Chapter 9 Exercise Solutions
Chapter 9 Exercise Solutions
Activity-Based Costing
2.
3.
Compute a cost rate per activity unit (e.g., rate per setup, rate per part, rate per
machine-hour).
4.
Allocate costs to products by multiplying the activity rate times the volume of
activity consumed by the product.
False. While the total cost allocated is the same, the reported costs for individual
products will differ. Because managers make decisions at the product level, it is
important that the reported costs reflect, to the extent possible, the use of resources by
the products.
9-7.
Activity-based costing will benefit most companies with high overhead costs and diverse
products and processes. If there is little overhead or if there is a single product, the
allocation process will not result in significantly different product costs. (Even if there are
only a few, relatively homogeneous products, activity-based costing may be useful for
cost management. See chapter 10 for a discussion.)
9-8.
A personnel department provides its services by completing a set of activities using
resources. In this way, implementing activity-based costing in an administrative function
is the same as implementing it in a manufacturing firm. However, the products and
activities may be much harder to define, making it less like a manufacturing
environment.
9-15.
False. The lesson learned from activity-based costing is that costs are a function not
only of output volume, but also of other factors such as complexity. For example, a
complex multiproduct operation will cost more than a simple single-product operation.
9-16.
False. activity-based costing breaks down the costs into cost pools according to the
activities that cause the costs. While several departments may have the same cost
drivers, each department should individually determine which activities cause their
costs.
9-17.
There are two important characteristics you should look for. Are the first-stage cost
pools activities? Second, do the cost drivers in the second stage form a cost hierarchy
(e.g., volume related, batch related, etc.) or are they all volume-related costs?
9-18.
Without information on the use of overhead resources by products, it is difficult for
managers to make decisions that appropriately account for the use of these resources
by the products. Although the specific allocation base to be used may not be clear,
products that require more handling, perhaps because of toxicity, use more overhead
resources. Allocating no overhead costs to a product is as likely to distort decision
making as allocating costs based on an arbitrary allocation base.
9-19.
Disagree. The cost of implementing activity-based costing for inventory valuation
generally is not worth the small benefits that might be realized. It is most worthwhile
when managers use product cost data to make decisions at the product level.
9-20.
Answers will vary. The function selected will determine the activities, but some
examples of activities are processing payments, processing job applications, checking
backgrounds, processing bills, answering customer questions, and so on. Some
examples of cost drivers are number of payments, number of applications, time spent,
number of questions, and so on. Example cost objects might be departments or
divisions, if the function provides support, or products or services, if the departments
provide service to customer activities.
Solutions to Exercises
9-21. (30 min.) Plantwide versus Department Allocation: Munoz Sporting
Equipment.
Baseball
Tennis
Bats
rackets
a. Revenue ............................................................
$1,350,000
$900,000
Direct Labor .......................................................
250,000
125,000
Direct Materials ..................................................
550,000
275,000
a
Overhead ...........................................................
500,000
250,000 b
Profit ..................................................................
$50,000
$ 250,000
a $500,000
b $250,000
b $375,000
c.
The plantwide allocation method allocates overhead at 200% of direct labor for
both types of equipment. While this is the simplest method, it is usually not very
accurate. It assumes that overhead in both departments has the same rate. When
overhead costs are broken down into department cost pools, we see that Department B
is allocated a smaller share of the overhead. Each department should try to assess
what causes its overhead, and use that as its allocation base.
b$165
c$225
$825
500
165 b
$1,490
$1,125
600
225 c
$1,950
b$231
c$99
Vanilla
$825
500
231 b
$1,556
Chocolate
$1,125
600
99 c
$1,824
d. Charlene was correct in her belief that she was being allocated some of Department
SVs overhead. Plantwide allocation does not correctly allocate the overhead by
department; it simply uses one allocation rate for all products in all departments.
Under plantwide allocation, 1,000 gallons of chocolate cost $1,950. Once the
overhead was reallocated into department cost pools, the cost of chocolate fell to
$1,824. Although it requires more time and skill to collect and process the
information, department allocation generally yields more accurate product cost
information.
a.
J25P
J40X
900,000
270,000
120,000
Packaging building
Inspecting and Packaging (@$5/direct labor-hour) .
300,000
114,000
Shipping (@$1,320/shipment) .................................
132,000
264,000
Total ABC O/H...................................................... $ 663,000 $1,668,000
Total ABC cost ............................................................. $3,903,000 $5,028,000
Number of units ............................................................
100,000
40,000
Unit cost .......................................................................
$39.03
$125.70
75% of the amounts in Exhibit 9.16. ($27,000 = .75 $36,000; $270,000 = .75
$360,000)
a
9-23. (continued)
b. Kris could have made the reductions he planned, but the effect on the product costs
would have been different. The $99,000 reduction in setup costs (25% of $396,000),
would have been spread between the two products based on labor or machinehours.
ABC provides more detailed measures of costs than do plantwide or department
allocation methods. In this case, ABC shows the costs of machining, setting up
equipment, handling materials, inspecting, packaging products, and shipping. The
plantwide and department allocation methods did not reveal any of these detailed
cost drivers. With ABCs more detailed information, management has an opportunity
to manage costs by managing cost drivers. For example, are there less costly ways
to inspect and package products? Or perhaps spending additional resources to
improve quality would more than pay for itself with reduced inspections.
ABC also provides better measures of product costs than plantwide and department
allocation methods, which leads to better decisions about product pricing and
whether to keep or drop products.
ABC requires more record keeping than plantwide or department allocation
methods. ABC also requires more teamwork among accountants, production people,
marketing, and management, which can be both costly and beneficial. In the end,
management must decide whether the benefits of ABC, outlined above, are worth
these costs.
a.
Afternoon
Picnic
$ 80
60
200 a
160
b.
Formal
Dinner
$ 80
100
380 b
320
160 c
240 d
320 e
480 f
Activities
Total ..........................................................
a
$980
$1,600
c. If Cathy wants to cover her costs she should charge $49 per guest for the picnic
($980 20 guests), and $80.00 per guest for the formal dinner ($1,600 20 guests).
bData
c$6,000
d$9,000
e$600
f$120,000
g$54,000
h$30,000
i$4.08
j$7.92
Reading from the table above, we can see that the total overhead assigned is $204,000
and $126,000 for Wired and Wireless, respectively. The total cost per unit is the total
cost per product divided by the total units produced; $4.08 per Wired mouse and $7.92
per Wireless mouse.
9-25. (continued)
b.
Rate
Wired
bData
c91.7%
$ 99,000
171,000
90,750
$360,750
$7.22
Total
$360,000
358,500
330,000
$1,048,500
d$239,250
e$4.30
Wireless
= $261,000 .9166667
From the table above, total overhead allocated to Wired and Wireless is
$239,250 and $90,750 respectively. The unit cost for Wired and Wireless is $4.30 and
$7.22 respectively.
c. By allocating overhead on the basis of direct labor, Rodent has been understating
the cost to manufacture Wireless mice thereby overstating the profits on the
Wireless model.
bData
c$15
d$3,500
e$1,500
f$75,000
g$35,000
h$30,000
i$28.33
j$130
Reading from the table above, we can see that the total overhead assigned is $140,000
for both M-008 and M-123. The total cost per unit is the total cost per product divided by
the total units produced; $28.33 per M-008 and $130 per M-123.
9-26. (continued)
b.
Rate
M-008
bData
c200%
M-123
$ 80,000
40,000
80,000
$200,000
$100.00
Total
$180,000
140,000
280,000
$600,000
d$200,000
e$33.33
= $100,000 2.0
From the table above, total overhead allocated to M-008 and M-123 is $200,000
and $80,000 respectively. The unit cost for M-008 and M-123 is $33.33 and $100.00
respectively.
c. By allocating overhead on the basis of direct labor, Doaktown Products has been
understating the cost to manufacture M-123 thereby overstating the profits on M123.
Commercial
Revenuea...........................................................
$378,000
b
Direct Labor .....................................................
210,000
c
Overhead .........................................................
43,400
Profit ..................................................................
$ 124,600
Residential
Total
$910,000
390,000
80,600
$439,400
$1,288,000
600,000
124,000
$ 564,000
a$378,000
= 14,000 hours x $27 per hour; $910,000 = 26,000 hours x $35 per hour.
b$210,000
= 14,000 hours x $15 per hour; $390,000 = 26,000 hours x $15 per hour.
c$43,400
b.
Rate
Commercial
Residential
Revenue ............................................................
$378,000
$910,000
Direct Labor .......................................................
210,000
390,000
Overhead
Traveling ........................................................
$250.00 a
$ 4,250 b
$ 11,750 c
Equipment ......................................................
6.00 d
22,500 e
13,500 f
Supplies .........................................................
0.36 g
46,800 h
25,200 i
Total Overhead ..................................................
$ 73,550
$ 50,450
Profit ..................................................................
$ 94,450
$469,550
a $250
b $4,250
c $11,750
d $6.00
e $22,500
f $13,500
g $0.36
h
i
Total
$1,288,000
600,000
$
16,000
36,000
72,000
$ 124,000
$ 564,000
9-27. (continued)
c. The recommendation to Ms. Lodge is that she should reconsider dropping
residential services in favor of the commercial business. From the table in part b of
the solution, we can show Ms. Lodge that commercial work has a profit margin of
25%, while the residential business has a profit margin of greater than 50%. We can
explain the differences in profits under the two cost methods by showing Ms. Lodge
that there is little correlation in costs between direct labor and the overhead costs.
Rate
Pencils
Pens
Setting up...........................................................
$1,600 a
$32,000 d
Inspecting ..........................................................
2,400 b
9,600 e
Packaging and Shipping ....................................
0.40 c
18,000 f
Total Overhead .................................................. $59,600
a $1,600
b $2,400
c $0.40
$ 48,000
14,400
30,000
$92,400
d $32,000
e $9,600
= $1,600 x 20 setups.
= $2,400 x 4 parts.
f $18,000
b.
Pens
Total
19,500
Overhead ...........................................................
$35,077 b
$116,923
$ 152,000
a 4,500
b $35,077
d $24,000
e $14,400
f $11,250
Account
Rate
Revenue.............................................................
$66,000
a
Expenses ...........................................................
$143.2836
31,522 b
Profit...................................................................
$34,478
a
40,000
36,000
20,000
$105,000
c $12.50
b.
16,000
21,600
8,750
$88,650
Executive
Coaching
$135,000
64,478
$ 70,522
Total
$201,000
96,000
$105,000
c. Under labor-based costing, teen counseling and executive coaching appear equally
profitable (relative to revenues), so Wendy will not emphasize one or the other.
However, using ABC, executive coaching appears to be much more profitable.
d. ABC and traditional costing systems generally yield comparable product-line profits
when overhead is a small portion of costs, or when cost drivers are highly correlated
with the volume-related allocation base. In this case, labor-hours were distributed
32.8% to Teen Counseling and 67.2% to Executive Coaching. If Wendys three cost
drivers were each also distributed 32.8% to Teen Counseling and 67.2% to
Executive Coaching, the labor-hour allocation and ABC would have been identical.
9-29. (continued)
e. Activity-based costing assigns higher costs to teen counseling than the traditional
method does, so using this would increase the chances of receiving the grant. If teen
counseling uses more activities and these activities generate higher costs, there is
nothing unethical about using and reporting ABC costs. Choosing to use ABC simply
to increase the chances of receiving the grant, if there is no reason to believe these
activities actually increase the costs, could be unethical.
Overhead Applied:
Quality Inspections
750 inspections x
$225 per inspection
= $168,750 to WIP
Overhead Applied:
Machine Setups
40 setups x $2,700
per setup =
$108,000 to WIP
Overhead Applied:
Running Machines
15,000 hours x
$22.50 per hour =
$337,500 to WIP
9-30. (continued)
Overhead Applied:
Quality Inspections
800 inspections x
$100 per inspection
= $80,000 to WIP
Overhead Applied:
Machine Setups
100 setups x $800
per setup = $80,000
to WIP
Overhead Applied:
Running Machines
20,000 hours x $10
per hour = $200,000
to WIP
9-31. (continued)
$27,500 c
$137,500
b $110,000
c $27,500
b.
LaidBack
StressOut
$ 90,000 c
3,500 f
$93,500
Total
$120,000
17,500
$137,500
a $6,000
b 30,000
c 90,000
d $140
e $14,000
f
$84,000
$84 per bill = $84,000 Accounts receivable cost 1,000 bills prepared.
b $50,400
c $33,600
b.
Rate
Personal
Billinga ................................................................
$48
$28,800 b
Dispute resolutiond.............................................
$500
30,000 e
Total allocated costs ..........................................
$58,800
a $48
Business
$19,200 c
6,000 f
$25,200
Total
$48,000
36,000
$84,000
b 28,800
c 19,200
d $500
e $30,000
f
$33,600 c
= $500 60 disputes.