COST ACCOUNTING PLUS NEW MYACCOUNTING L
16th Edition
ISBN: 9780134476353
Author: Horngren
Publisher: PEARSON
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Chapter 13, Problem 13.27P
Value engineering, target pricing, and target costs. Westerly Cosmetics manufactures and sells a variety of makeup and beauty products. The company has developed its own patented formula for a new antiaging cream The company president wants to make sure the product is priced competitively because its purchase will also likely increase sales of other products. The company anticipates that it will sell 400,000 units of the product in the first year with the following estimated costs:
Product design and licensing | $1,700,000 |
Direct materials | 4,000,000 |
Direct manufacturing labor | 1,600,000 |
Variable manufacturing |
400,000 |
Fixed manufacturing overhead | 2,500,000 |
Fixed marketing | 3,000,000 |
- 1. The company believes that it can successfully sell the product for $45 a bottle. The company’s target operating income is 30% of revenue. Calculate the target full cost of producing the 400,000 units. Does the cost estimate meet the company’s requirements? Is value engineering needed? Required
- 2. A component of the direct materials cost requires the nectar of a specific plant in South America. If the company could eliminate this special ingredient, the materials cost would decrease by 25%. However, this would require design changes of $300,000 to engineer a chemical equivalent of the ingredient. Will this design change allow the product to meet its target cost?
- 3. The company president does not believe that the formula should be altered for fear it will tarnish the company’s brand. She prefers that the company become more efficient in manufacturing the product. If fixed
manufacturing costs can be reduced by $250,000 and variable direct manufacturing labor costs are reduced by $1 per unit, will Westerly achieve its target cost? - 4. Would you recommend the company follow the proposed solution in requirement 2 or requirement 3?
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Check out a sample textbook solutionChapter 13 Solutions
COST ACCOUNTING PLUS NEW MYACCOUNTING L
Ch. 13 - What are the three major influences on pricing...Ch. 13 - Relevant costs for pricing decisions are full...Ch. 13 - Describe four purposes of cost allocation.Ch. 13 - How is activity-based costing useful for pricing...Ch. 13 - Describe two alternative approaches to long-run...Ch. 13 - What is a target cost per unit?Ch. 13 - Describe value engineering and its role in target...Ch. 13 - Give two examples of a value-added cost and two...Ch. 13 - It is not important for a company to distinguish...Ch. 13 - Prob. 13.10Q
Ch. 13 - Describe three alternative cost-plus pricing...Ch. 13 - Give two examples in which the difference in the...Ch. 13 - What is life-cycle budgeting?Ch. 13 - What are three benefits of using a product...Ch. 13 - Prob. 13.15QCh. 13 - Which of the following statements regarding price...Ch. 13 - Value-added, non-value-added costs. The Magill...Ch. 13 - Target operating income, value-added costs,...Ch. 13 - Target prices, target costs, activity-based...Ch. 13 - Target costs, effect of product-design changes on...Ch. 13 - Target costs, effect of process-design changes on...Ch. 13 - Cost-plus target return on investment pricing....Ch. 13 - Cost-plus, target pricing, working backward....Ch. 13 - Life-cycle budgeting and costing. Arnold...Ch. 13 - Considerations other than cost in pricing...Ch. 13 - Cost-plus, target pricing, working backward. The...Ch. 13 - Value engineering, target pricing, and target...Ch. 13 - Target service costs, value engineering,...Ch. 13 - Cost-plus, target return on investment pricing....Ch. 13 - Cost-plus, time and materials, ethics. C S...Ch. 13 - Cost-plus and market-based pricing. Georgia Temps,...Ch. 13 - Cost-plus and market-based pricing. (CMA, adapted)...Ch. 13 - Life-cycle costing. Maximum Metal Recycling and...Ch. 13 - Airline pricing, considerations other than cost in...Ch. 13 - Prob. 13.35PCh. 13 - Ethics and pricing. Instyle Interior Designs has...Ch. 13 - Value engineering, target pricing, and locked-in...
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