Accounting Exercises 5: Costing
by Clemens Werkmeister
Information about Salesdesign's Departments and Job Orders
Salesdesign Ltd. designs, produces and sells salespoints for retailers. Due to its large inventory it has quick reaction times and is able to build a broad variety of salespoints to order. Apart from the Warehouse, the manufacturing departments are Design and Assembly. The Sales department is responsible for selling and customer service. The following departmental accounting data are available:
Department | Warehouse | Design | Assembly | Sales |
Budgeted overhead | $100,000 | $800,000 | $900,000 | $500,000 |
Actual overhead | 120,000 | 810,000 | 870,000 | 550,000 |
Cost driver | Direct material cost |
Design labor hours |
Assembly labor hours |
CoGS per period |
Cost driver units | $2,000,000 | 50,000 hrs | 30,000 hrs | t.b.d. |
Average direct labor cost is $15 per hour. During the year, several jobs were completed. Data pertaining to three such jobs, Job 623, 624 and 625, follow:
Job | 623 | 624 | 625 |
Direct materials | $2,000 | $10,000 | $1,000 |
Direct labor Design | 100 hrs | 200 hrs | 200 hrs |
Direct labor Assembly | 60 hrs | 200 hrs | 40 hrs |
Units produced | 5 | 20 | 1 |
Job-order costing with plant-wide overhead rates
Salesdesign Ltd. calculates job-order cost using a plant-wide budgeted manufacturing overhead rate based on direct labor costs. There are no changes in inventory of raw materials, work in process or finished goods.
1. Compute the budgeted plant-wide manufacturing overhead rate.
2. Compute the per-unit manufacturing cost and the cost of goods sold for Jobs 623, 624 and 625, based on the plant-wide rate.
3. Compute the sales overhead rate and allocate sales overhead to Jobs 623, 624 and 625.
Job-order costing based on departmental overhead rates
Salesdesign Ltd. wants to analyze the effect of job-order costing with departmental rates based on the above departmental cost drivers. Departmental direct labor costs are $20 per design hour and $10 per assembly hour.
4. Compute the budgeted departmental overhead rates.
5. Recalculate the unit manufacturing costs for both jobs based on departmental overhead rates and direct labor cost rates.
6. Compute the difference in unit costs for the three jobs.
7. At the end of the year, Salesdesign reported 48,000 direct labor hours in Design and 32,000 in Assembly. Total material costs were $1,950,000. Determine the under- or over-applied overhead (based on departmental overhead rates). What happens with the overhead variance?
8. Discuss advantages and disadvantages of the departmental approach compared to the plant-wide rates. Which one is more complex? Is it appropriate for the current situation?
Activity-based costing
An activity analysis prepared by Salesdesign's controller, comes to a surprising conclusion: There are only two activities, Order-setup and Processing, which are the main overhead drivers in the three manufacturing departments. The analysis assigns percentages of departmental overhead to the two activities using the following work distribution matrix:
Department | Overhead | Setup | Processing |
Warehouse | $100,000 | 70 % | 30 % |
Design | 800,000 | 80 % | 20 % |
Assembly | 900,000 | 20 % | 80 % |
Cost drivers | Orders | Units | |
Cost-driver units | 250 | 3,000 |
9. Assign the departmental cost to activities.
10. Compute the activity rates (per order and per unit).
11. Calculate the total and unit manufacturing costs for the three jobs.
12. Compute the difference in unit cost for the three jobs and compare them to the plant-wide job-order costing. Is this activity-based costing approach appropriate for Salesdesign's manufacturing process?
Sales Cost as Activity-based Costs
The Sales department is strongly involved in the design of salespoints and the customers appreciate its after-sales service activities as a key part of the product. Thus, Salesdesign considers including the corresponding costs in the cost of goods manufactured (or cost of goods sold, respectively). Following estimates, about 50 % of Sales activities are order-setup related, the rest is selling.
13. Calculate the cost of goods manufactured including this information.
14. Analyze possible effects of this change on the financial statements and order-related decisions.
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References:
Accounting Exercises