40‚000 | | 100‚000 | | 404 | | | | 20‚000 | 20‚000 | 40‚000 | | 405 | | | | | 20‚000 | 20‚000 | | Total | 90‚000 | 120‚000 | 90‚000 | 60‚000 | 40‚000 | 400‚000 | 2 Physical Measures Method | Produced | Proportion | Joint Cost Allocation | Unit Cost | 401 | 90‚000 | (90‚000/400‚000)0.225 or 22.5% | (200‚000 x 0.225)45‚000 | (45‚000/90‚000)0.5 | 402 | 120‚000 | (120‚000/400‚000)0.3 or 30% | (200‚000 x 0.3)60‚000 | (60‚000/120‚000)0.5 | 403 | 90‚000 | (90‚000/400‚000)0.225 or 22.5%
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1. The chief economist for Argus Corporation‚ a large appliance manufacturer‚ estimated the firm’s short-run cost function for vacuum cleaners using an average variable cost function of the form. AVC= a + bQ+ cQ^2 (the 2 is suppose to be exponent) Where AVC=dollars per vacuum cleaner and Q=number of vacuum cleaners produced each month. Total fixed cost each month is $180‚000. The following results were obtained: Dependent Variable:AVC R-Square
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------------------------------------------------- ASSIGNMENT ON COST CONTROL AND COST REDUCTION ------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------- -------------------------------------------------
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Financial Accounting Part I Textbook for Class XI © no N C tt E o R be T re pu bl is he Accountancy d ISBN 81-7450-507-5 First Edition February 2006 Phalguna 1927 Reprinted October 2006 Kartika 1928 October 2007 Kartika 1929 January 2009 Magh 1930 January 2010 Magha 1931 January 2011 Magha 1932 PD 90T RPS © National Council of Educational Research and Training‚ 2006 ALL RIGHTS RESERVED No part of this publication may be reproduced‚ stored in a retrieval system or transmitted‚
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of the costs as direct materials‚ direct labor‚ manufacturing overhead‚ or period costs. Materials used in product $100‚000 – Direct materials Advertising expense $45‚000 – Period costs Depreciation on plant $60‚000 – Manufacturing overhead Property taxes on plant $14‚000 – Manufacturing overhead Property taxes on store $7‚500 – Manufacturing overhead Delivery expense $21‚000 – Period costs Labor costs of assembly-line workers $110‚000 – Direct labor Sales commissions $35‚000 – Period costs Factory
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complete CVP analysis‚ and the result does not support her purchasing the equipment‚ because of the unprofitable break-even point. However Jill ignores this outcome deliberately. By dishonestly modifying the report as ‘direct cost may be reduced and the manufacturing fixed cost keep stable’‚ she tried to make the banks believe her new plan will benefit her business and finally lend money to her. The ethical
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5 / ¼.5= .67%/ 22%= 3.05 Ch 22 #7 1. Key Question A firm has fixed costs of $60 and variable costs as indicated in the table on the following page. Complete the table and check your calculations by referring to question 4 at the end of Chapter 23. 1. Graph total fixed cost‚ total variable cost‚ and total cost. Explain how the law of diminishing returns influences the shapes of the variable-cost and total-cost curves Graph AFC‚ AVC‚ ATC‚ and MC. Explain the derivation and shape of each
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ABSTRACT Just Falafel has revolutionized stereotype about Falafel. Falafel‚ which is traditionally sold in very small and sometimes smelly cafeterias‚ is now sold in outlets that match in image and brand elements the biggest fast food brands known worldwide (maybe at the expense of its oriental past‚ with a somewhat western offering– the Sandwich‚ the coke‚ and yes the French fries). This somewhat Westernization has made the Journey possible‚ with Just Falafel becoming the biggest falafel franchise
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| Cash and current receivables | $900‚000 | $400‚000 | | Temporary investments — HFT | | 1‚100‚000 | | Inventories | 1‚400‚000 | 200‚000 | | Property‚ plant and equipment (net) | 2‚100‚000 | 3‚500‚000 | | Investment in Selina (at cost) | 3‚000‚000 | — | | | $7‚400‚000 | $5‚200‚000 | | | | | Liabilities and shareholders’ equity | | | | Current liabilities | $600‚000 | $100‚000 | | Long-term liabilities | 2‚200‚000 | 800‚000 | | Deferred tax liabilities
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The lecture last night discussed accrual accounting concepts such as timing issues‚ and the basics of adjusting entries. The discussion went into more detail on periodicity assumption and how accounting divides the economic life of a business into artificial time periods. These time periods are generally a month‚ a quarter‚ or a year‚ now whether it is a fiscal year or a calendar year that is determined by the company itself. The lecture then reviews the revenue recognition principle which expects
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