Managerial Accounting: Tools for Business Decision Making
7th Edition
ISBN: 9781118334331
Author: Jerry J. Weygandt, Paul D. Kimmel, Donald E. Kieso
Publisher: WILEY
expand_more
expand_more
format_list_bulleted
Textbook Question
Chapter 4, Problem 4.3BE
Splash Co. identifies the following activities that pertain to manufacturing overhead for its production of water polo balls: materials handling, machine setups, factory machine maintenance, factory supervision, and quality control. For each activity, identify an appropriate cost driver.
Expert Solution & Answer
Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solutionStudents have asked these similar questions
Suppose you are the controller of a company that produces handmade glassware. Choose a volume-based cost driver upon which to base the application of overhead.
Classify the following costs of activity inputs as variable, fixed, or mixed. Identify the activity andthe associated activity driver that allow you to define the cost behavior. For example, assume thatthe resource input is “cloth in a shirt.” The activity would be “sewing shirts,” the cost behavior“variable,” and the activity driver “units produced.” Prepare your answers in the following format:
Activity Cost Behavior Activity DriverSewing shirts Variable Units produced
a. Flu vaccineb. Salaries, equipment, and materials used for moving materials in a factoryc. Forms used to file insurance claimsd. Salaries, forms, and postage associated with purchasinge. Printing and postage for advertising circularsf. Equipment, labor, and parts used to repair and maintain production equipmentg. Power to operate sewing machines in a clothing factoryh. Wooden cabinets enclosing audio speakers
i. Advertisingj. Sales commissionsk. Fuel for a delivery vanl. Depreciation on a warehousem. Depreciation on…
Ritz Company sells fine collectible statues and has implemented activity-based costing. Costs in the shipping department have been divided into three cost pools. The first cost pool contains costs that are related to packaging and shipping and Rand has determined that the number of boxes shipped is an appropriate cost driver for these costs. The second cost pool is made up of costs related to the final inspection of each item before it is shipped and the cost driver for this pool is the number of individual items that are inspected and shipped. The final cost pool is used for general operations and supervision of the department and the cost driver is the number of shipments. Information about the department is summarized below:
Cost Pool Total Costs Cost Driver Annual Activity
Packaging and $167,300 Number of boxes 21,800 boxes
Shipping shipped
Final Inspection $201,300…
Chapter 4 Solutions
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...
Knowledge Booster
Learn more about
Need a deep-dive on the concept behind this application? Look no further. Learn more about this topic, accounting and related others by exploring similar questions and additional content below.Similar questions
- Reducir, Inc., produces two different types of hydraulic cylinders. Reducir produces a major subassembly for the cylinders in the Cutting and Welding Department. Other parts and the subassembly are then assembled in the Assembly Department. The activities, expected costs, and drivers associated with these two manufacturing processes are given below. Note: In the assembly process, the materials-handling activity is a function of product characteristics rather than batch activity. Other overhead activities, their costs, and drivers are listed below. Other production information concerning the two hydraulic cylinders is also provided: Required: 1. Using a plantwide rate based on machine hours, calculate the total overhead cost assigned to each product and the unit overhead cost. 2. Using activity rates, calculate the total overhead cost assigned to each product and the unit overhead cost. Comment on the accuracy of the plantwide rate. 3. Calculate the global consumption ratios. 4. Calculate the consumption ratios for welding and materials handling (Assembly) and show that two drivers, welding hours and number of parts, can be used to achieve the same ABC product costs calculated in Requirement 2. Explain the value of this simplification. 5. Calculate the consumption ratios for inspection and engineering, and show that the drivers for these two activities also duplicate the ABC product costs calculated in Requirement 2.arrow_forwardClassify the following costs of activity inputs as variable, fixed, or mixed. Identify the activity and the associated activity driver that allow you to define the cost behavior. For example, assume that the resource input is cloth in a shirt. The activity would be sewing shirts, the cost behavior variable, and the activity driver units produced. Prepare your answers in the following format: a. Flu vaccine b. Salaries, equipment, and materials used for moving materials in a factory c. Forms used to file insurance claims d. Salaries, forms, and postage associated with purchasing e. Printing and postage for advertising circulars f. Equipment, labor, and parts used to repair and maintain production equipment g. Power to operate sewing machines in a clothing factory h. Wooden cabinets enclosing audio speakers i. Advertising j. Sales commissions k. Fuel for a delivery van l. Depreciation on a warehouse m. Depreciation on a forklift used to move partially completed goods n. X-ray film used in the radiology department of a hospital o. Rental car provided for a clientarrow_forwardElectan Company produces two types of printers. The company uses ABC, and all activity drivers are duration drivers. Electan Company is considering using DBC and has gathered the following data to help with its decision. A. Activities with duration drivers: B. Activities with consumption ratios and costs: C. Products with cycle time and practical capacity: Required: 1. Using cycle time and practical capacity for each product, calculate the total time for all primary activities. Comment on the relationship to ABC. 2. Calculate the overhead rate that DBC uses to assign costs. Comment on the relationship to a unit-based plantwide overhead rate. 3. Use the overhead rate calculated in Requirement 2 to calculate (a) the overhead cost per unit for each product, and (b) the total overhead assigned to each product. How does this compare to the ABC assignments shown in Part B of the Information set? 4. What if the units actually produced were 10,000 for Printer A and 18,000 for Printer B. Using DBC, calculate the cost of unused capacity.arrow_forward
- Tom Young, vice president of Dunn Company (a producer of plastic products), has been supervising the implementation of an activity-based cost management system. One of Toms objectives is to improve process efficiency by improving the activities that define the processes. To illustrate the potential of the new system to the president, Tom has decided to focus on two processes: production and customer service. Within each process, one activity will be selected for improvement: molding for production and sustaining engineering for customer service. (Sustaining engineers are responsible for redesigning products based on customer needs and feedback.) Value-added standards are identified for each activity. For molding, the value-added standard calls for nine pounds per mold. (Although the products differ in shape and function, their size, as measured by weight, is uniform.) The value-added standard is based on the elimination of all waste due to defective molds (materials is by far the major cost for the molding activity). The standard price for molding is 15 per pound. For sustaining engineering, the standard is 60 percent of current practical activity capacity. This standard is based on the fact that about 40 percent of the complaints have to do with design features that could have been avoided or anticipated by the company. Current practical capacity (the first year) is defined by the following requirements: 18,000 engineering hours for each product group that has been on the market or in development for five years or less, and 7,200 hours per product group of more than five years. Four product groups have less than five years experience, and 10 product groups have more. There are 72 engineers, each paid a salary of 70,000. Each engineer can provide 2,000 hours of service per year. There are no other significant costs for the engineering activity. For the first year, actual pounds used for molding were 25 percent above the level called for by the value-added standard; engineering usage was 138,000 hours. There were 240,000 units of output produced. Tom and the operational managers have selected some improvement measures that promise to reduce non-value-added activity usage by 30 percent in the second year. Selected actual results achieved for the second year are as follows: The actual prices paid per pound and per engineering hour are identical to the standard or budgeted prices. Required: 1. For the first year, calculate the non-value-added usage and costs for molding and sustaining engineering. Also, calculate the cost of unused capacity for the engineering activity. 2. Using the targeted reduction, establish kaizen standards for molding and engineering (for the second year). 3. Using the kaizen standards prepared in Requirement 2, compute the second-year usage variances, expressed in both physical and financial measures, for molding and engineering. (For engineering, explain why it is necessary to compare actual resource usage with the kaizen standard.) Comment on the companys ability to achieve its targeted reductions. In particular, discuss what measures the company must take to capture any realized reductions in resource usage.arrow_forwardHercules Inc. manufactures elliptical exercise machines and treadmills. The products are produced in its Fabrication and Assembly production departments. In addition to production activities, several other activities are required to produce the two products. These activities and their associated activity rates are as follows: The activity-base usage quantities and units produced for each product were as follows: Use the activity rate and usage information to determine the total activity cost and activity cost per unit for each product.arrow_forwardClassify 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_forward
- Which of the following is typically a process-costing firm? a. Paint manufacturer b. Custom cabinetmaker c. Large regional medical center d. Law office e. Custom framing shoparrow_forwardThe table shows a list of expenses involved in the production of custom snowboard bindings. For each item listed, state if the cost is manufacturing or sales and administration. If the cost is a manufacturing cost, state if it is direct materials, direct labor, or manufacturing overhead. 1f the cost is a manufacturing overhead cost, state if it is indirect materials, indirect labor, or another type of manufacturing overhead.arrow_forwardLarsen, Inc., produces two types of electronic parts and has provided the following data: There are four activities: machining, setting up, testing, and purchasing. Required: 1. Calculate the activity consumption ratios for each product. 2. Calculate the consumption ratios for the plantwide rate (direct labor hours). When compared with the activity ratios, what can you say about the relative accuracy of a plantwide rate? Which product is undercosted? 3. What if the machine hours were used for the plantwide rate? Would this remove the cost distortion of a plantwide rate?arrow_forward
- Ritz Company sells fine collectible statues and has implemented activity-based costing. Costs in the shipping department have been divided into three cost pools. The first cost pool contains costs that are related to packaging and shipping and Rand has determined that the number of boxes shipped is an appropriate cost driver for these costs. The second cost pool is made up of costs related to the final inspection of each item before it is shipped and the cost driver for this pool is the number of individual items that are inspected and shipped. The final cost pool is used for general operations and supervision of the department and the cost driver is the number of shipments. Information about the department is summarized below: Cost Pool Total Costs Cost Driver Annual Activity Packaging and shipping $168,100 Number of boxes shipped 20,600 boxes Final inspection $197,500 Number of individual items shipped 97,500 items General operations and supervision $81,900 Number of orders…arrow_forwardActivity Levels and Cost Drivers Shroeder Machine Shop has the following activities: Machine operation Machine setup Production scheduling Materials receiving Research and development Machine maintenance Product design Parts administration Final inspection of a sample of products Materials handling Required Classify each of the activities as a unit-level, batch-level, product-level, or facility-level activity. Identify a potential cost driver for each activity in requirement 1.arrow_forwardAssume that your team is going to form a company that will manufacture chocolate chip cookies. The teamis responsible for preparing a list of all product components and costs necessary to make this product.Required:Prepare a list of all product components and costs necessary to manufacture your cookies and identify eachof the product costs as direct materials, direct labor, or factory overhead. Identify each of those costs asvariable, fixed, or mixed.arrow_forward
arrow_back_ios
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
arrow_forward_ios
Recommended textbooks for you
- Cornerstones of Cost Management (Cornerstones Ser...AccountingISBN:9781305970663Author:Don R. Hansen, Maryanne M. MowenPublisher:Cengage LearningPrinciples of Accounting Volume 2AccountingISBN:9781947172609Author:OpenStaxPublisher:OpenStax CollegeManagerial AccountingAccountingISBN:9781337912020Author:Carl Warren, Ph.d. Cma William B. TaylerPublisher:South-Western College Pub
- Managerial Accounting: The Cornerstone of Busines...AccountingISBN:9781337115773Author:Maryanne M. Mowen, Don R. Hansen, Dan L. HeitgerPublisher:Cengage Learning
Cornerstones of Cost Management (Cornerstones Ser...
Accounting
ISBN:9781305970663
Author:Don R. Hansen, Maryanne M. Mowen
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Principles of Accounting Volume 2
Accounting
ISBN:9781947172609
Author:OpenStax
Publisher:OpenStax College
Managerial Accounting
Accounting
ISBN:9781337912020
Author:Carl Warren, Ph.d. Cma William B. Tayler
Publisher:South-Western College Pub
Managerial Accounting: The Cornerstone of Busines...
Accounting
ISBN:9781337115773
Author:Maryanne M. Mowen, Don R. Hansen, Dan L. Heitger
Publisher:Cengage Learning
alue Chain Analysis EXPLAINED | B2U | Business To You; Author: Business To You;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SI5lYaZaUlg;License: Standard Youtube License