CoolDay |
LiteMist |
||||
Direct materials per liter |
$0.40 |
$1.20 |
|||
Direct labor cost per liter |
$0.25 |
$0.50 |
|||
Direct labor hours per liter |
0.05 |
0.09 |
|||
Total direct labor hours |
150,000 |
27,000 |
Activity Cost Pool |
Cost Driver |
Estimated Overhead |
Expected |
Expected
Use of |
||||||||||
Activity Cost Pool |
Cost Driver |
Estimated Overhead |
Expected |
Expected
Use of |
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CoolDay |
LiteMist |
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Grape processing |
Cart of grapes |
$145,860 |
6,600 |
6,000 |
600 |
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Aging |
Total months |
396,000 |
6,600,000 |
3,000,000 |
3,600,000 |
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Bottling and corking |
Number of bottles |
270,000 |
900,000 |
600,000 |
300,000 |
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Labeling and boxing |
Number of bottles |
189,000 |
900,000 |
600,000 |
300,000 |
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Maintain and inspect equipment |
Number of inspections |
240,800 |
800 |
350 |
450 |
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$1,241,660 |
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Under traditional product costing using direct labor hours, compute the total manufacturing cost per liter of both products.(Round computations and final answers to 3 decimal places, e.g. 2.250.)
Under ABC, prepare a schedule showing the computation of the activity-based overhead rates (per cost driver).(Enter overhead rate to 2 decimal places, e.g. 10.50.)
Prepare a schedule assigning each activity's overhead cost pool to each product, based on the use of cost drivers. What is the overhead cost per liter?(Enter overhead rate to 2 decimal places, e.g. 10.50 and round overhead cost per liter to 3 decimal places, e.g. 2.250.)
Compute the total manufacturing cost per liter for both products under ABC.(Round answers to 3 decimal places, e.g. 2.250.)

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Solution: Solutions to Managerial Accounting: Tools for Business Decision Making