Managerial Accounting Chapter 6
volume trade-off decisions
companies must trade-off, or sacrifice production of some products in favor of others in an effort to maximize profits
joint costs
cost that are incurred up to the split-off point in a process that produces joint products
vertical integration advantages: (make advantages)
- an integrated company is less dependent on its suppliers and may be able to ensure a smoother flow of parts and materials for production than a nonintegrated company - some companies feel they can control quality better by producing their own parts and materials - an integrated company realizes profits from the parts and materials that it is "making" rather than "buying"
Buy Advantage
- enjoy economic scale - higher quality and lower costs
to make a sell or process further decision, managers need to follow a three step process:
1. always ignore all joint costs 2. determine the incremental revenue that is earned by further processing the joint product 3. take the incremental revenue from step two and subtract the incremental costs associated with processing the joint product beyond the split-off point
6 Key Concepts to Decision Making
1. define the alternatives being considered 2. distinguish between relevant and irrelevant costs & benefits (consider relevant factors, ignore irrelevant factors) 3. differential analysis 4. sunk costs are always irrelevant 5. future costs and benefits that do not differ between alternatives are irrelevant 6. opportunity costs need to be considered
differential revenue
future revenue that differs between any two alternatives
future costs and benefits that do not differ between alternatives are ...
irrelevant to the decision-making process
opportunity cost
the potential benefit that is given up when one alternative is selected over another (considered financial advantage / disadvantage)
activity-based costing improves ___________________ of costs by focusing on the activities caused by a product or other segment
traceability
joint products
two or more products that are produced from a common input
when do companies have to make volume trade-off decision?
when they do not have enough capacity to produce all of the products and sales volumes demanded by their customers
split-off point
that point in the manufacturing process where some or all of the joint products can be recognized as individual products
a comparative format shows...
the effects of either keeping or dropping the product line
vertical integration
the involvement by a company in more than one of the activities in the entire value chain from development through production, distribution, sales, & after-sales service
the costs provided by a well-designed activity-based costing system are only ______________ relevant
potentially
activity-based costing can be sued to identify:
potentially relevant costs for decision-making purposes
differential costs and benefits can be _______________ or _______________
qualitative or quantitative
differential costs are always __________ costs, differential revenue is a ______________ benefit
relevant ; relevant
a special order should be ___________ if the incremental revenue from the special order exceed the incremental costs of the order
accepted
call chain
all activities from development to production to after - sales service
relaxing (or elevating) the constraint
an action that increases the amount of constrained resource. equivalently, an action that increases the capacity of the bottleneck
incremental cost
an increase in cost between two alternatives
bottleneck
another word for constraint, a machine or some other part of a process that limits the total output of the entire system
constraint
anything that prevents you from getting more of what you want
always ignore _________ costs
joint
a danger in allocating common fixed costs is that such allocations can make a product line ...
look less profitable than it really is
special order
a one-time order that is not considered part of the company's normal ongoing business
three steps to a volume trade-off decision:
1. define the meaning of a constraint 2. explain how to determine the most profitable use of a constrained resource 3. discuss how to determine the value of obtaining more of a constrained resource & how to manage constraints to increase profits
with special orders, there are 2 important things that must be true:
1. there is indeed idle capacity 2. the special order does not but into normal sales or undercut prices on normal sales
relevant benefits
a benefit that should be considered when making decisions
avoidable cost
a cost that can be eliminated by choosing one alternative over another
sunk cost
a cost that has already been incurred and cannot be changed regardless of what managers decide to do
relevant costs
a cost that should be considered when making decisions
sell or process further decision
a decision as to whether a joint product should be sold at the split-off point or sold after further processing
make or buy decision
a decision concerning whether an item should be produced internally or purchased from an outside supplier
differential cost
a future cost that differs between any two alternatives
differential cost approach
focuses solely on the relevant costs and benefits *derives financial (dis) advantage
differential analysis
focusing on future costs and benefits that differ between the alternatives
opportunity costs represent economic benefits that are ...
foregone as a result of pursuing some course of action
with a volume trade-off situation, favor the products that provide the ...
highest contribution margin per unit of the constrained resource
irrelevant costs and irrelevant benefits should be ...
ignored when making decisions
total cost approach
includes all of the costs and benefits - relevant or not
_______________ cost and ______________ cost are used to describe differential costs
incremental ; avoidable