Financial And Managerial Accounting
15th Edition
ISBN: 9781337902663
Author: WARREN, Carl S.
Publisher: Cengage Learning,
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Chapter 24, Problem 3E
To determine
Identify a cost driver that could be used for allocating the given support department costs to the profit center.
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Chapter 24 Solutions
Financial And Managerial Accounting
Ch. 24 - Differentiate between centralized and...Ch. 24 - Differentiate between a profit center and an...Ch. 24 - Weyerhaeuser Co. (WY) developed a system that...Ch. 24 - What is the major shortcoming of using operating...Ch. 24 - In a decentralized company in which the divisions...Ch. 24 - Prob. 6DQCh. 24 - (a) Explain how return on investment might lead a...Ch. 24 - Prob. 8DQCh. 24 - When is the negotiated price approach preferred...Ch. 24 - Prob. 10DQ
Ch. 24 - Budgetary performance for cost center Vinton...Ch. 24 - Support department allocations The centralized...Ch. 24 - Prob. 3BECh. 24 - Profit margin, investment turnover, and ROI Briggs...Ch. 24 - Residual income Obj. The Commercial Division of...Ch. 24 - Transfer pricing The materials used by the...Ch. 24 - Budget performance reports for cost centers...Ch. 24 - The following data were summarized from the...Ch. 24 - Prob. 3ECh. 24 - Prob. 4ECh. 24 - Service department charges In divisional income...Ch. 24 - Varney Corporation, a manufacturer of electronics...Ch. 24 - Horton Technology has two divisions, Consumer and...Ch. 24 - Rocky Mountain Airlines Inc. has two divisions...Ch. 24 - Championship Sports Inc. operates two divisionsthe...Ch. 24 - The operating income and the amount of invested...Ch. 24 - The operating income and the amount of invested...Ch. 24 - Prob. 12ECh. 24 - The condensed income statement for the Consumer...Ch. 24 - Prob. 14ECh. 24 - Data are presented in the following table of...Ch. 24 - Prob. 16ECh. 24 - Materials used by the Instrument Division of...Ch. 24 - Prob. 18ECh. 24 - GHT Tech Inc. sells electronics over the Internet....Ch. 24 - Profit center responsibility reporting for a...Ch. 24 - Divisional income statements and return on...Ch. 24 - Effect of proposals on divisional performance A...Ch. 24 - Divisional performance analysis and evaluation The...Ch. 24 - Prob. 6PACh. 24 - Budget performance report for a cost center The...Ch. 24 - Profit center responsibility reporting for a...Ch. 24 - Divisional income statements and return on...Ch. 24 - Effect of proposals on divisional performance A...Ch. 24 - Prob. 5PBCh. 24 - Prob. 6PBCh. 24 - Kelly Kitchens operates both franchised and...Ch. 24 - Panera Bread Company (PNRA) operates over 2,000...Ch. 24 - Papa Johns International, Inc. (PZZA), operates...Ch. 24 - Panera Bread Company (PNRA) operates over 2,000...Ch. 24 - McDonalds Corporation (MCD) operates company-owned...Ch. 24 - Prob. 1TIFCh. 24 - Prob. 2TIFCh. 24 - Communication The Norse Division of Gridiron...Ch. 24 - The three divisions of Yummy Foods are Snack...Ch. 24 - Last Resort Industries Inc. is a privately held...Ch. 24 - Sara Bellows, manager of the telecommunication...Ch. 24 - Most firms allocate corporate and other support...Ch. 24 - Prob. 3CMACh. 24 - Prob. 4CMA
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- The actions listed next are associated with either an activity-based operational control system or a traditional operational control system: a. Budgeted costs for the maintenance department are compared with the actual costs of the maintenance department. b. The maintenance department manager receives a bonus for beating budget. c. The costs of resources are traced to activities and then to products. d. The purchasing department is set up as a responsibility center. e. Activities are identified and listed. f. Activities are categorized as adding or not adding value to the organization. g. A standard for a products material usage cost is set and compared against the products actual materials usage cost. h. The cost of performing an activity is tracked over time. i. The distance between moves is identified as the cause of materials handling cost. j. A purchasing agent is rewarded for buying parts below the standard price set by the company. k. The cost of the materials handling activity is reduced dramatically by redesigning the plant layout. l. An investigation is undertaken to find out why the actual labor cost for the production of 1,000 units is greater than the labor standard allowed. m. The percentage of defective units is calculated and tracked over time. n. Engineering has been given the charge to find a way to reduce setup time by 75 percent. o. The manager of the receiving department lays off two receiving clerks so that the fourth-quarter budget can be met. Required: Classify the preceding actions as belonging to either an activity-based operational control system or a traditional control system. Explain why you classified each action as you did.arrow_forwardDescribe the concept of a cost center and, using a specific organization, give an example of how this might be used to achieve the strategic goals of the organization.arrow_forwardThe second stage of customer-based activity-based costing entails the assignment of: a. resource costs to sales departments. b. resources costs to distribution channels. c. customer-related activity costs to products. d. customer-related activity costs to customers.arrow_forward
- For each cost pool, identify an appropriate cost driver. A. order department B. accounts receivable processing C. catering D. raw material inventoryarrow_forwardIdentifying basis for distribution of service department costs What would be the appropriate basis for distributing the costs of each of the following service departments to the user departments? Building maintenance Inspection and packing Machine repair Human resources Purchasing Shipping Raw materials storeroomarrow_forwardFor each of the following situations, two scenarios are described, labeled A and B. Choose which scenario is descriptive of a setting corresponding to activity-based responsibility accounting and which is descriptive of financial-based responsibility accounting. Provide a brief commentary on the differences between the two systems for each situation, addressing the possible advantages of the activity-based view over the financial-based view. Situation 1 A: The purchasing manager, receiving manager, and accounts payable manager are given joint responsibility for procurement. The charges given to the group of managers are to reduce costs of acquiring materials, decrease the time required to obtain materials from outside suppliers, and reduce the number of purchasing mistakes (e.g., wrong type of materials or the wrong quantities ordered). B: The plant manager commended the manager of the Grinding Department for increasing his departments machine utilization ratesand doing so without exceeding the departments budget. The plant manager then asked other department managers to make an effort to obtain similar efficiency improvements. Situation 2 A: Delivery mistakes had been reduced by 70 percent, saving over 40,000 per year. Furthermore, delivery time to customers had been cut by two days. According to company policy, the team responsible for the savings was given a bonus equal to 25 percent of the savings attributable to improving delivery quality. Company policy also provided a salary increase of 1 percent for every day saved in delivery time. B: Bill Johnson, manager of the Product Development Department, was pleased with his departments performance on the last quarters projects. They had managed to complete all projects under budget, virtually assuring Bill of a fat bonus, just in time to help with this years Christmas purchases. Situation 3 A: Harvey, dont worry about the fact that your department is producing at only 70 percent capacity. Increasing your output would simply pile up inventory in front of the next production department. That would be costly for the organization as a whole. Sometimes, one department must reduce its performance so that the performance of the entire organization can improve. B: Susan, I am concerned about the fact that your departments performance measures have really dropped over the past quarter. Labor usage variances are unfavorable, and I also see that your machine utilization rates are down. Now, I know you are not a bottleneck department, but I get a lot of flack when my managers efficiency ratings drop. Situation 4 A: Colby was muttering to himself. He had just received last quarters budgetary performance report. Once again, he had managed to spend more than budgeted for both materials and labor. The real question now was how to improve his performance for the next quarter. B: Great! Cycle time had been reduced and, at the same time, the number of defective products had been cut by 35 percent. Cutting the number of defects reduced production costs by more than planned. Trends were favorable for all three performance measures. Situation 5 A: Cambry was furious. An across-the-board budget cut! How can they expect me to provide the computer services required on less money? Management is convinced that costs are out of control, but I would like to know whereat least in my department! B: After a careful study of the Accounts Payable Department, it was discovered that 80 percent of an accounts payable clerks time was spent resolving discrepancies between the purchase order, receiving document, and the suppliers invoice. Other activities such as recording and preparing checks consumed only 20 percent of a clerks time. A redesign of the procurement process eliminated virtually all discrepancies and produced significant cost savings. Situation 6 A: Five years ago, the management of Breeann Products commissioned an outside engineering consulting firm to conduct a time-and-motion study so that labor efficiency standards could be developed and used in production. These labor efficiency standards are still in use today and are viewed by management as an important indicator of productive efficiency. B: Janet was quite satisfied with this quarters labor performance. When compared with the same quarter of last year, labor productivity had increased by 23 percent. Most of the increase was due to a new assembly approach suggested by production line workers. She was also pleased to see that materials productivity had increased. The increase in materials productivity was attributed to reducing scrap because of improved quality. Situation 7 A: The system converts materials into products, not people at work stations. Therefore, process efficiency is more important than labor efficiencybut we also must pay particular attention to those who use the products we produce, whether inside or outside the firm. B: I was quite happy to see a revenue increase of 15 percent over last year, especially when the budget called for a 10 percent increase. However, after reading the recent copy of our trade journal, I now wonder whether we are doing so well. I found out that the market expanded by 30 percent, and our leading competitor increased its sales by 40 percent.arrow_forward
- Classify the following cost drivers as structural, executional, or operational. a. Number of plants b. Number of moves c. Degree of employee involvement d. Capacity utilization e. Number of product lines f. Number of distribution channels g. Engineering hours h. Direct labor hours i. Scope j. Product configuration k. Quality management approach l. Number of receiving orders m. Number of defective units n. Employee experience o. Types of process technologies p. Number of purchase orders q. Type and efficiency of layout r. Scale s. Number of functional departments t. Number of planning meetingsarrow_forwardExplain why the Accounting Department should be responsible for producing quality cost reports.arrow_forwardWhat are the two most frequently used methods of distributing service department costs to production departments?arrow_forward
- COMPUTING OPERATING INCOME The sales, cost of goods sold, and total operating expenses of departments A and B of Ash Company are as follows: Compute the departmental operating income for each department.arrow_forwardClassify each of the following performance measures into the balanced scorecard perspective to which it relates: financial perspective, internal operations perspective, learning and growth perspective, or customer perspective. A. Employee satisfaction surveys B. Units of waste per production process, uniformity of products and inventory control C. Number of energy-efficient bulbs replaced D. Management training course certificates awarded E. Divisional profit F. Number of customer referralsarrow_forwardDefine and explain the two major subsystems of the cost management information system.arrow_forward
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