Managerial Accounting: Tools for Business Decision Making
7th Edition
ISBN: 9781118334331
Author: Jerry J. Weygandt, Paul D. Kimmel, Donald E. Kieso
Publisher: WILEY
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Textbook Question
Chapter 4, Problem 4.1DI
Indicate whether the following statements are true or false.
(a) The reasoning behind ABC cost allocation is that products consume activities and activities consume resources.
(b) Activity-based costing is an approach for allocating direct labor to products.
(c) In today's increasingly automated environment, direct labor is never an appropriate basis for allocating costs to products.
(d) A cost driver is any factor or activity that has a direct cause-effect relationship with resources consumed.
(e) Activity-based costing segregates
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Managerial Accounting: Tools for Business Decision Making
Ch. 4 - Under what conditions is direct labor a valid...Ch. 4 - What has happened in recent industrial history to...Ch. 4 - In an automated manufacturing environment, what...Ch. 4 - What is generally true about overhead allocation...Ch. 4 - What are the principal differences between...Ch. 4 - What is the formula for computing activity-based...Ch. 4 - What steps are involved in developing an activity-...Ch. 4 - Prob. 8QCh. 4 - What is an activity cost pool?Ch. 4 - Prob. 10Q
Ch. 4 - Prob. 11QCh. 4 - What is the formula for assigning activity cost...Ch. 4 - What are the benefits of activity-based costing?Ch. 4 - What are the limitations of activity-based...Ch. 4 - Under what conditions is ABC generally the...Ch. 4 - Prob. 16QCh. 4 - Prob. 17QCh. 4 - Prob. 18QCh. 4 - Prob. 19QCh. 4 - Prob. 20QCh. 4 - Prob. 4.1BECh. 4 - Finney Inc. has conducted an analysis of overhead...Ch. 4 - Splash Co. identifies the following activities...Ch. 4 - Mason Company manufactures four products in a...Ch. 4 - Morgana Company identifies three activities in its...Ch. 4 - Weisman, Inc. uses activity-based costing as the...Ch. 4 - Spud, Inc. a manufacturer of gourmet potato chips,...Ch. 4 - Prob. 4.8BECh. 4 - Pine and Danner is an architectural firm that is...Ch. 4 - Prob. 4.10BECh. 4 - Fixlt, Inc. operates 20 injection molding machines...Ch. 4 - Prob. 4.12BECh. 4 - Indicate whether the following statements are true...Ch. 4 - Compute activity-based overhead rates and assign...Ch. 4 - Adamson Company manufactures four lines of garden...Ch. 4 - Ready Ride is a trucking company. It provides...Ch. 4 - Saddle Inc. has two types of handbags: standard...Ch. 4 - Ayala Inc. has conducted the following analysis...Ch. 4 - EcoFabrics has budgeted overhead costs of 945,000....Ch. 4 - Altex Inc. manufactures two products: car wheels...Ch. 4 - Perdon Corporation manufactures safeslarge mobile...Ch. 4 - Santana Corporation manufactures snowmobiles in...Ch. 4 - Rojas Vineyards in Oakville, California, produces...Ch. 4 - Wilmington, Inc. manufactures five models of...Ch. 4 - Air United, Inc. manufactures two products:...Ch. 4 - Kragan Clothing Company manufactures its own...Ch. 4 - Health 'R Us, Inc., uses a traditional product...Ch. 4 - Santana Corporation manufactures snowmobiles in...Ch. 4 - William Mendel Sons, Inc. is a small...Ch. 4 - Venus Creations sells window treatments (shades,...Ch. 4 - Snap Prints Company is a small printing and...Ch. 4 - Lasso and Markowitz is a law firm that is...Ch. 4 - Manzeck Company operates a snow-removal service....Ch. 4 - Combat Fire, Inc. manufactures steel cylinders and...Ch. 4 - Prob. 4.2APCh. 4 - Shaker Stairs Co. designs and builds factory-made...Ch. 4 - Prob. 4.4APCh. 4 - Lewis and Stark is a public accounting firm that...Ch. 4 - CURRENT DESIGNS As you teamed in the previous...Ch. 4 - Prob. 4.1BYPCh. 4 - Prob. 4.2BYPCh. 4 - Curtis Rich, the cost accountant for Hi-Power...Ch. 4 - As discussed in the chapter, the principles...
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- Which is not a step in analyzing the cost driver for manufacturing overhead? A. Identify the cost B. identify non-value-added costs C. analyze the effect on manufacturing overhead D. identify the correlation between the potential driver and manufacturing overheadarrow_forwardWhen might activity-based costing be preferred over using a relative amount of product sales in allocating selling and administrative expenses to products?arrow_forwardHow are nonfactory costs and costs that benefit both factory and nonfactory operations accounted for?arrow_forward
- Which of the following is a reason a company would implement activity-based costing? A. The cost of record keeping is high. B. The additional data obtained through traditional allocation are not worth the cost. C. They want to improve the data on which decisions are made. D. A company only has one cost driver.arrow_forwardExplain why service companies use different activity bases than manufacturing companies to classify costs as fixed or variable.arrow_forwardWhich is not a step In activity-based costing? A. identify the activities performed by the organization B. identify the cost driver(s) associated with each activity C. compute a cost rate per production D. assign costs to products by multiplying the cost driver rate by the volume of the cost driver units consumed by the productarrow_forward
- Which is not a task typically associated with ABC systems? A. calculating the overhead application rate for each cost pool B. applying a single cost rate C. identifying a cost driver D. more correctly allocating overhead costsarrow_forwardWhich statement is correct? A. Activity-based cost systems are less costly than traditional cost systems. B. Activity-based cost systems are easier to implement than traditional cost systems. C. Activity-based cost systems are more accurate than traditional cost systems. D. Activity-based cost systems provide the same data as traditional cost systems.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
- Under absorption costing, a unit of product includes which costs? A. direct material, direct labor, and manufacturing overhead B. direct material, direct labor, and variable manufacturing overhead C. direct material, direct labor, and fixed manufacturing overhead D. direct material, direct labor, and all variable manufacturing overheadarrow_forwardThe following items are associated with a traditional cost accounting information system, an activity-based cost accounting information system, or both (that is, some elements are common to the two systems): a. Usage of direct materials b. Direct materials cost assigned to products using direct tracing c. Direct labor cost incurrence d. Direct labor cost assigned to products using direct tracing e. Setup cost incurrence f. Setup cost assigned using number of setups as the activity driver g. Setup cost assigned using direct labor hours as the activity driver h. Cost accounting personnel i. Submission of a bid, using product cost plus 25 percent j. Purchasing cost incurrence k. Purchasing cost assigned to products using direct labor hours as the activity driver l. Purchasing cost assigned to products using number of orders as the activity driver m. Materials handling cost incurrence n. Materials handling cost assigned using the number of moves as the activity driver o. Materials handling cost assigned using direct labor hours as the activity driver p. Computer q. Costing out of products r. Decision to continue making a part rather than buying it s. Printer t. Customer service cost incurred u. Customer service cost assigned to products using number of complaints as the activity driver v. Report detailing individual product costs w. Commission cost x. Commission cost assigned to products using units sold as the activity driver y. Plant depreciation z. Plant depreciation assigned to products using direct labor hours Required: 1. For each cost system, classify the relevant items into one of the following categories: a. Interrelated parts b. Processes c. Objectives d. Inputs e. Outputs f. User actions 2. Explain the choices that differ between the two systems. Which system will provide the best support for the user actions? Explain. 3. Draw an operational model that illustrates each cost accounting systemwith the items that belong to the system used as examples for each component of the model. 4. Based on the operational models, comment on the relative costs and benefits of the two systems. Which system should be chosen?arrow_forwardWhy does a company use a standard costing system? A. to identify variances from actual cost that assist them in maintaining profits B. to identify nonperformers in the workplace C. to identify what vendors are unreliable D. to identify defective materialsarrow_forward
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