Accounting 201 Exam 1 - Concepts
Sales salaries and commissions are $10,000 when 80,000 units are sold, and $14,000 when 120,000 units are sold. Using the high-low method, what is the variable portion of sales salaries and commission?
$0.10 per unit
Sales salaries and commissions are $10,000 when 80,000 units are sold, and $14,000 when 120,000 units are sold. Using the high-low method, what is the fixed portion of sales salaries and commissions?
$2,000
Job WR53 at NW Fab, Inc. required $200 of DM and 10 DL hours at $15 per hour. Estimated total OH for the year was $760,000 and estimated DL hours were 20,000. What would be recorded as the cost of job WR53?
$730
Fixed Cost
A cost that remains constant, in total, regardless of changes in the level of the activity.
Variable Cost
A cost that varies, in total, in direct proportion to changes in the level of activity.
Activity Base (Cost Driver)
A measure of what causes the incurrence of a variable cost. Examples: units produced, machine hours, miles driven, labor hours.
Least-Squares Regression Method
A method used to analyze mixed costs if a scatterplot graph reveals an approximately linear relationship between X and Y variables.
Activity-Based Costing (ABC)
A number of allocation bases are used for assigning costs to products
Plantwide OH rate
A single OH rate used throughout an entire factory
Facility-Level
Activities: General factory administration, plant building and grounds. Activity Measure: direct labor hours
Unit-Level
Activities: Processing units on machines, processing units by hand, consuming factory supplies. Activity Measure: machine-hours, direct labor-hours, units produced
Batch-Level
Activities: processing purchase orders, processing production orders, setting up equipment, handling materials. Activity Measure: purchase orders processed, production orders processed, number of setups, pounds of material handled
Product-Level
Activities: testing new products, administering parts inventories, designing products. Activity Measure: hours of testing time, number of part types, hours of design
Administrative Costs
All executive, organizational, and clerical costs. Can be either direct or indirect.
Benchmarking
Can be used to compare activity cost information with world-class standards of performance achieved by other organizations
High-Low Method (formula)
Change in cost divided by change in hours.
Finished goods
Consist of completed units of product that have not been sole to customers
Work in process (WIP)
Consists of units of production that are only partially complete and will require further work before they are ready for sale to customers
Variable Cost Per Unit
Constant. Ex: Cost per text sent my be constant at 5 cents per text.
Mixed Costs
Contains both variable and fixed elements. Examples: Utility cost
Selling Costs
Costs necessary to assure the order and deliver the product. Can be either direct or indirect.
Direct Costs
Costs that can be easily and conveniently traced to a unit of product or other cost object. Example: Direct Material and Direct Labor
Indirect Costs
Costs that cannot be easily and conveniently traced to a unit of product or other cost object. Example: Manufacturing Overhead
Sunk Cots
Costs that have already been incurred and cannot be changed now or in the future. These costs should be ignored when making decisions.
Predetermined Overhead Rate (formula)
Estimated total manufacturing OH cost for the coming period / estimated total units in the allocation base for the coming period
Overapplied Overhead
Exists when the amount of OH applied to jobs during the period using the predetermined OH rate is greater than the total amount of OH actually incurred during the period
Underapplied Overhead
Exists when the amount of OH applied to jobs during the period using the predetermined OH rate is less than the total amount of OH actually incurred during the period
Activity-Based Management
Focuses on managing activities to eliminate waste and reduce delays and defects
Cost Behavior
How a cost will react to changes in the level of activity.
Period Costs
Include all selling and administrative costs.
Raw Materials
Include any materials that go into the final product.
Product Costs
Include direct materials, direct labor, and manufacturing overhead.
Cost of goods manufactured (CGM)
Include the manufacturing costs associated with the goods that were finished during the period
Common Costs
Indirect costs incurred to support a number of cost objects. These costs cannot be traced to any individual cost object.
Manufacturing Overhead
Manufacturing costs that cannot be easily traced to specific units produced. Examples: indirect materials and indirect labor.
Indirect Materials
Materials used to support the production process. Examples: lubricants and cleaning supplies used in the automobile assembly plant.
Suppose your car could be sold now for $5,000. Is this a sunk cost?
No, it is not a sunk cost
Which of the following costs would be considered a period rather than a product cost in a manufacturing company?
Property taxes on corporate HQ and Sales commissions
Direct Materials
Raw materials that become an integral part of the product and that can be conveniently traced directly to it. Example: a radio installed in an automobile.
Which of the following costs would be variable with respect to the number of cones sold at a Baskins & Robbins shop?
The cost of ice cream and the cost of napkins for customers
Opportunity Cost
The potential benefit that is given up when one alternative is selected over another.
Direct Labor
Those labor costs that can be easily traced to individual units of product. Example: Wages paid to automobile assembly workers.
Total Fixed Cost (formula)
Total Cost - Total Variable Cost
Allocation Base
Used to assign manufacturing overhead to individual jobs. Example: direct labor hours, direct labor dollar, machine hours.
Activity Rates
Used to target areas where costs seem excessively high
Fixed Cost Per Unit
Varies inversely with changes in activity. Ex: the average _____ ______ per cell phone call made decreases as more calls are made.
Indirect Labor
Wages paid to employees who are not directly involved in production work. Example: maintenance workers, janitors, security guards.