Chapter 9 Profit Planning and Activity-Based Budgeting McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies‚ Inc. All rights reserved. Learning Objective 1 9-2 Learning objective 1 • List and explain five purposes of budgeting systems. Purposes of Budgeting Systems Budget Budget a detailed plan‚ expressed in quantitative terms‚ that specifies how resources will be acquired and used during a specified period of time. 1. Planning 2. Facilitating Communication and Coordination 3
Premium Budget Balance sheet Inventory
Question 1 Product costs are costs that are associated with manufactured goods until the time period during which products are sold. It involved all costs in acquiring or making a product. These costs consist of direct materials‚ direct labour and manufacturing overhead. Product costs are initially assigned to an inventory account on the balance sheet. When the goods are sold‚ the costs are released from inventory as expenses and matched against sales revenue. Since product costs are initially
Premium Variable cost Costs Management accounting
CHAPTER 10 QUIZ 1. A mixed cost function has a constant component of $20‚000. If the total cost is $60‚000 and the independent variable has the value 200‚ what is the value of the slope coefficient? a. $200 b. $400 c. $600 d. $40‚000 2. [CMA Adapted] Of the following methods‚ the one that would not be appropriate for analyzing how a specific cost behaves is a. the scattergraph method. b. the industrial engineering approach. c. linear programming. d. statistical regression analysis.
Premium Costs Cost Economics
E -11 DM 5 DL 4 VMO 3 FMO = 180‚000/50‚000 = 3.6 Total = 15.6 15.6 * 5‚000 (50‚000-45000) = 78‚000 E-12 DM 5 DL 4 VMO 3 Cost per unit = 12 $ EIV = 12 * 5000 = 60‚000 E-13 Difference 3.6 * 5000 = 18‚000 And 78‚000 – 60‚000 = 18‚000 E-14 CGS sold = 45000(sold) * 15.60 = 702‚000 E15 12 * 45000 = 540‚000 E16 Sales = 30 * 45‚000 = 1‚350‚000 CGS 702‚000 CM 648‚000 Less S & admin. 160‚000 Net income 488‚000 E17 Sales =
Premium Costs Variable cost Cost
References: Managerial Accounting [VitalSouce bookshelf version]. Retrieved from http://digitalbookshelf.argosy.edu/books/0077588002/id/ch02ufn2
Premium Costs Cost Mathematics
Course: Managerial Accounting (ACCTG 4B) – Fall 2014 Lab Assignment No: 8 (Chapter 23) Assignment Due Date: 10/30/14 by 6:00AM Instructions Complete the following problems; make sure to include your calculations. Any incomplete work or partially completed will automatically receive zero points. PART I: Herron Company has budgeted the following unit sales: 2008 Units April 25‚000 May 50‚000 June 75‚000 July 45‚000 Of the units budgeted‚ 40% are sold by the Southern Division at an average
Premium Variable cost Costs Expense
ACG 4341 - Review Sheet - Spring 2012 Multiple Choice Identify the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question. ____ 1. Which of the following defines variable cost behavior? Total cost reactionto increase in activity|Cost per unit reactionto increase in activity| a.|remains constant remains constant| b.|remains constant increases| c.|increases increases| d.|increases
Premium Variable cost Costs Fixed cost
Textbook case: Managerial Accounting for Managers‚ 2nd edition Noreen‚ Brewer and Garrison (McGraw-Hill/Irwin‚ 2008). Case 4-33 Cost Structure; Target profit and Break-Even Analysis Contribution Income Statement for all three scenarios: 15% commission 20% commission Own sales force Sales $16‚000‚000 $16‚000‚000 $16‚000‚000 Variable manuf. cost $7‚200‚000 $7‚200‚000 $7‚200‚000 Commissions $2‚400‚000 $3‚200‚000 $1‚200‚000 -Tot. variable cost ($9‚600‚000)
Premium Management accounting Contribution margin Variable cost
References: Needles‚ B. E. (2010). Managerial Accounting. Florida: Cengage Learning. Warren‚ C. S. (2013). Managerial Accounting. Chicago: Cengage Learning.
Premium Investment Net present value Internal rate of return
Debts to amount calculated) 2014 30 June Bad Debts Expense Allowance for Doubtful Debts 20 070 20 070 (Adjustment to increase Allow for Doubtful Debts to amount calculated) Suggested Solutions taken from the Solutions Manual to accompany Hoggett J.‚ Medlin J. Edwards L.‚ Tilling M. and Hogg E. “Financial Accounting” 8th Edition‚ 2012‚ John Wiley & Sons Australia‚ Ltd.
Premium Accounts receivable Expense Balance sheet