Horngren's Cost Accounting, Student Value Edition (16th Edition)
16th Edition
ISBN: 9780134476032
Author: Srikant M. Datar, Madhav V. Rajan
Publisher: PEARSON
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Chapter 5, Problem 5.17MCQ
To determine
Activity based costing:
Activity based costing is stand for the ABC. It is that method in which organization identifies the activities and assign the cost to each resource according to use of them.
To identify: The correct option.
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Horngren's Cost Accounting, Student Value Edition (16th Edition)
Ch. 5 - What is broad averaging, and what consequences can...Ch. 5 - Why should managers worry about product...Ch. 5 - What is costing system refinement? Describe three...Ch. 5 - What is an activity-based approach to designing a...Ch. 5 - Describe four levels of a cost hierarchy.Ch. 5 - Why is it important to classify costs into a cost...Ch. 5 - What are the key reasons for product cost...Ch. 5 - Prob. 5.8QCh. 5 - Department indirect-cost rates are never...Ch. 5 - Prob. 5.10Q
Ch. 5 - Prob. 5.11QCh. 5 - Prob. 5.12QCh. 5 - Activity-based costing is the wave of the present...Ch. 5 - Increasing the number of indirect-cost pools is...Ch. 5 - The controller of a retail company has just had a...Ch. 5 - Conroe Company is reviewing the data provided by...Ch. 5 - Prob. 5.17MCQCh. 5 - Cost hierarchy. Roberta, Inc., manufactures...Ch. 5 - ABC, cost hierarchy, service. (CMA, adapted)...Ch. 5 - Alternative allocation bases for a professional...Ch. 5 - Plant-wide, department, and ABC Indirect cost...Ch. 5 - Plant-wide, department, and activity-cost rates....Ch. 5 - ABC, process costing. Sander Company produces...Ch. 5 - Department costing, service company. DLN is an...Ch. 5 - Activity-based costing, service company....Ch. 5 - Activity-based costing, manufacturing. Decorative...Ch. 5 - ABC, retail product-line profitability. Fitzgerald...Ch. 5 - Prob. 5.28ECh. 5 - Activity-based costing. The job-costing system at...Ch. 5 - ABC, product costing at banks,...Ch. 5 - Problems 5-31 Job costing with single direct-cost...Ch. 5 - Job costing with multiple direct-cost categories,...Ch. 5 - Job costing with multiple direct-cost categories,...Ch. 5 - First-stage allocation, time-driven activity-based...Ch. 5 - First-stage allocation, time-driven activity-based...Ch. 5 - Department and activity-cost rates, service...Ch. 5 - Activity-based costing, merchandising. Pharmahelp,...Ch. 5 - Choosing cost drivers, activity-based costing,...Ch. 5 - ABC, health care. Crosstown Health Center runs two...Ch. 5 - Unused capacity, activity-based costing,...Ch. 5 - Unused capacity, activity-based costing,...Ch. 5 - ABC, implementation, ethics. (CMA, adapted) Plum...Ch. 5 - Activity-based costing, activity-based management,...
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Similar questions
- Explain how a plantwide overhead rate, using a unit-based driver, can produce distorted product costs. In your answer, identify two major factors that impair the ability of plantwide rates to assign cost accurately.arrow_forwardWhich 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_forwardTrail Outfitters has this information for its manufacturing: Its income statement under absorption costing is as follows: Prepare an income statement with variable costing and a reconciliation statement between both methods.arrow_forward
- Why 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_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_forwardLean manufacturing uses value streams to produce a family of products that require the same manufacturing sequence. Value-stream costing is an approach often used to determine the unit product costs in a lean manufacturing environment. Which of the following best describes how unit costs are calculated using value-stream costing? a. Value stream costs divided by units shipped b. Value stream costs divided by units produced c. (Total prime costs + overhead costs assigned to the value stream using a plantwide rate) divided by units produced d. Activity-based costing assignments within the value streamarrow_forward
- Lean manufacturing is characterized by all but one of the following: a. Employee empowerment b. Total quality management c. Inventories of goods awaiting further processing or consumption d. Elimination of wastearrow_forwardWhen might activity-based costing be preferred over using a relative amount of product sales in allocating selling and administrative expenses to products?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 of the following product situations is better suited to job order costing than to process costing? A. Each product batch is exactly the same as the prior batch. B. The costs are easily traced to a specific product. C. Costs are accumulated by department. D. The value of work in process is based on assigning standard costs.arrow_forwardWhy do lean manufacturers use a raw and in process inventory account, rather than separately reporting materials and work in process?arrow_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_forward
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