Chapter 3: Cost-Volume-Profit Relationships
Place in the order in which sales dollars are applied on a contribution margin income statement: Net income Variable costs Fixed expenses
(1) Variable costs (2) Fixed expenses (3) Net income
The formula used to calculate the sales volume needed to achieve a target profit is:
Target Volume (sales dollars) = (fixed costs + target profit)/(contribution margin ratio)
Assuming all else remains the same, what would increase profits according to the CVP analysis model:
a decrease in the unit variable cost
Variable costs per unit is calculated by dividing total variable costs by total:
activity
Contribution margin divided by sales is the formula for:
contribution margin ratio
CVP is the acronym for:
cost-volume-profit
Place in the following order in which they appear on the contribution margin format income statement: Variable expenses Contribution margin Sales Net operating income Fixed expenses
(1) Sales (2) Variable expenses (3) Contribution margin (4) Fixed expenses (5) Net operating income
What must be subtracted from sales to reach the contribution margin:
(1) Variable selling & administrative costs (2) Variable overhead (3) Variable direct labor (4) Variable direct materials
At the break-even point:
(1) net operating income is zero (2) total revenue equals total cost
The variable expense ratio is the ratio of variable expense to:
sales
The contribution margin is equal to:
sales minus variable expenses