1. The document discusses relevant costing and linear programming techniques for short-term non-routine decision making. It provides examples of decision types like make-or-buy, accept-or-reject special orders, and continues-or-shutdown of business segments.
2. Linear programming involves identifying decision variables and constraints to optimize an objective function like profit maximization. It is useful for resource allocation problems with multiple constraints.
3. Exercises provide examples of using total vs. differential analysis for a production quantity decision, and making-or-buying a component using relevant costs.
1. The document discusses relevant costing and linear programming techniques for short-term non-routine decision making. It provides examples of decision types like make-or-buy, accept-or-reject special orders, and continues-or-shutdown of business segments.
2. Linear programming involves identifying decision variables and constraints to optimize an objective function like profit maximization. It is useful for resource allocation problems with multiple constraints.
3. Exercises provide examples of using total vs. differential analysis for a production quantity decision, and making-or-buying a component using relevant costs.
1. The document discusses relevant costing and linear programming techniques for short-term non-routine decision making. It provides examples of decision types like make-or-buy, accept-or-reject special orders, and continues-or-shutdown of business segments.
2. Linear programming involves identifying decision variables and constraints to optimize an objective function like profit maximization. It is useful for resource allocation problems with multiple constraints.
3. Exercises provide examples of using total vs. differential analysis for a production quantity decision, and making-or-buying a component using relevant costs.
CPA Review Batch 45 May 2023 CPA Licensure Examination
MS-05 MANAGEMENT SERVICES Aljon Lee Elirie Arañas Kenneth Manuel
RELEVANT COSTING WITH LINEAR PROGRAMMING
DECISION MAKING – is the process of making choices from at least two alternatives. It involves identifying a problem, gathering information and evaluating alternative solutions. For business entities, management usually chooses the option that maximizes company profit. FACTORS CONSIDERED IN DECISION MAKING 1. Qualitative Factors – factors that cannot be expressed in money or other numerical units. Examples: customer satisfaction, suppliers and employee morale 2. Quantitative Factors – factors that can be expressed in money or other numerical units. The two quantitative approaches to decision making are: ✓ TOTAL approach: Total revenues and costs are determined for each alternative, and the results are compared to serve as a basis for the decision to make. ✓ DIFFERENTIAL approach (a.k.a. incremental analysis): Only the differences or changes in costs and revenues are considered. TYPES of COSTS COMMONLY ASSOCIATED WITH DECISION MAKING RELEVANT COSTS Future costs that are different among alternatives. DIFFERENTIAL COSTS Increases or decreases in total costs resulting from choosing one option over another. AVOIDABLE COSTS Costs that will be saved or will not be incurred if a certain decision is made. OPPORTUNITY COSTS Benefit foregone or highest income sacrificed when an option is chosen over another. OUT-OF-POCKET COSTS Costs required for immediate or near future cash outlays based on a particular decision. SUNK COSTS Historical or past costs that cannot be avoided regardless of what decision is made. NOTE: Differential (incremental) costs, avoidable costs, opportunity costs and out-of-pocket costs are usually considered relevant in decision making while sunk and unavoidable costs are considered irrelevant. TYPES of SHORT-TERM NON-ROUTINE DECISIONS NATURE of ALTERNATIVES DESCRIPTION DECISION-MAKING GUIDELINES 1. MAKE or BUY Should a product or material be internally Choose the option that has the lower cost. In a product or material manufactured (‘insource’) or bought from most cases, fixed costs are irrelevant. Consider (Outsourcing Decision) outside supplier (‘outsource’)? if there is any opportunity cost. 2. ACCEPT or REJECT Should a special order that requires a price Accept the order if the additional revenue a special order lower than the regular selling price be exceeds additional cost. In most cases, fixed accepted or rejected? costs are irrelevant. 3. CONTINUE or Should a business segment (e.g., product line, Continue if avoidable revenue is greater than its SHUTDOWN division, department or branch) be continued avoidable costs. Any allocated fixed cost to the a business segment (‘keep’) or discontinued (‘drop’)? segment is usually considered irrelevant. 4. SELL or PROCESS Should a product, after undergoing the joint Process further if additional revenue from FURTHER process, be sold at the split-off point or be processing further is greater than further a product processed further beyond the split-off point? processing costs. Joint costs are considered sunk costs and irrelevant. 5. SCRAP or REWORK Shall be a substandard or obsolete product Rework if additional revenue after rework is a product be sold as scrap (‘junk’) or be reworked higher than rework costs. The original cost or (‘modify’)? carrying value is considered irrelevant. 6. BEST PRODUCT Which product(s) should be given priority in Identify and measure constraint(s). Allocate COMBINATION production, given limited resources and/or limited resources to products from highest to (Optimal Use of Scarcity) market limitations? lowest CM per unit of limited resources. 7. CHANGE IN PROFIT Should any of the profit factors such as Change the profit factor if it will cause an FACTORS selling price, unit sales, variable cost, fixed improvement on the company’s over-all profit (CVP Analysis in MS-03) cost and sales mix be manipulated to increase position. profit? OTHER TERMINOLOGIES ASSOCIATED WITH SHORT-TERM NON-ROUTINE DECISIONS SHUTDOWN COSTS* Costs that will remain to be incurred even if a segment is discontinued. [Irrelevant] JOINT COSTS** Costs incurred in processing joint products until the split-off point. [Irrelevant] SPLIT-OFF POINT** The production stage where joint products are split into separate and distinct products. FURTHER PROCESSING COSTS** Costs incurred in processing separate products beyond the split-off point. [Relevant] BOTTLENECK RESOURCES*** Any operation where the capacity is less than the demand placed upon it. * connected with No. 3 above ** connected with No. 4 above *** connected with No. 6 above LINEAR PROGRAMMING (LP) is a quantitative technique used to achieve the best outcome (maximum profit or lowest cost) in a mathematical model whose requirements are represented by linear relationships. LP usually starts by identifying decision variables. Most LP problems are characterized by an objective function that is to be maximized or minimized subject to multiple constraints. ➢ OBJECTIVE FUNCTION – an equation that deals with maximizing revenue/profit or minimizing costs. Example: Maximize Z =10 A + 20 B ➢ CONSTRAINT FUNCTIONS – inequality relationships representing resource limitation and consumption. Example: 3 A + 5 B 240 NOTE: The non-negativity constraint (e.g., A, B 0) of the identified decision variables is often assumed even if it is not specified in linear programming problems. LP models are useful in resource allocation problems with multiple constraints (as opposed to relevant costing which can typically handle one constraint only). In LP, limited resources are often allocated based on the optimal product mix that aims to achieve the maximum possible profit.
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ReSA – THE REVIEW SCHOOL OF ACCOUNTANCY RELEVANT COSTING with LINEAR PROGRAMMING MS-05 EXERCISES: RELEVANT COSTING with LINEAR PROGRAMMING 1. TOTAL ANALYSIS vs. DIFFERENTIAL ANALYSIS KLM Company currently sells 10,000 units of its lone product at a price of P 50 per unit. The product costs at this level of activity are given below: Variable Costs: Fixed Costs: Direct materials P 12 Fixed Overhead P 70,000 Direct labor 8 Fixed Selling Expense 50,000 Variable Overhead 7 Variable Selling Expense 3 REQUIRED: A) What is the present profit? B) The company could increase its sales by 25% if it spends P 30,000 for advertisements. Determine the effect on company profit using: 1) Total approach 2) Differential approach 2. MAKE or BUY (OUTSOURCING DECISION) BMW must decide whether it must continue to produce an engine component or buy it from Sarao- Philippines for P 25,000 each. The demand for the coming year is 20 units. The costs of producing a single unit of the engine component are as follows: Direct materials P 13,000 Direct labor 7,000 Factory Overhead (80% fixed) 10,000 P 30,000 If BMW buys the components, the facility now used to make the components can be rented out to another firm for P 100,000. REQUIRED: A) Should BMW make or buy the components? B) How much is the maximum amount that BMW is willing to pay an outside supplier for the engine component? 3. ACCEPT or REJECT (SPECIAL ORDER DECISION) ESA Company produces and sells toy cars. Each toy car sells for P 50 and the company sells approximately 500,000 toy cars each year. Unit cost data for 2022 are given below: Fixed Variable Fixed Variable Direct Material - P 15 Factory Overhead P8 P5 Direct Labor - 12 Distribution Costs 2 3 ESA has received an offer from a foreign customer to purchase 15,000 toy cars at P 40. If the offer is accepted, the company has idle capacity to accommodate the order but the unit variable distribution costs will increase by P 2 for insurance and import duties. REQUIRED: A) What is the relevant unit cost of the special order? B) Should ESA accept or reject the special order? 4. SPECIAL ORDER PRICING CPL Company sells “BTS” at a unit price of P 36,000, with the following unit production costs: Direct materials P 12,000 Direct labor 8,000 Variable overhead 6,000 Fixed overhead 4,000 A special order for 1,000 units of BTS was received from AJD Company. Additional shipping costs for this sale are P 4,000 per unit. REQUIRED: What is the minimum selling price per unit for the special order if: A) CPL is operating at FULL capacity? B) CPL has EXCESS capacity? 5. CONTINUE or SHUTDOWN (SHUTTING DOWN OPERATIONS) The combined income statement of CTE Stores for Baguio and Manila branches is given below: Baguio Branch Manila Branch Total Sales P 1,200,000 P 800,000 P 2,000,000 Less: Variable expenses (840,000) (360,000) (1,200,000) Contribution margin P 360,000 P 440,000 P 800,000 Less: Traceable fixed expenses (210,000) (180,000) (390,000) Segment margin P 150,000 P 260,000 P 410,000 Less: Common fixed expenses (180,000) (120,000) (300,000) Profit (loss) (P 30,000) P 140,000 P 110,000 If Baguio Branch were eliminated, then its traceable fixed expenses could be avoided. The total common fixed expenses are merely allocated and would be unaffected. A) What will be the new company profit (loss) if Baguio Branch is eliminated? B) What will be the decrease in company profit if Baguio Branch is closed and 20% of its traceable fixed expense would remain unchanged while Manila’s sales would decrease by 20%?
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ReSA – THE REVIEW SCHOOL OF ACCOUNTANCY RELEVANT COSTING with LINEAR PROGRAMMING MS-05 6. PRODUCT ELIMINATION POINT JAC Company expects that sales will drop below the current level of 5,000 units per month. An income statement prepared for the monthly sales of 5,000 units show the following: Sales (5,000 @ P 3) P 15,000 Less: Variable costs (5,000 @ P 2) P 10,000 Fixed costs 5,000 15,000 Profit - Nil - If plant operations are suspended, a shutdown cost (i.e., plant maintenance and taxes) of P 2,000 per month will remain as incurred. Since there is no immediate possibility of profit under present conditions, the problem of the company is just how to minimize the loss. REQUIRED: A) Determine the shutdown point in units. B) Should the company continue or shut down operations if sales next month are expected to be: 1) 4,000 units? 2) 2,000 units? 3) 3,000 units?
7. SELL or PROCESS FURTHER
JBB Company produces products S, T and D for a joint cost of P 200,000. Each product may be sold at its split-off point or processed further. Additional processing costs are entirely variable. Relevant data are given below: Product Sales Value at Split-Off Additional Processing Costs Final Sales Value S P 100,000 P 80,000 P 250,000 T 200,000 40,000 200,000 D 50,000 . 60,000 . 100,000 . P 350,000 P 180,000 P 550,000 REQUIRED: A) Which product(s) should the company sell at split-off point? B) If the company can only sell all the products at split-off point or process all the products further beyond the split-off point, then which option is recommended? 8. SCRAP or REWORK NFS Company has 5,000 obsolete truck parts that are carried in inventory at a cost of P 50,000. The company is faced with a decision whether to scrap the parts or modify them: ➢ If the parts were junked, the company would realize only 10% of its cost. ➢ Should the company modify the parts, it will spend P 10,000 for materials, P 2,000 for direct labor, and overhead equal to 40% of prime costs. The new parts will sell for P 25,000 in the market. REQUIRED: Should NFS Company modify or scrap the parts?
9. BEST PRODUCT COMBINATION
JDD Company produces products A, B and C. One machine is used to produce the products. The sales demands, contribution margins and time on the machine (in hours) are as follows:
Market Limit Unit Contribution Margin Hours on Machine
A 100 units P 20 10 per unit B 80 units P 18 5 per unit C 150 units P 25 10 per unit There are 2,400 hours available on the machine during the week. Total fixed cost is P 3,000. REQUIRED: A) What is the best product combination that maximizes the weekly contribution? a. 90 units of A; 0 unit of B; 150 units of C b. 50 units of A; 80 units of B; 150 units of C c. 100 units of A; 80 units of B; 100 units of C d. 100 units of A; 80 units of B; 150 units of C B) How much is the profit associated with the best product combination?
10. LINEAR PROGRAMMING
GDM Company has an available 120 grams of Material 1 and 80 meters of Material 2 to produce its products A and B: Product A Product B Unit Contribution Margin P3 P4 Required Materials: Material 1 2 grams 5 grams Material 2 4 meters 2 meters REQUIRED: A) Objective function - involving maximization of the company’s contribution margin. B) Non-negativity constraint function C) Constraint function for Material 1 D) Constraint function for Material 2 E) Optimal product mix
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ReSA – THE REVIEW SCHOOL OF ACCOUNTANCY RELEVANT COSTING with LINEAR PROGRAMMING MS-05 WRAP-UP EXERCISES 1. Identify the best description for relevant costs in decision-making process. a. Past costs that are expected to be different under each alternative b. Past costs that are expected to be the same under each alternative c. Future costs that are expected to be different under each alternative d. Future costs that are expected to be the same under each alternative 2. A cost incurred in the past and hence irrelevant for current decision-making is a: a. Sunk cost c. Direct cost b. Fixed cost d. Discretionary cost 3. Which of the following costs is generally considered irrelevant in decision-making process? a. Direct labor c. Fixed factory overhead b. Direct materials d. Variable factory overhead 4. Which of the following cost classification schemes is most relevant to decision-making? a. Fixed vs. variable c. Joint vs. common b. Direct vs. common d. Avoidable vs. unavoidable 5. The salary that you would otherwise earn by working rather than attending the CPA review is a good example of a (an): a. Sunk cost c. Opportunity cost b. Joint cost d. Unavoidable cost 6. An opportunity cost is usually: a. Relevant and part of traditional accounting records b. Relevant, but not part of traditional accounting records c. Irrelevant, but part of traditional accounting records d. Irrelevant and not part of traditional accounting records 7. In a make-or-buy decision a. Only variable costs are relevant b. Only conversion costs are relevant c. Fixed costs that can be avoided in the future are relevant d. Fixed costs that will continue regardless of the decision are relevant 8. In a make-or-buy decision, the cost to buy is compared with the a. Total cost to make c. Variable manufacturing costs b. Relevant cost to make d. Variable selling & administrative expenses 9. What is the opportunity cost of making a component part in a factory given that there is no alternative use of the capacity? a. Zero c. Variable costs of the component b. Fixed costs of the component d. Total manufacturing costs of the component 10. In an accept-or-reject decision, which cost is usually considered to be irrelevant? a. Fixed cost of the product c. Direct fixed costs associated with the order b. Variable cost of the product d. Opportunity costs of the temporary idle capacity 11. If there is an excess capacity, then the minimum acceptable price for a special order must cover a. Usual fixed manufacturing costs b. Variable and usual fixed manufacturing costs c. Variable and incremental fixed costs associated with the special order d. Variable manufacturing costs plus contribution margin foregone on lost regular units. 12. If a company is operating at maximum or full capacity, the minimum special-order price must cover a. Variable costs associated with the special order b. Variable and incremental fixed costs associated with the special order c. Variable and fixed manufacturing costs associated with the special order d. Variable costs and incremental fixed costs associated with the special order plus contribution margin foregone on regular units not produced. 13. If the margin lost by dropping a product line is higher than avoidable fixed costs, then the product line a. Operates at a loss c. Shall be continued b. Shall be shutdown d. Has no impact on company profit 14. Assuming there is a material amount of shutdown costs, then the shutdown point must be a. Nil or zero c. Above its break-even point b. Below its break-even point d. Equal to its break-even point 15. Which is usually considered irrelevant in ‘sell or process further’ decision-making? a. Joint costs c. Sales value at the split-off point b. Further processing costs d. Sales value after further processing 16. A company that has a limited number of machine hours and abundant labor hours should produce first the product that has the highest a. Demand in units c. Contribution margin per labor hour b. Contribution margin per unit d. Contribution margin per machine hour 17. In linear programming, the expression “Maximize Z = 50 X + 100 Y” is most likely a (an) a. Objective function c. Cost function b. Constraint function d. Restriction function 18. The term ‘constraints’ in a linear programming model generally refers to: a. Committed costs c. Scarce resources b. Inefficiencies d. Decision variables
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ReSA – THE REVIEW SCHOOL OF ACCOUNTANCY RELEVANT COSTING with LINEAR PROGRAMMING MS-05 SELF-TEST QUESTIONS - with suggested answers (Sources: CMA/CIA/RPCPA/AICPA/Various test banks)
1. The relevance of a particular cost to a decision is determined by the
C a. Size of the cost c. Potential effects on the decision b. Risk level of the decision d. Accuracy and verifiability of the cost 2. In the development of the accounting data for decision-making purposes, a relevant cost is defined as: B a. Changes in variable cost under each alternative course of action. b. Future costs which will differ under each alternative course of action. c. Historical costs which are the best available basis for estimating future costs. d. Standard costs which are developed by time-and-motion-study techniques because of their relevance to managerial control. 1. In a decision analysis situation, which one of the following costs is generally NOT relevant to the decision? D a. Incremental cost c. Avoidable cost b. Differential cost d. Historical cost 2. The kind of cost that can be ignored in short-term decision making is a(n): C a. Differential cost c. Sunk cost b. Incremental cost d. Relevant cost 3. In determining whether to manufacture a part or buy it from an outside vendor, a cost that is irrelevant to the short-run decision is D a. Prime costs b. Variable overhead c. Fixed overhead that will be avoided if the part is bought from an outside vendor d. Fixed overhead that will continue even if the part is bought from an outside vendor 4. In a make-or-buy decision, the relevant costs include variable manufacturing costs as well as C a. Factory management costs c. Avoidable fixed costs b. General office costs d. Depreciation costs 5. Turkey Technology manufactures a particular computer component. Currently, the costs per unit are as follows: Direct materials, P 50; direct labor, P 500; variable overhead, P 250; fixed overhead, P 400. Pakistan Inc. has obtained Turkey with an offer to sell 10,000 units of the component for P 1,100 per unit. If Turkey accepts the proposal, P 2,500,000 of the fixed overhead will be eliminated. Should Turkey make or buy the component? D a. Make due to savings of P 3,000,000 c. Buy due to savings of P 1,000,000 b. Buy due to savings of P 2,500,000 d. Make due to savings of P 500,000 6. Saudi, Inc. is operating at 70% capacity and considers making Part A5 now being purchased from outside suppliers for P 110 each, which is projected to increase in the near future. Saudi has the equipment and labor force required to manufacture Part A5. The design engineer estimates that each part requires P 40 of direct materials and P 30 of direct labor. The plant overhead is 200% of direct labor peso cost, and 40% of the overhead is fixed cost. A decision to manufacture Part A5 will result in a gain or (loss) for each component of: D a. P 26 c. (P 20) b. P 16 d. P 4 7. The Blade Division of Baghdad Corporation produces hardened steel blades. One-third of the Blade Division’s output is sold to the Lawn Products Division of Baghdad; the remainder is sold to outside customers. The Blade Division’s estimated sales and cost data for the fiscal year are as follows: Lawn Products Outsiders Sales P 15,000 P 40,000 Variable costs (10,000) (20,000) Fixed costs (3,000) (6,000) Profit P2,000 P 14,000 Unit sales 10,000 units 20,000 units The Lawn Products Division has an opportunity to purchase 10,000 identical quality blades from an outside supplier at a cost of P 1.25 per unit. Assume that the Blade Division cannot sell any additional products to outside customers. Should Baghdad allow its Lawn Products Division to purchase the blades from the outside supplier? D a. Yes, because buying the blades would save Baghdad Company P 500 b. No, because making the blades would save Baghdad Company P 1,500 c. Yes, because buying the blades would save Baghdad Company P 2,500 d. No, because making the blades would save Baghdad Company P 2,500 8. Cairo Manufacturing uses 10 units of Part Number KJ45 each month in the production of radar equipment. The unit cost to manufacture one unit of KJ45 is presented below. Direct materials P 1,000 Materials handling (20% of direct material cost) 200 Direct labor 8,000 Manufacturing overhead (150% of direct labor) 12,000 Materials handling represents the direct variable costs of the Receiving Department that are applied to direct materials and purchased components on their cost. This is a separate charge in addition to manufacturing overhead. Cairo’s annual manufacturing overhead budget is one-third variable and two-thirds fixed. Egypt Suppliers, one of Cairo’s reliable vendors, has offered to supply Part KJ45 at a unit price of P 15,000. If Cairo purchases the KJ45 units from Scott, the capacity Cairo used to manufacture these parts would be idle. Should Cairo decide to purchase the parts from Egypt, the unit cost of KJ45 would: A a. Increase by P 4,800 c. Decrease by P 3,200 b. Decrease by P 6,200 d. Increase by P 1,800 NOTE: The relevant cost to buy must include 20% handling cost. (P 15,000 + P 3,000)
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ReSA – THE REVIEW SCHOOL OF ACCOUNTANCY RELEVANT COSTING with LINEAR PROGRAMMING MS-05 9. Yemen Company manufactures 20,000 units of a certain component per year. This component is used in the production of a main product. The following are the costs to make the component per unit: Direct materials P 11 Direct labor 14 Variable overhead 8 Fixed overhead 9 If Yemen buys the component from outside supplier the company can rent out the released facilities for P 20,000 a year. The cost of the component per unit as quoted by the supplier is P 36. 60% of the fixed overhead applied in the manufacture of the component will continue regardless of what decision is made. For all purchases made by the company, freight and handling costs are applied at 1% of the purchase price. The direct materials cost is exclusive of the freight and handling cost. What is the economic advantage or disadvantage of buying the component? (NOTE: the relevant cost to buy both DM and component must include 1% handling cost based on the purchase price) B a. P 24,800 advantage c. P 27,000 disadvantage b. P 27,000 advantage d. P 63,000 advantage 10. Iran Company needs 20,000 of a certain part to use in its production cycle. The following information is available: Cost to Iran to make the part: Direct materials P4 Direct labor 16 Variable overhead 18 Fixed overhead applied 10 P 48 Cost to buy the part from the Syria Company P 36 If Iran buys the part from Syria Co., Iran could not use the released facilities in another manufacturing activity. 60% of the fixed overhead applied will continue regardless of what decision is made. In deciding whether to make or buy the part, what are the total relevant costs to make the part? D a. P 560,000 c. P 720,000 b. P 640,000 d. P 840,000 11. Accepting a special order will improve overall net operating income so long as revenue from the order exceeds D a. The contribution margin on the order c. The variable costs associated with the order b. The sunk costs associated with the order d. The incremental costs associated with the order 12. In considering a special-order situation that will enable a company to make use of its idle capacity, which of the following costs would be irrelevant? B a. Materials c. Direct labor b. Depreciation d. Variable overhead 13. Given the following target selling price for a unit of product: Direct materials P 18 Direct labor 7 Overhead (20% variable) 15* Cost of manufacture 40 Desired markup – 30% 12 Regular selling price P 52 * based on 25,000 units produced each year A customer has offered to purchase 5,000 units at a special price of P 38 per unit. The company is selling only 20,000 units per year so it has idle capacity. Variable selling costs associated with the special order would be P 2 per unit. If the special order is accepted, what will be the effect on the company’s overall net income? A a. Increase by P 40,000 c. Increase by P 50,000 b. Decrease by P 10,000 d. Decrease by P 70,000 14. Iraq, Inc. sells a product for P 30. Variable cost is P 16. Iraq could accept a special order for 1,000 units at P 23. If Iraq accepted the order, how many units could it lose at the regular price before the decision became unwise? B a. 1,000 c. 200 b. 500 d. 0 Solution: (30 – 16) X = (23 – 16) 1,000 CM foregone on regular sales = CM earned on special order 15. Abu Company sells Product B at a selling price of P 21 per unit. Abu’s cost per unit based on the full capacity of 200,000 units is as follows: Direct materials P 4.00 Direct labor 5.00 Overhead (2/3 fixed) 6.00 P 15.00 A special order offering to buy 20,000 units was received from a foreign distributor. The only selling cost that would be incurred for this order would be P 3 per unit for shipping. Abu has sufficient existing capacity to manufacture the additional units. In negotiating the price for the special order, Abu should consider that the minimum selling price per unit should be: A a. P 14 c. P 16 b. P 15 d. P 18 16. Delhi Co. operates at full capacity. The minimum selling price to be set for a special order must cover C a. Fixed cost b. Variable cost c. Variable cost plus foregone contribution margin on lost regular sales d. Fixed cost plus foregone contribution margin on lost regular sales
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ReSA – THE REVIEW SCHOOL OF ACCOUNTANCY RELEVANT COSTING with LINEAR PROGRAMMING MS-05 17. Mumbai Co. is a manufacturer of industrial components. One of their products used as a subcomponent in manufacturing is KB-96. This product has the following financial structure per unit: Selling price P 150 Direct materials P 20 Direct labor 15 Variable manufacturing overhead 12 Fixed manufacturing overhead 30 Shipping and handling 3 Fixed selling and administrative 10 Total costs P 90 Mumbai has received a special, one-time, order for 1,000 KB-96 parts. Assume that Mumbai is operating at full capacity and that the contribution margin of the output that would be displaced by the special order is P 10,000. The minimum price that is acceptable, using the original data, for this one-time special order is in excess of A a. P 60 c. P 87 b. P 70 d. P 100 18. Dhabi Company’s regular selling price for its product is P 10 per unit. Variable costs are P 6 per unit. Fixed costs total P 1 per unit based on 100,000 units and remain constant within the relevant range of 50,000 units to a total capacity of 200,000 units. After sales of 80,000 units were projected for 2021, a special order was received for an additional 10,000 units. To increase its operating income by a total of P 10,000, what price per unit should Dhabi charge for this special order? A a. P 7.00 c. P 10.00 b. P 8.00 d. P 11.00 19. In deciding whether or not to eliminate a branch or division, which of the following is considered relevant? C a. All variable costs of the branch c. All direct costs of the branch b. All fixed costs of the branch d. All indirect costs of the branch 20. Lebanon plans to discontinue a division with a P 20,000 contribution margin. Overhead allocated to the division is P50,000, of which P 5,000 cannot be eliminated. What is the effect on Lebanon’s pretax income by this plan? C a. P 5,000 decrease c. P 25,000 increase b. P 20,000 decrease d. P 30,000 increase 21. Baghdad Company produces and sells 8,000 units of Product X each year. Each unit of Product X sells for P 10 and has a contribution margin of P 6. It is estimated that if Product X is discontinued, P 50,000 of the P 60,000 in fixed costs charged to Product X could be eliminated. These data indicate that if Product X is discontinued, overall company operating income should A a. Increase by P 2,000 per year c. Increase by P 38,000 per year b. Decrease by P 2,000 per year d. Decrease by P 38,000 per year 22. Arab manages 5 upscale townhouses in Damascus. Shown below are the summary income statements for each unit : ONE TWO THREE FOUR FIVE Rent Income P 10,000 P 12,100 P 23,470 P 18,780 P 10,650 Expenses 8,000 13,000 26,000 24,000 13,000 Profit P 2,000 (P 900) (P 2,530) (P 5,220) (P 2,350) Included in the expenses is P 12,000 of corporate overhead allocated to the townhouses based on rental income. The townhouse unit(s) that the company should consider selling is (are): C a. Two, Three, Four and Five c. Four and Five b. Three, Four and Five d. Four 23. In analyzing whether to build another regional service office, the salary of the Chief Executive Officer (CEO) at the corporate headquarters is: D a. Relevant because salaries are always relevant b. Irrelevant since another imputed cost for the same will be considered c. Relevant because this will probably change if the regional service office is built d. Irrelevant because it is a future cost that will not differ between the alternatives under consideration 24. The Uganda Company has two divisions – East and West. The divisions have the following revenues and expenses: East West Sales P 720,000 P 350,000 Variable costs 370,000 240,000 Traceable fixed costs 130,000 80,000 Allocated common corporate costs 120,000 50,000 Operating income (loss) P 100,000 (P 20,000) The management at Uganda is pondering the elimination of the West division since it has shown an operating loss for the past several years. If the West division were eliminated, its traceable fixed costs could be avoided. The total common corporate costs would be unaffected by this decision. Given these data, the elimination of the West Division would result in an overall company operating income of: D a. P 120,000 c. P 80,000 b. P 100,000 d. P 50,000 25. The income statement of product Pabigat, one of the products being sold by Palugi Company is reproduced below: Sales P 80,000 Costs and expenses 92,000 Net loss (P 12,000) P 37,600 of the costs and expenses above are fixed, of which P 21,600 is unavoidable regardless of whether the product will be dropped or not. What is the product elimination (shutdown) point? B a. P 16,000 c. P 54,400 b. P 50,000 d. P 70,400 Page 7 of 9 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com ReSA – THE REVIEW SCHOOL OF ACCOUNTANCY RELEVANT COSTING with LINEAR PROGRAMMING MS-05 26. Temple Corporation contemplates the temporary shutdown of its plant facilities in a provincial area which are economically depressed due to natural disasters. Below are certain manufacturing and selling expenses: 1) Depreciation 5) Sales commissions 2) Property tax 6) Security of premises 3) Interest expense 7) Delivery expenses 4) Insurance of facilities Which of the above expenses will be considered in the computation of shutdown costs? B a. All expenses in the list c. Items 1, 2 and 3 only b. All except items 5 & 7 d. All except item 5 27. The indifference point is the level of volume at which a company A a. Earns the same profit under different operating schemes. b. Earns no profit c. Earns its target profit d. Any of the above 28. Bible Production, Inc. owns and operates a chain of movie theaters. The theaters in the chain vary from low volume, small town to high volume, big city/downtown theaters. Management is considering installing machines that will make popcorn on the premises. This proposed feature would be properly advertised and is intended to increase patronage at the company’s theaters. These machines are available in two different sizes with the following details: Economy poppers Regular poppers Annual capacity 50,000 boxes 120,000 boxes Costs: Annual machine rental P 80,000 P 110,000 Popcorn cost per box 1.30 1.30 Cost of each box 0.80 0.80 Other variable costs per box 2.20 1.40 What level of output at which the Economy and Regular Poppers would earn the same profit (loss)? C a. 50,000 boxes c. 37,500 boxes b. 65,000 boxes d. 40,000 boxes 29. Desert Company produces three products from a joint process costing P 100,000. The following information is available: Units Sales Price (Split-Off) Cost to Process Further Sales Price (After Further) A 10,000 P 35 P 60,000 P 40 B 20,000 P 40 20,000 P 45 C 30,000 P 20 90,000 P 25 Which products should be processed further? C a. A only c. B and C b. A and B d. A, B and C 30. Aladdin Company has 100 units of obsolete part. The variable cost to produce them was P 40 per unit. They could now be sold for P 30 each and it would cost P 60 to make them now. The parts can be reworked for P 80 each and sold for P 170. What is the monetary advantage of reworking the parts over the next-best action? C a. P 3,000 c. P 6,000 b. P 5,000 d. P 10,000 31. Middle East Corporation has 1,000 obsolete lanterns that are carried in inventory at a manufacturing cost of P 20,000. If the lanterns are reworked for P 5,000, they could be sold for P 9,000. If the lanterns are scrapped, they could be sold for P 1,000. What alternative is more desirable and what are the total relevant costs of the alternative? A a. Rework, P 5,000 c. Scrap, P 20,000 b. Rework, P 25,000 d. Neither, both options result to losses 32. When a multiproduct plant operates at full capacity, quite often decisions must be made as to which products to emphasize. These decisions are frequently made with a short-run focus. In making such decisions, managers should select products with the D a. Highest sales price per unit b. Highest sales volume potential c. Highest individual unit contribution margin d. Highest contribution margin per unit of the constraining resource 33. Somalia Company produces three products, with costs and selling prices as shown below: A . B . C . Selling price per unit P 30 100% P 20 100% P 15 100% Variable costs per unit 18 60% 15 75% 6 40% Contribution margin per unit P 12 40% P5 25% 9 60% A particular machine is a bottleneck. On that machine, 3 machine hours are required to produce each unit of Product A, 1 hour is required to produce each unit of Product B, and 2 hours are required to produce each unit of Product C. In which order should it produce its products? C a. C, A, B c. B, C, A b. A, C, B d. The order of production doesn’t matter 34. Food Co. has a limited number of machine hours that it can use for manufacturing two products, X and Y. Each product has a selling price of P 160 per unit but product X has 40% contribution margin and product Y has 70% contribution margin. One unit of Y takes twice as many machine hours to make as a unit of X. Assuming unlimited demand, which product(s) should the limited machine hours be used for? A a. X c. Either X and Y b. Both X and Y d. Y
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ReSA – THE REVIEW SCHOOL OF ACCOUNTANCY RELEVANT COSTING with LINEAR PROGRAMMING MS-05 35. Data about various products manufactured by a company are presented below. Direct material and labor are readily available from resource markets. However, the company is limited to a maximum of 3,000 machine hours per month: Product A Product B Product C Product D Selling price per unit P 15 P 18 P 20 P 25 Variable cost per unit P7 P 11 P 10 P 16 Units produced per machine hour 3 4 2 3 What is the product that is the most profitable for the manufacturer in this situation? B a. Product A c. Product C b. Product B d. Product D 36. Sudan Company has three products: A, B and C. Three machines are used to produce the products. The contribution margins, sales demands, and time on each machine (in minutes) are as follows: Demand CM Time on Machine 1 Time on Machine 2 Time on Machine 3 A 100 P 30 10 mins 15 mins 12 mins B 80 P 20 10 mins 5 mins 8 mins C 60 P 30 5 mins 10 mins 5 mins Assuming that there are 2,400 minutes available in each machine, which machine is the bottleneck (see page 1 for definition of “Bottleneck Operations”)? B a. Machine 1 c. Machine 3 b. Machine 2 d. No bottleneck operation 37. Assuming the same data in No. 36, how many units of A, B and C should be produced during the week? B a. 93 of A, 60 of B, and 90 of C c. 60 of A, 60 of B, and 90 of C b. 93 of A, 80 of B, and 60 of C d. 90 of A, 60 of B, and 90 of C Items 38 and 39 are based on the following information Guava Co. uses the following model to determine its product mix for metal (M) and scrap metal (S): Max Z = P 30 M + P 70 S If: 3M + 2S 15, 2M + 4S 18, M & S are non-negative values 38. What are the two inequality functions? D a. Contributions c. Conditions b. Shadow prices d. Constraints 39. The point at which M = 2 and S = 3 would C a. Minimize cost c. Be a feasible point b. Lie in a corner d. Be an infeasible point Items 40 and 41 are based on the following information Strawberry Company manufactures two models, small and large. Each model is processed as follows: Machining Polishing Small model (X) 2 hours 1 hour Large model (Y) 4 hours 3 hours The available weekly hours to process the two models: 100 hours in the Machining Department and 90 hours in the Polishing Department. The contribution margins are P 5 for small model (X) and P 7 for large model (Y). 40. How would the objective function be expressed? A a. 5 X + 7 Y c. 5 X (3) + 7 Y (7) 190 b. 5 X + 7 Y 190 d. 12 X + 10 Y 41. How would the restriction (constraint) for the Machining Department be expressed? C a. 2 X + 4 Y c. 2 X + 4 Y 100 b. 2 (5 X) + 4 (7 Y) 100 d. 5 X + 7 Y 100 42. Durian Manufacturing produces two products, X and Y. A unit of Product X requires six hours of time on Machine 1 and twelve hours of time on Machine 2. A unit of Product Y requires 4 hours on Machine 1 and no time on Machine 2. Both machines are available for 24 hours. Assuming that the objective function of the total contribution margin is 2X + 1Y, what product mix will produce the maximum profit? (NOTE: usual mistake is D -- not feasible on Machine 2) C a. 0 unit of X, 6 units of Y c. 2 units of X, 3 units of Y b. 1 unit of X, 4 units of Y d. 4 units of X, 0 unit of Y 43. Lemon Company makes products X and Y, with the following production constraints representing two machines: Machine 1: 2X + 3Y 18 Machine 2: 2X + Y 10. If the profit equation is Z = 4 X + 2Y, then what is the maximum possible profit? B a. P 18 c. P 21 b. P 20 d. P 24 44. A relevant cost is a cost that is D a. Optimal c. Important b. Effective d. Pertinent to a decision 45. If a cost has no influence on a decision, it B a. Is a sunk cost c. Cannot be a future cost b. Is not a relevant cost d. Is merely a differential cost 46. Which type of cost is a vital part of decision-making process, but omitted from conventional accounting records? C a. Sunk costs c. Opportunity costs b. Direct costs d. Out-of-pocket costs 47. Allocated costs are generally D a. Separable c. Variable b. Immaterial d. Common 48. The role of sunk costs in decision-making can be summed up in which of the following sayings? B a. No pain, no gain c. A penny saved is a penny earned b. Bygones are bygones d. The love of money is the root of all evil
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