chapter 3 acct. 202
In activity-based costing, the focus is on the activities performed to produce specific products.
TRUE
Activity-based costing involves a two-stage allocation process in which overhead costs are first assigned to departments and then allocated to products using activity measures.
false
When a company changes from a traditional costing system to an activity-based costing system, costs will ordinarily shift from low-volume products to high-volume products when the activity-based costing system includes batch-level or product-level costs.
false
Under the ABC philosophy
the cost of a product is equal to the sum of the costs of all activities performed to manufacture it.
In activity-based costing, the activity rate for an activity cost pool is computed by dividing the total overhead cost in the activity cost pool by:
the total activity for the activity cost pool.
Activities consume resources. In activity-based costing an attempt is made to trace the costs of those activities directly to the products that cause them.
true
An activity in activity-based costing is an event that causes the consumption of overhead resources.
true
An activity rated is computed for each activity cost pool—not for each product.
true
In the second-stage allocation in activity-based costing, overhead costs are allocated from activity cost pools to products.
true