Break Even Analysis University of Phoenix Accounting in Healthcare ACC561 November 26‚ 2010 Break Even Analysis Relevance of DRG Analysis as a Tool in Healthcare DRG analysis helps managers in health care determine levels of service at which to operate and to break even as well as avoid any loses. Using the DGR analysis‚ management will be able to determine the appropriate levels at which to operate making the most of any profits (Steven‚ & David‚ 2000). The management team of
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workers on the vertical axis and full-time workers on the horizontal. The slope of the isoquant measures the number of part-time workers that can be exchanged for a full-time worker while still maintaining output. At the bottom end of the isoquant‚ at point A‚ the isoquant hits the full-time axis because it is possible to produce with full-time workers only and no part-timers. As we move up the isoquant and give up full-time workers‚ we must hire more and more part-time workers to replace each full-time
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has 1- the greater fixed costs? 2- The greater variable cost rate? 3-The greater per unit revenue? 1- B 2- B 3- A b. Which provider ha the greater contribution margin? B c. Which provider needs the higher volume to break even? A d. How would the graphs below change if the providers were operating in a discounted fee-for-service environment? In a capitated environment Revenue and Costs ($) Total Costs Loss
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Variable costs are those costs that increase as the output the restaurant increases. As example‚ assume for the Teen Burger Direct Materials cost $1.50 per burger. A day with one thousand burgers sold would cost of $1500 dollars. In comparison‚ a day with two thousand burgers sold would cost $3000 dollars. While the cost per Teen Burger remains constant the total cost per day varies with the output each given day. Electricity costs would increase in the same fashion as each time a burger is cooked
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inventory. Costs involved in production are: Direct material $5 Direct labor $4 Variable manufacturing overhead $3 Total variable manufacturing costs per unit $12 Fixed manufacturing overhead cost per year $180‚000 In addition‚ the company has fixed selling and administrative costs of $160‚000 per year. Exercise 5-11. During the year‚ Summit produces 50‚000 snow shovels and sells 45‚000 snow shovels. What is the value of ending inventory using full costing? Fixed manufacturing
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Break-Even Analysis FIN/200 July 29‚ 2010 Justin Henegar 13. Healthy Foods‚ Inc.‚ sells 50-pound bags of grapes to the military for $10 a bag. The fixed costs of this operation are $80‚000‚ while the variable costs of the grapes are $.10 per pound. a. What is the break-even point in bags? 80‚000/5= 16‚000 bags- This is the company’s break-even point because the variable per unit would be $5.00 if it’s .10 per pound with a 50-lb bag. The other answer I received was 8‚080 bags but this would
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exam‚ management concluded the large fixed cost absorbed sale figure. First it is important to understand the standard costing system implemented in Rubber group. Standard costing assigns quantity and price standards to each component of variable and fixed costs in calculating the total cost. In the case of NASA‚ the system uses standard purchasing price (input cost) and standard inputs usage in place for variable costs‚ and standard spending price (input cost) and standard
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has a traditional cost system. It calculates a plant-wide overhead rate by dividing total overhead costs by total direct labor hours. Assume‚ for the calculations below‚ that plant overhead is a committed (fixed) cost during the year‚ but that direct labor is a variable cost. 1. Calculate the plant-wide overhead rate. Use this rate to assign overhead costs to products and calculate the profitability of the four products. The assignment spreadsheet provides a starting point for your calculations
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done above is a “full-cost” analysis. This is in contrast to a “direct-cost” analysis that ignores overhead costs. Is full cost the right metric for job profitability and customer profitability? What assumptions are we making about the variability of overhead costs when we do a “full-cost” analysis? By allocating the overhead costs to jobs and customers there is an implicit assumption that these are variable with the cost driver. In reality‚ some of the overhead costs are fixed‚ at least in the short
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difference in costs between high and low months is calculated by subtracting the cost lowest month from the highest month. • 26‚000 – 20‚500 = 5‚500 3. Variable cost per meal is calculated by dividing the cost difference by the difference in service volume. • 5‚500 / 1‚400 = 3.93 • $3.93 per meal 4. Total variable cost for the lowest time period is calculated by multiplying the service volume by the variable cost per meal. The same calculation is used to determine the total variable cost for the highest
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