Reviewer in Abc Costing: Cost Accounting AND Control (B. Activity-Based Cost System)
Reviewer in Abc Costing: Cost Accounting AND Control (B. Activity-Based Cost System)
Reviewer in Abc Costing: Cost Accounting AND Control (B. Activity-Based Cost System)
REVIEWER IN ACTIVITY-BASED COST SYSTEM 5. Primary concepts under activity-based management include all of the following except:
A. activity analysis C. activity-based costing
B. total quality management D. cost driver analysis
THEORIES:
Outdated cost system 18. Which of the following falls under the Activity-Based Management umbrella?
3. Symptoms of an outdated cost system include all of the following EXCEP Continuous Business process Activity-based
A. product costs change because of changes in financial reporting. improvement reengineering costing
B. products that are difficult to produce show little profit. A. NO NO YES
C. competitors' prices appear unrealistically low. B. YES NO NO
D. the company has a highly profitable niche all to itself. C. YES YES YES
D. NO YES NO
13. Which of the following is NOT a sign of poor cost data?
A. Competitors' prices for high-volume products appear much too high. 29. All of the following are ways that activities can be managed to achieve improvements in a
B. The company seems to have a highly profitable niche all to itself. process, except
C. Customers don't balk at price increases for low-volume products. A. activity induction C. activity elimination
D. Competitors' prices for low-volume products appear much too high. B. activity selection D. activity sharing
30. An activity-based costing system uses which of the following procedures? 24. A base used to allocate the cost of a resource to the different activities using that resource is
A. Overhead costs are traced to departments, then costs are traced to products. A. resource driver C. activity driver
B. Overhead costs are traced to activities, then costs are traced to products. B. final cost object D. driver
C. Overhead costs are traced directly to products.
D. All overhead costs are expensed as incurred. 42. A base used to allocate the cost of products, customers, or other final cost objects is a(n)
A. resource driver C. activity driver
Steps B. final cost object D. driver
16. A well-designed activity-based costing system starts with
A. identifying the activity-cost pools. 38. Activity drivers differ from resource drivers in that activity drivers
B. computing the activity-based overhead rate. A. are used to assign indirect costs while resource drivers are used to assign direct costs
C. assigning manufacturing overhead costs for each activity cost pool to products. B. assign the cost of activities to cost objects while resource drivers assign the cost of
D. analyzing the activities performed to manufacture a product. resources to activities
C. assign the cost of activities to resources and resource drivers assign the cost of resources
25. The first step in activity-based costing is to to cost objects
A. assign manufacturing overhead costs for each activity cost pool to products. D. are used to assign direct costs while resource drivers are used to assign indirect costs
B. compute the activity-based overhead rate per cost driver.
C. identify and classify the major activities involved in the manufacture of specific products. 55. An appropriate cost driver base should
D. identify the cost driver that has a strong correlation to the activity cost pool. A. have a cause-and-effect relationship with the activity and the use of resources
B. predict or explain activities' use of resources with reasonable accuracy
26. The last step in activity-based costing is to C. be based on the practical capacity of the resource to support activities
A. identify the major activities that pertain to the manufacture of specific products. D. all of the above
B. allocate manufacturing overhead costs to activity cost pools.
C. identify the cost drivers that accurately measure each activity’s contribution to the Cost pool
finished product. 31. A cost pool is
D. assign manufacturing overhead costs for each activity cost pool to products. A. all of the costs of a particular department.
B. all costs in a group such as variable costs or discretionary fixed costs.
65. Successful activity-based costing (ABC) implementation depends upon the firm having: C. all costs related to a product or product line.
A. top management support D. all costs that have the same driver.
B. ABC linked to its competitive strategy
C. adequate resources Cost pool rate
34. More accurate product costing information is produced by assigning costs using B. direct and indirect costs
A. a volume-based, plant-wide rate. C. directly traceable resource costs and resource driver assigned costs
B. volume-based, departmental rates. D. opportunity costs and realized costs
C. activity-based pool rates.
D. all of the above Activity levels
Unit level
Cost allocation 46. Unit-level costs are costs that
33. Activity-based overhead rates are more useful than a single plant-wide rate if A. inevitably increase whenever a unit is produced
A. overhead costs are driven by several activities. B. are caused by the number of batches produced and sold
B. direct labor cost varies significantly from department to department. C. are incurred to support the number of different products produced
C. all products require about the same amounts of all activities. D. are incurred to sustain capacity at a production site
D. manufacturing overhead costs are nearly all fixed.
44. Examples of unit-level costs are
20. In activity-based costing, preliminary cost allocations assign costs to A. portions of electricity and indirect materials
A. departments. C. products. B. salaries of schedulers and setup personnel
B. processes. D. activities. C. salaries of designers and programmers
D. depreciation and insurance of building
19. In activity-based costing, final cost allocations assign costs to
A. departments. C. products. 58. Examples of unit level activities are
B. processes. D. activities. A. scheduling, setting up, and receiving C. heating, lighting, and security
B. designing, changing, and advertising D. cutting, painting, and packaging
35. Which of the following best describes the flow of overhead costs in an activity-based costing
system? 41. All of the following are unit-based cost drivers except
A. Overhead costs => direct labor cost or hours => products A. machine hours C. number of setups
B. Overhead costs => products B. number of units D. direct labor hours
C. Overhead costs => activity cost pools => cost drivers => products
D. Overhead costs => machine hours => products 62. An example of a nonvolume-related overhead base would be:
A. Direct materials cost C. Direct Labor cost
36. Finding a single cost driver that changes in the same proportion as all the variable factory B. Machine hours D. Number of setups
overhead costs is:
A. simplified by breaking out the fixed portion of overhead cost Batch level
B. the first step in variable overhead cost management 54. Batch-level resources are acquired
C. difficult, but manageable A. for individual units of product or service
D. impossible B. for making a group of similar products
C. to produce and sell a specific product
37. Total activity cost is the sum of D. to provide a general capacity to produce products and services.
A. resource driver assigned costs and activity driver assigned costs
40. Which of the following activities is directly traceable to a product? 59. Which of the following is not considered to be a facility-level cost?
A. batch-level activities C. facility-level activities A. Cost of Property Insurance.
B. unit-level activities D. product-sustaining activities B. Cost of personnel administration.
C. Cost of Liability Insurance for only one of the product lines.
57. Designing and redesigning are activities that are classified as D. Cost of building security.
A. Facility level C. Unit level
B. Batch level D. Product level Value adding & Non-value adding activity
49. The following activity is value-added:
60. Which of the following is the best way to consider a product-level cost?. A. Storage of raw materials C. Moving parts from machine to machine
A. A product-level cost can be avoided when a product line is discontinued. B. Turning a piece of metal on a lathe D. All of these
B. A product-level cost can be avoided when a there is change in the production schedule
so the product is not produced this week. 48. An activity that adds cost to the product but does not increase it market value is a
C. A product level cost can be avoided when a business segment is discontinued. A. value-added activity C. cost driver
D. A product level cost can be avoided when the corporation is dissolved. B. cost-benefit activity D. nonvalue-added activity
61. Examples of activities at the batch level of costs include 50. When a firm redesigns a product to reduce the number of component parts, the firm is
A. scheduling, setting up, and moving A. increasing consumer value.
B. designing, changing, and advertising B. increasing the value added to the product.
C. heating, lighting, and security C. decreasing product variety.
D. cutting, painting, and packaging D. decreasing non-value-added costs.
PROBLEMS:
52. Under activity-based costing, benchmarks for product cost should contain an allowance for Breakeven Analysis
A. idle time. C. spoilage. i
. Peal Company had the following information:
B. idle time and scrap materials. D. none of the above. Activity Driver Unit Variable Cost Level of Activity Driver
Units sold P40
64. Elimination of non-value-added activities in a firm should: Setups 1,000 80
A. be discouraged because of potential harmful effects Engineering hours 60 2,000
B. not affect customer value Other data:
C. not have priority because non-value-added activities do not affect a firm's performance Total fixed costs (traditional) P400,000
D. have priority only when a firm is operating at a loss Total fixed costs (ABC) P150,000
Units selling price P80
66. Page Company’s cost allocation and product costing procedures follow activity-based What is the breakeven point in units using ABC?
costing principles. The following activities have been identified and classified as being A. 10,000 unit C. 5,000 units
either value-adding or non-value adding as to each product. B. 5,000 units D. 8,750 units
1. Raw materials storage activity
2. Design engineering activity Traditional Costing
3. Drill press activity Overhead cost per unit
4. Heat treatment activity ii
. Mary Manufacturing Company manufactures two products (X and Y). The overhead costs of
5. Quality control inspection activity P29,000 have been divided into three cost pools that use the following activity drivers:
6. Issuance of purchase order activity Product No. of Orders No. of Labor Transactions No. of Labor Hours
How are the foregoing activities classified?
X 30 100 1,000
Value-adding Non-value adding
Y 20 300 4,000
A. 1, 2, 5, 6 3, 4
Cost per pool P5,000 P4,000 P20,000
B. 1, 2, 4 3, 5, 6
C. 2, 4, 5 1, 3, 6 Using traditional costing, what is the amount of overhead cost to be assigned to Product Y
D. 2, 3, 4 1, 5, 6 using labor hours as the allocation base?
A. P21,750 C. P16,000
Productivity Measures B. P 5,800 D. P23,200
51. Manufacturing cycle efficiency is a measure of
A. bottlenecks. C. efficiency. Unit cost
iii
B. effectiveness. D. quality. . Arid Company produces products BH and XP. The direct cost of BH is P250 per unit and XP is
P350 per unit. Fifty units of BH and 150 units of XP were produced. Overhead amounting to
53. The amount of time between the development and the production of a product is P130,000 is allocated to products using direct costs as the relevant cost driver.
A. the product life cycle. C. production time. The cost of XP per unit amounts to
B. lead time. D. value-added time. A. P750 C. P1,050
B. P1,000 D. P1,250
Activity-based Costing materials and P150 labor) and Y is P350 (P230 material and P120 labor) per unit. Fifty units of
Batch-level costs X and 150 units of Y were produced. Overhead amounts to P130,000 and is composed of
Allocated overhead material handling P12,000, labor support P60,000, machine operation P48,000, and general
iv
. One of Alien Company’s activity cost pools is machine setups, with estimated overhead of administration P10,000. Material handling cost driver is material cost, labor support cost driver
P300,000. Alien produces slacks (400 setups) and shirts (600 setups). How much of the is labor cost. Machine operation cost resulted from running the machines a total of 480 hours
machine setup cost pool should be assigned to slacks? (three-fourth of which was for product X). General administration effort related equally to
A. P 0 C. P150,000 product X and Y. Material handling chargeable per unit of X (rounded) amounts to
B. P120,000 D. P180,000 A. P30; P 70 C. P60; P140
B. P40; P 80 D. P70; P 30
v
. The overhead rate for Machine Setups is P100 per setup. Products A and B have 80 and 60
setups, respectively. The overhead assigned to each product is ix
. Genco manufactures two versions of a product. Production and cost information show the
A. Product A P8,000, Product B P8,000 C. Product A P8,000, Product B P6,000 following:
B. Product A, P6,000, Product B P6,000 D. Product A, P6,000, Product B P8,000 Model A Model B
Units produced 200 400
vi
. Sylvia Company has identified an activity cost pool to which it has allocated estimated Material moves (total) 20 80
overhead of P1,920,000 and determined the expected use of cost drivers per that activity to by Direct labor hours per unit 1 2
160,000 inspections. Widgets require 40,000 inspections, Gadgets 30,000 inspections, and Material handling costs total P200,000. Under ABC, the material handling costs allocated to
Targets, 90,000 inspections. each unit of Model A and Model B would be:
The overhead assigned to each product is A. B. C. D.
A. Widgets P40,000, Gadgets P30,000, Targets P90,000
Model A P100 P200 P333 P130
B. Widgets P480,000, Gadgets P360,000, Targets P1,080,000
Model B P333 P400 P200 P100
C. Widgets P360,000, Gadgets P480,000, Targets P1,080,000
D. Widgets P480,000, Gadgets P360,000, Targets P1,080,000 x
. EMPIRE Company makes two products, E and M. E is being introduced this period,
Overhead cost per unit whereas M has been in production for 2 years. For the period about to begin, 1,000 units of
vii
. EMPIRE Company makes two products, E and M. E is being introduced this period, whereas each product are to be manufactured. The only relevant overhead item is the cost of
M has been in production for 2 years. For the period about to begin, 1,000 units of each engineering change orders. E and M are expected to require eight and two change orders,
product are to be manufactured. The only relevant overhead item is the cost of engineering respectively. E and M are expected to require 2 and 3 machine hours, respectively. The
change orders. E and M are expected to require eight and two change orders, respectively. E cost of a change order is P600.
and M are expected to require 2 and 3 machine hours, respectively. The cost of a change If EMPIRE is using direct tracing, the amount of overhead per unit that will be assigned to E
order is P600. and M, respectively, are
If EMPIRE applies engineering change order cost on the basis of machine hours, the A. P2.40 and P3.60, respectively C. P4.80 and P1.20, respectively
overhead cost per unit to be assigned to E and M, respectively, are B. P3.60 and P2.40, respectively D. P1.20 and P4.80, respectively
A. P2.40 and P3.60, respectively C. P4.80 and P3.60, respectively
B. P3.60 and P2.40, respectively D. P3.60 and P4.80, respectively Total allocated overhead
xi
. Germie, Inc., has identified the following overhead costs and activity drivers for next year:
viii
. Beltran Company produces products X and Y. The direct cost of X is P250 per unit (P100 Overhead Item Expected Cost Activity Driver Expected Quantity
upon full manufacturing costs plus 10 percent. overhead per unit be for Model 2?
Estimates for the proposed job are as follows: A. P158.33 C. P925.00
Direct materials P30,000 B. P415.93 D. P815.00
Direct labor (8,000 hours) P24,000
Number of material moves 100 Questions 17 & 18 are based on the following information.
Number of inspections 120 Hughes Company produces three products with the following production and cost information:
Number of setups 24 Model A Model B Model C
Number of machine hours 4,000 Units produced 2,000 6,000 12,000
The plant manager has heard of a new way of applying overhead that uses cost pools and Direct labor hours (total) 4,000 2,000 4,000
activity drivers. Expected activity for the four activity drivers that would be used are: Number of setups 100 150 250
Machine hours 60,000 Number of shipments 200 225 275
Material moves 20,000 Engineering change orders 15 10 5
Setups 3,000 Overhead costs include setups P90,000; shipping costs P140,000; and engineering costs
Quality inspections 12,000 P180,000.
What is the total cost of the proposed job if Ray Manufacturing uses direct labor hours as its
only activity driver? xvii
. What would be the per unit overhead cost for Model A if direct labor hours were the allocation
A. P144,000 C. P112,400 base?
B. P136,400 D. P106,400 A. P20.50 C. P82.00
B. P41.00 D. P76.00
Traditional Costing & Activity-based Costing
Questions 15 & 16 are based on the following information. xviii
. What would be the per unit overhead cost for Model A if activity-based costing were used?
Gilmore Company produces two products in a single factory. The following production and cost A. P20.50 C. P82.00
information has been determined: B. P74.00 D. P76.00
Model 1 Model 2
Units produced 1,000 200 Question Nos. 19 and 20 are based on the following:
Material moves (total) 100 40 Toylandia Company manufactures two products, X-MAN and Machman. Toylandia's overhead
Testing time (total) 250 125 costs consist of setting up machines, P400,000; machining, P900,000; and inspecting,
Direct labor hours per unit 1 5 P300,000.
The controller has determined total overhead to be P480,000. P140,000 relates to material moves; Information on the two products is:
P150,000 relates to testing; the remainder is related to labor time. X-MAN Machman
Direct labor hours 15,000 25,000
xv
. If Gilmore uses direct labor hours to allocate overhead to each model, what would overhead Machine setups 600 400
per unit be for Model 2? Machine hours 24,000 26,000
A. P 158.33 C. P 950.00 Inspections 800 700
B. P 400.00 D. P1,200.00
xix
. Overhead applied to X-MAN using traditional costing is
xvi
. If Gilmore uses activity-based costing to allocate overhead to each model, what would A. P600,000. C. P832,000.
REVIEWER IN ABC COSTING
Cost Accounting AND Control
(B. Activity-Based Cost System)
xxvi
. Set up cost chargeable per unit of M accounting for unused capacity amounts to
A. 2.50 C. 5.00
B. 2.75 D. 5.50
xxvii
. Ordering cost chargeable per unit of N ignoring unused capacity amounts to
A. 2.00 C. 3.00
B. 2.67 D. 4.00
xxviii
. The cost of unused capacity excluding labor costs amounts to
A. 11,260 C. 11,856
B. 11,460 D. 14,856
ii
.Answer: D
Total overhead (5,000 + 4,000 + 20,000) 29,000
Allocated OH to Product Y based on labor hours: 4 ÷ 20 x 29,000 P23,200
iii
.Answer: D
BH: (50 x P250) P 12,500
XP: (150 x P350) 52,500
Total direct costs P 65,000
iv
.Answer: B
Setup cost per setup (P300,000 ÷ 1,000) P300
Setup costs assigned to slacks (400 x P300) P120,000
v
.Answer: C
Overhead allocated to:
Product A: (80 x P100) P8,000
Product B: (60 x P100) 6,000
vi
.Answer: D
Overhead rate per inspection: (P1,920,000 ÷ 160,000) P12
Overhead assigned to:
Widgets: (40,000 x P12) P 480,000
Gadgets (30,000 x P12) 360,000
Targets (90,000 x P12) 1,080,000
vii
.Answer: A
Cost of change orders 10 x 600 P6,000
Cost of change order per hour P6,000/5,000 hours P1.20/MH
Cost of change order per unit:
E: 2 hours x P1.20 P2.40
M: 3 hours x P1.20 P3.60
viii
.Answer: A
Materials cost:
Product X: (50 x P100) P 5,000
Product Y: (150 x P230) 34,500
Total P39,500
Material handling cost based on direct materials cost: (P12,000 ÷ P39,500) P0.3038
Material handling cost per unit chargeable to:
Product X: (50,000 x P0.3038 ÷ 50) P 30.38
Product Y: (34,500 x P0.3038 ÷ 150) P 69.87
ix
.Answer: B
Handling cost per move (P200,000 ÷ 100 moves) P2,000
Model A: 20 x P2,000 ÷ 200 P 200
Model B: 80 x P2,000 ÷ 400 P 400
x
.Answer: C
Cost of change orders based on ABC
E: 8 x P600 ÷ 1,000 P4.80
M: 2 x P600 ÷ 1,000 P1.20
xi
.Answer: C
Activity Rates:
Setup (P100,000 ÷ 500) P200.00
Ordering (P40,000 ÷ 3,200) 12.50
Maintenance (P200,000 ÷ 4,000) 50.00
Power (P20,000 ÷ 80,000) 0.25
Overhead costs assigned to Job 500:
Setup (2 x P200) P 400
Ordering (8 x P12.50) 100
Maintenance (40 x P50) 2,000
Power (60 x P025) 15
Total P2,515
xii
.Answer: D
Room and meals (7 days x P150) P1,050
Radiology (4 images x P95) 380
Pharmacy (5 orders x P20) 100
Chemistry lab (6 tests x P85) 510
Operating room (4.5 hours x P550) 2,475
Total P4,515
xiii
.Answer: D
Setup P 80,000 ÷ 100 x 2 P1,600
Ordering P 40,000 ÷ 500 x 5 400
Maintenance P100,000 ÷ 2,500 x 25 1,000
Power P 20,000 ÷ 5,000 x 50 200
Total overhead assigned P3,200
Direct materials 2,000
Direct labor 2,400
Total costs assigned P7,600
xiv
.Answer: B
Direct materials P 30,000
Direct labor 24,000
Overhead 82,400
Total cost of the job P136,400
OH rate per DLH:
(P510,000 + P250,000 + P60,000 + P210,000) ÷ 100,000 P10.30 per DLH
Overhead allocated to proposed job: 8,000 x 10.30 82,400
xv
.Answer: D
Total DLH used (1,000 x 1) + (20 x 5) 2,000
Overhead allocated to Model 2 (0.5 x P480,000) P240,000
Overhead per unit of Model 2: (P240,000 ÷ 200) P1,200
xvi
.Answer: C
Overhead allocated to Model 2:
Handling (P140,000 ÷ 140 x 40 moves) P 40,000
Testing (P150,000 ÷ 375 x 125) 50,000
Labor-related (P190,000 ÷ 2) 95,000
Total P185,000
Overhead per unit, Model 2 (P185,000 ÷ 200) P925
xvii
.Answer: B
Overhead rate per DLH (P410,000 ÷ 10,000) P41
Overhead applied to Model A: (4,000 x P41) P164,000
Overhead applied to Model A per unit: (P164,000 ÷ 2,000) P82
xviii
.Answer: B
Activity rates;
Setups: (P90,000 ÷ 500 setups) P 180
Shipping: (P140,000 ÷ 700 shipments) 200
Engineering (P180,000 ÷ 30 change orders) 6,000
xix
.Answer: A
Total overhead costs: (P400,000 + P900,000 + P300,000) P1,600,000
Overhead applied to X-MAN using direct labor hours
(15,000/40,0000) x P1,600,000 P600,000
xx
.Answer: B
Activity Rates:
Setups (400,000/1,000 setups) P400 per set up
Machining (900,000/50,000 MH) P 18 per MH
Inspection (300,000/1,500 Inspection) P200 per inspection
Overhead assigned to Machman using ABC:
(400xP400) + (26,000xP18) + (700xP200) P768,000
xxi
.Answer: C
Direct materials P1,000
Direct labor 4,000
Maintenance 500 x 4 2,000
Inspection 4 x 100 400
Total P7,400
Activity Rate:
Inspection (P150,000 ÷ 1,500) P100/inspection
Maintenance (P100,000 ÷ 25,000) P4/MH
xxii
.Answer: D
OH rate per DLH: (P250,000 ÷ 50,000 DLH) = P5.00
Cost of the proposed job:
Direct materials P1,000
Direct labor 4,000
Overhead (800 hours x P5 4,000
Total P9,000
xxiii
.Answer: D
OH assigned to Product B: 6,000 MH x P15 per MH = P150,000
xxiv
.Answer: D
Purchasing cost (250 x P200) P 50,000
Processing costs (80,000 x P12) 960,000
Engineering cost (1,250 x P40) 50,000
Total costs assigned to Product A P1,060,000
Unit cost: (P1,060,000 ÷ 200,000) P 5.30
xxv
.Answer: B
Cost of use of equipment (0.65 x P80,000) P 52,000
Supplies (0.2 x P20,000) 4,000
Salary of second engineer (0.2 x P50,000) 10,000
Total cost assigned to designing tool activity P 66,000
xxvi
.Answer: C
Setup cost chargeable to Product M: (40/55 x P5,50 P4,000
Setup cost per unit, Product M: (P4,000 ÷ 800) P 5.00
xxvii
.Answer: B
Ordering costs chargeable to Product M: 5/15 x P3,200) P1,066.67
Ordering cost per unit, Product M: (P1,066.67 ÷ 400) P 2.67
xxviii
.Answer: D
Activity rate:
Setup cost: (5,500 ÷ 55) P100 per setup
Ordering: (P3,200 ÷ 20) P160 per order
Receiving cost: (P2,400 ÷ 40) P60 per receipt
Product development: (P2,800 ÷ 400) P 7 per part
General management: (P7,200 ÷ 8,000) P 0.90 per hour
Security: (P9,000 ÷ 9,000) P1.00 per sq. m.
Labor cost: (P56,000 ÷ 6,000) P9.33 per DLH