ch. 13 manag
false
Variable costs are always relevant in decision making and are the only costs that should be considered.
true
When using a decision tree, the outcomes of each decision are shown with their costs and benefits.
false
Relevant costs and revenues are those costs and revenues that occur in the future and are the same among alternatives.
true
An analysis of outsourcing requires an analysis of quality as well as costs
true
. In accepting a special order, it is important to consider unused capacity
true
. In making special order pricing decisions, generally only unit costs and batch-costs need to be considered assuming excess capacity exists
false
A business has complete freedom when setting prices for products and services
true
Avoidable costs are often a good approximation of the relevant costs between alternatives.
false
Because facility costs are fixed and do not change with volume changes, these cost are never relevant in considering alternatives
false
Because it lacks complete objectivity, subjective information is not useful in good decision making.
false
Charging varying prices for the same product is always illegal because it is discriminatory
true
Cost management is a powerful activity including a proactive attitude
false
Costs that could be avoided if a business unit is dropped are not relevant to the decision.
true
In decision making, feedback is important because it enhances learning
false
It is important in decision making to focus only on future decisions; decisions made in the past should not be considered
true
Most not-for-profit organizations have a zero overall target profit
false
Not-for-profit organizations do not need goals and objectives
false
Price discrimination involves temporarily setting a price below cost to broaden demand for a product and injure competition
true
Some costs will continue to be incurred if the company outsources a particular function.
false
Sunk costs are relevant to decision-making
false
Tangible Objectives are abstract goals of the organization
false
Target pricing can be found at the intersection of the demand and supply curve.
false
The target price is found by multiplying the target cost times one plus the target profit percentage.
false
The target profit equals the desired return on sales times the contribution margin
true
To achieve target costing, organizations are often required to redesign their systems
false
To properly use price-led costing, a company needs to study only its cost