CHAPTER 2 AN INTRODUCTION TO COST TERMS AND PURPOSES 2-20 (15–20 min.) Classification of costs‚ manufacturing sector. Cost object: Type of car assembled (Corolla or Geo Prism) Cost variability: With respect to changes in the number of cars assembled There may be some debate over classifications of individual items‚ especially with regard to cost variability. |Cost Item |D or I |V or F | |A
Premium Variable cost Costs Fixed cost
Types of costs Classification of costs: • Materials – costs of raw materials‚ components and other goods used. • Labor – cost of employees wages and salaries. • Expenses – costs which cannot be included in materials and labor. Variable costs – these costs varies directly with changes in the level of quantity‚ over a defined period of time. Fixed costs – are not affected by the changes in the level of activity‚ over a defined period of time. Semi variable costs – for example
Premium Marginal cost Variable cost Costs
Inventories Additional Valuation Issues ASSIGNMENT CLASSIFICATION TABLE (BY TOPIC) TopicsQuestionsBrief ExercisesExercisesProblems Concepts for Analysis1.Lower-of-cost-or-market.1‚ 2‚ 3‚ 4‚ 5‚ 61‚ 2‚ 31‚ 2‚ 3‚ 4‚ 5‚ 61‚ 2‚ 3‚ 9‚ 101‚ 2‚ 3‚ 52.Inventory accounting changes relative sales value method net real-izable value.7‚ 847‚ 83.Purchase commitments.95‚ 69‚ 10964.Gross profit method.10‚ 11‚ 12‚ 13711‚ 12‚ 13‚ 14‚ 15‚ 16‚ 174‚ 55.Retail inventory method.14‚ 15‚ 16818‚ 19‚ 20‚ 22‚ 23‚ 266‚ 7‚ 8
Premium Revenue Inventory Profit margin
additional costs incurred. Actual variable costs increased from $218 to $247.50‚ causing an unfavourable flexible-budget variable cost variance of $59 457. The next section‚ 3.2 Variable and Fixed Variance Analysis‚ will look into the specific causes of this increased in cost and resources consumed. Understanding the reasons why actual results differ from budgeted amounts can help Barnes better manage its costs and pricing decisions in the future. If Barnes have not been able to pass these costs on to
Premium Variable cost Costs Cost
Sou SOLUTIONS TO EXERCISES EXERCISE 18-1 (15-20 minutes) (a) Huish could recognize revenue at the point of sale based upon the time of shipment because the books are sold f.o.b. shipping point. Because of the return policy one might argue in favor of the cash collection basis. Because the returns can be estimated‚ one could argue for shipping point less estimated returns. (b) Based on the available information and lack of any information indicating that any of the criteria in FASB Statement
Premium Generally Accepted Accounting Principles Revenue Accounts receivable
Chapter 04 Analyzing Investing Activities Multiple Choice Questions 1. Which of the following would rarely be classified as a current asset? A. Prepaid insurance B. Goodwill C. Marketable Securities D. Work-in-progress 2. Which of the following would not be classified as a current asset? A. Inventory B. Accounts payable C. Accounts receivable D. Prepaid expenses 3. An asset is considered to be liquid if: A. it is readily converted into a current asset. B. it is
Premium Balance sheet Inventory Generally Accepted Accounting Principles
Cost Accounting A Managerial Emphasis Fourteenth Edition Charles T. Horngren Stanford University Srikant M. Datar Harvard University Madhav V. Rajan Stanford University Prentice Hall Boston Columbus Indianapolis New York San Francisco Upper Saddle River Amsterdam Cape Town Dubai London Madrid Milan Munich Paris Montréal Toronto Delhi Mexico City São Paulo Sydney Hong Kong Seoul Singapore Taipei Tokyo Editorial Director: Sally Yagan Editor in Chief: Donna Battista AVP/Executive Editor: Stephanie
Premium Management accounting
CAPITAL BUDGETING PROBLEMS: CHAPTER 11 Answers to Warm-Up Exercises E11-1. Categorizing a firm’s expenditures Answer: In this case‚ the tuition reimbursement should be categorized as a capital expenditure since the outlay of funds is expected to produce benefits over a period of time greater than 1 year. E11-2. Classification of project costs and cash flows Answer: $3.5 billion already spent—sunk cost (irrelevant) $350 million incremental cash outflow—relevant cash flow $15 million per year cash
Premium Depreciation Generally Accepted Accounting Principles Operating cash flow
CHAPTER 7 CORPORATIONS: REORGANIZATIONS SOLUTIONS TO PROBLEM MATERIALS Status: Q/P Question/ Learning Present in Prior Problem Objective Topic Edition Edition 1 LO 1 IRS Letter Ruling Unchanged 1 2 LO 1 Reorganizations follow tax law Unchanged 2 3 LO 1 Types of reorganizations Unchanged 3 4 LO 2 Comparing like-kind exchange to corporate New reorganization 5 LO 2 Four-column template Unchanged 5 6 LO 1‚ 2‚ 3 Reorganization: tax attributes Unchanged 6 7
Premium Corporation Net present value Bond
according to the authors ‚ the organizational structure will in turn make the condition less and less and less favorable ‚ given the previous condition that the transfer pricing policy made many complaints by consumer product division ‚ such as the cost of production inefficiencies that should be the responsibility of the milling division instead become a burden products division consumers ‚ are also subject to deduction of 75% investment by milling division when this division does not include additional
Premium Forward contract Management Control theory