Exam 9: Absorption Cost System
Exam 1: Introduction12 Questions
Exam 2: The Nature of Costs32 Questions
Exam 3: Opportunity Cost of Capital and Capital Budgeting17 Questions
Exam 4: Organizational Architecture14 Questions
Exam 5: Responsibility Accounting and Transfer Pricing26 Questions
Exam 6: Budgeting19 Questions
Exam 7: Cost Allocation: Theory25 Questions
Exam 8: Cost Allocation: Practices26 Questions
Exam 9: Absorption Cost System28 Questions
Exam 10: Criticisms of Absorption Cost Systems: Incentives to Overproduce19 Questions
Exam 11: Criticisms of Absorption Cost Systems: Inaccurate Product Costs17 Questions
Exam 12: Standard Costs: Direct Labor and Materials22 Questions
Exam 13: Overhead and Marketing Variances16 Questions
Exam 14: Management Accounting in a Changing Environment14 Questions
Select questions type
Hercules Hair Restorer Inc. (HHRI) makes many varieties of hair restoration products which are sold under well-known marketing labels. A single batch contains 10,000 8 oz. bottles and takes two days to make. Typically 15 batches are completed per month, for different brands. Basic cost data for the month of January appears below.
The new CEO has decided that 25% of the production target of 200 batches per year will be a new product, whose information appears below. Hair by Jove (new product) Qty per Bottle Qty per Batch Unit Cost Oil, fl. oz. 13/2 \ 3.00 Lotion. fl. oz. 3 \ 0.90 Jove potion. fl. oz. 1/8 \ 24.00 Hera scent 1/8 \ 60 Bottle, cap. label 1 \ 0.40 Direct labor. hour 60 \ 14.00 Machine hours 6 If the same dual rate scheme from Q5 is applied, which is true?

(Multiple Choice)
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Barbara Karloff Inc. recently set up as a microbrewery to manufacture a variety of beers, ales and stouts to customer specifications. The standard sizes per batch are as follows: stout, 5,000 gallons; ale, 8,000 gallons; and beer, 10,000 gallons. A beer batch takes six days to process, ale ten days and stout 14 days, the difference primarily attributable to the number of steps in the brewing process and the amount of time needed to mature the brew to the intended flavor specifications. By tradition, a new batch is started at 7 a.m., the start of a work day. It costs $1,800 in labor and variable overheads to set up each batch. The brewery's monthly fixed overheads are $220,000, which is allocated to products based on gallons. Other costing data appears below. Per gallon of output Beer Ale Stout Basic direct materials \ 0.40 \ 0.60 \ 0.90 Variable conversion costs \ 0.80 \ 1.00 \ 1.20 Bottle Label Case/Crate/Pack Other direct materials \ 0.05 \ 0.03 \ 0.25 Basic direct materials are applied at the start of the process. Direct materials costs are charged when used in production and variable conversion costs are applied evenly throughout the production process. All products are sold in 12-ounce bottles. Beer is sold with 24 bottles per case, but ale is packed by the dozen in mini-crates, and stout in 6-packs. In April, the first month of operations, BKI finished five batches of beer, three of ale and one of stout. Dribbles of liquids from one batch that do not completely fill a bottle are poured away. Bottles from a batch that do not make up a complete case, crate or pack are donated to the company monthly picnic. In reviewing the production records, you find that a batch of stout was started on the 23rd, a batch of ale on the 27th, and a batch of beer on the 29th. These batches constitute ending work in process (EWIP).
Which is true as far as equivalent units of output are concerned?
(Multiple Choice)
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Hercules Hair Restorer Inc. (HHRI) makes many varieties of hair restoration products which are sold under well-known marketing labels. A single batch contains 10,000 8 oz. bottles and takes two days to make. Typically 15 batches are completed per month, for different brands. Basic cost data for the month of January appears below. Hair by Bottle Batch Cost January's other Zeus per expenses Oil, fl. oz. 2 \ 3 Supervision \ 8,000 Lotion, fl. oz. 4 \ 1 Indirect materials \ 2,200 Zeus potion, fl. oz. 1/4 \ 24 Equipment deprec \& repairs \ 14,520 Alcemena scent 1/16 \ 48 Plant manager's salary \ 6.500 Bottle. cap, label 1 \ 0.4 Utilities \ 1.800 Direct labor, hour 50 \ 14 \ 33,020 Machine hours 8
If overheads for January are calculated per machine hour, which is false?
(Multiple Choice)
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The Alphonse Company allocates fixed overhead costs by machine hours and variable overhead costs by direct labor hours. At the beginning of the year the company expects fixed overhead costs to be $600,000 and variable costs to be $800,000. The expected machine hours are 6,000 and the expected direct labor hours are 80,000. The actual fixed overhead costs are $700,000 and the actual variable overhead costs are $750,000. The actual machine hours during the year are 5,500 and the actual direct labor hours are 90,000.
Required:
a. How much overhead is allocated?
b. What is the over/under-absorbed overhead?
(Essay)
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Hercules Hair Restorer Inc. (HHRI) makes many varieties of hair restoration products which are sold under well-known marketing labels. A single batch contains 10,000 8 oz. bottles and takes two days to make. Typically 15 batches are completed per month, for different brands. Basic cost data for the month of January appears below. Hair by Bottle Batch Cost January's other Zeus per expenses Oil, fl. oz. 2 \ 3 Supervision \ 8,000 Lotion, fl. oz. 4 \ 1 Indirect materials \ 2,200 Zeus potion, fl. oz. 1/4 \ 24 Equipment deprec \& repairs \ 14,520 Alcemena scent 1/16 \ 48 Plant manager's salary \ 6.500 Bottle. cap, label 1 \ 0.4 Utilities \ 1.800 Direct labor, hour 50 \ 14 \ 33,020 Machine hours 8
The firm uses actual absorption costing and allocates overhead on the basis of direct labor hours. For batches made in January, which is true?
(Multiple Choice)
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A computer manufacturer has the following account balances at the end of the year. Work-in-process \ 100,000 Finished goods 800,000 Cost of goods sold 2,000,000 Total \ 2,900,000 These accounts contain $500,000 of allocated overhead. Actual overhead, however, is $600,000.
Required:
What are the account balances after prorating the under-absorbed overhead?
(Essay)
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Employees' Incentives to Mis-state Product Costs
Chris Maynard, one of Owens Metal Products' three customer engineers, is reviewing the costs of the radar housings for Lingle Aerospace (LA). LA is one of Maynard's largest accounts and the radar housing is a fabricated piece of sheet metal LA uses to assemble an aircraft's radar system installed in the nose of the plane. In reviewing the detailed cost record for this job, Maynard is concerned that the direct labor posted to the job appears too high. He estimated the direct labor in the welding department to be six hours per batch of 130 units. But the job sheet reports that 9.5 hours were used.
Background
Owens Metal Products is a custom machine shop that bids on orders and produces sheet metal parts in batches. It was founded 30 years ago by two tool and die makers in their mid-30s: Jack Spence and Don Carter. Spence and Carter were previously employed by a national automobile company. They started Owens to make parts for local large manufacturing firms that did not have sufficient capacity to meet short-run production schedules. Now Owens competes by supplying certain types of parts more cheaply than large companies can produce them internally. It does this by (1) bidding on jobs with run lengths that match Owens's machine configurations, (2) employing nonunion labor, and (3) avoiding much of the overhead existing in big factories. Owens Metal Products now manufactures sheet metal parts used in a variety of office products, computers, and printers. The firm has grown in recent years and has benefited from the outsourcing movement whereby large firms seeking to reduce their manufacturing costs outsource noncritical metal fabricated parts.
Owens's single plant has a number of sheet metal presses (the largest being a 500-ton press), numerically controlled cutting and drilling machines, lathes, drill presses, and electric arc welders. Engineers contact customers to see if they have parts they are willing to outsource. Usually, the customer is introducing a new model and has not produced the tools necessary to fabricate the part internally. Owens's customer engineer works with the client on the manufacturing and design specifications for the part and submits a bid to produce and deliver a set number of parts over a given time period at a fixed price. In the process of preparing the bid, the customer engineer forecasts the cost of the job by estimating direct labor, direct material, and machine time required in each factory department.
Due to intense competition from other firms (as large office equipment companies constantly shift production worldwide to find the lowest-cost, highest-quality producers), shops such as Owens have high variability in volumes. In response to these volume changes, Owens is always laying off and rehiring employees. If Owens loses a large contract, it often requires six to nine months to replace the work. In the meantime, employees are laid off until new work can be found.
Two hundred employees now work at Owens, including sales, administrative, and factory employees. Besides production workers, Owens has a maintenance and janitorial staff. To improve cost competitiveness, Spence and Carter have been trying to get production employees to take over more of the maintenance and clean-up tasks when they have idle time. They would also like to see the workers cross-trained in more production and maintenance tasks to help better balance work flow in the factory. These actions will raise productivity and reduce costs. However, the attempts at cross-training have achieved very limited success.
Compensationsystem
Owens does not have a formal pay-for-performance or bonus system. All employees are paid straight salary with annual raises. Customer engineers do not receive commissions for sales. In good years, raises are higher. Management has explored incentive pay and piece-rate systems. They have concluded that the constantly changing product mix would cause such systems to be very expensive to implement and maintain.
At a sales staff meeting in February, Phil Matson, Owens's vice president of operation, mentioned they were going to award bonuses to the customer engineers if they could achieve their target sales forecasts. In July, Chris Maynard, whose sales were up 22 percent over the previous year, asked Matson whether total sales were ahead of the target needed for the bonus. Matson said that while sales were up for the year, the plant still had excess capacity and it appeared they would not achieve the forecast.
Accountingsystem
A job order cost system is used to accumulate direct labor and direct materials to individual jobs. At the end of the day, employees fill out a time sheet indicating the jobs they worked on and the time spent on each job. All the indirect costs are accumulated into a separate overhead cost pool for each factory department (pressing, drilling, and welding). The indirect costs for each department include equipment depreciation and lease charges, the department supervisor's salary, employees' idle time, and allocated utilities and occupancy charges (property taxes, plant building depreciation). Then, separate overhead rates are set for each department using direct labor hours as the allocation base. When an employee posts time to a particular job, the overhead rate for the employee's department multiplied by the employee's time charged to the job is the amount of overhead for that department charged to the job.
ProblemwiththeLingleAerospacejob
Chris Maynard contacts Phil Sanchez, supervisor of the welding department, and asks about the discrepancy between Maynard's estimate of 6.0 hours in the welding department and the 9.5 hours actually charged to the LA contract. Sanchez admits that there were two other jobs in the welding department at that time and that it is possible the employee had mistakenly charged some time to the LA contract instead of the other jobs.
Maynard then asks Linda Rawlings, supervisor of the drilling department, about the 67 labor hours charged to LA. Maynard had estimated the drilling time to be 53 hours for the batch. Rawlings said she was too busy now to look into the matter but she would contact him later. That was two weeks ago. Maynard is concerned that if the costs charged to the LA contract are too high, Phil Matson will ask LA for a higher price. If this happens, LA might shift the radar housing from Owens to another supplier.
When Jack Spence learned of the accounting errors on the LA account, he replied, "I don't see any problem. As long as the time cards are charged to jobs, our tax returns are right."
Required:
a. Identify various problems at Owens.
b. What improvements would you suggest Owens implement?
(Essay)
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Barbara Karloff Inc. recently set up as a microbrewery to manufacture a variety of beers, ales and stouts to customer specifications. The standard sizes per batch are as follows: stout, 5,000 gallons; ale, 8,000 gallons; and beer, 10,000 gallons. A beer batch takes six days to process, ale ten days and stout 14 days, the difference primarily attributable to the number of steps in the brewing process and the amount of time needed to mature the brew to the intended flavor specifications. By tradition, a new batch is started at 7 a.m., the start of a work day. It costs $1,800 in labor and variable overheads to set up each batch. The brewery's monthly fixed overheads are $220,000, which is allocated to products based on gallons. Other costing data appears below. Per gallon of output Beer Ale Stout Basic direct materials \ 0.40 \ 0.60 \ 0.90 Variable conversion costs \ 0.80 \ 1.00 \ 1.20 Bottle Label Case/Crate/Pack Other direct materials \ 0.05 \ 0.03 \ 0.25 With respect to direct materials, which is true for the first month of operations?
(Multiple Choice)
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