subject
Business, 29.02.2020 04:59 Kadancepiggott7

EMD Corporation manufactures two products, Product S and Product W. Product W is of fairly recent origin, having been developed as an attempt to enter a market closely related to that of Product W. Product W is the more complex of the two products, requiring 3 hours of direct labor time per unit to manufacture compared to 1 hour of direct labor time for Product S. Product W is produced on an automated production line. Overhead is currently assigned to the products on the basis of direct-labor-hours. The company estimated it would incur $958,396 in manufacturing overhead costs and produce 18,100 units of Product W and 72,400 units of Product S during the current year.

Unit cost for materials and direct labor are:

Product S Product W

Direct material $ 12 $ 34

Direct labor 16 13

Required: a-1. Compute the predetermined overhead rate under the current method of allocation.

a-2. Determine the unit product cost of each product for the current year.

b. The company's overhead costs can be attributed to four major activities.

These activities and the amount of overhead cost attributable to each for the current year are given below:

Total Activity Activity Cost Pool Total Cost Product S Product W

Total Machine setups required $ 411,680 1,690 1,630 3,320

Purchase orders issued 56,316 547 175 722

Machine-hours required 203,500 7,400 11,100 18,500

Maintenance requests issued 286,900 658 852 1,510 $ 958,396

Using the data above and an activity-based costing approach, determine the unit product cost of each product for the current year.

Predetermined overhead rate per DLH

Determine the unit product cost of each product for the current year. (Round your answers to 2 decimal places.) Product S Product W

Using the data above and an activity-based costing approach, determine the unit product cost of each product for the current year. (Round your answer to 2 decimal places.) Product S Product W

ansver
Answers: 2

Another question on Business

question
Business, 22.06.2019 03:30
Instructions: use the following information to construct the 2000 balance sheet and income statement for carolina business machines. round all numbers to the nearest whole dollar. all numbers are in thousands of dollars. be sure to read the whole problem before you jump in and get started. at the end of 1999 the firm had $43,000 in gross fixed assets. in 2000 they purchased an additional $14,000 of fixed asset equipment. accumulated depreciation at the end of 1999 was $21,000. the depreciation expense in 2000 is $4,620. at the end of 2000 the firm had $3,000 in cash and $3,000 in accounts payable. in 2000 the firm extended a total of $9,000 in credit to a number of their customers in the form of accounts receivable. the firm generated $60,000 in sales revenue in 2000. their cost of goods sold was 60 percent of sales. they also incurred salaries and wages expense of $10,000. to date the firm has $1,000 in accrued salaries and wages. they borrowed $10,000 from their local bank to finance the $15,000 in inventory they now have on hand. the firm also has $7,120 invested in marketable securities. the firm currently has $20,000 in long-term debt outstanding and paid $2,000 in interest on their outstanding debt. over the firm's life, shareholders have put up $30,000. eighty percent of the shareholder's funds are in the form of retained earnings. the par value per share of carolina business machines stock is
Answers: 3
question
Business, 22.06.2019 06:40
Burke enterprises is considering a machine costing $30 billion that will result in initial after-tax cash savings of $3.7 billion at the end of the first year, and these savings will grow at a rate of 2 percent per year for 11 years. after 11 years, the company can sell the parts for $5 billion. burke has a target debt/equity ratio of 1.2, a beta of 1.79. you estimate that the return on the market is 7.5% and t-bills are currently yielding 2.5%. burke has two issuances of bonds outstanding. the first has 200,000 bonds trading at 98% of par, with coupons of 5%, face of $1000, and maturity of 5 years. the second has 500,000 bonds trading at par, with coupons of 7.5%, face of $1000, and maturity of 12 years. kate, the ceo, usually applies an adjustment factor to the discount rate of +2 for such highly innovative projects. should the company take on the project?
Answers: 1
question
Business, 22.06.2019 12:30
Acorporation a. can use different depreciation methods for tax and financial reporting purposes b. must use the straight - line depreciation method for tax purposes and double declining depreciation method financial reporting purposes c. must use different depreciation method for tax purposes, but strictly mandated depreciation methods for financial reporting purposes d. can use straight- line depreciation method for tax purposes and macrs depreciation method financial reporting purposes
Answers: 2
question
Business, 22.06.2019 14:30
Taking commercial paper means the holder acts honestly
Answers: 1
You know the right answer?
EMD Corporation manufactures two products, Product S and Product W. Product W is of fairly recent or...
Questions
question
Biology, 02.08.2019 15:30
question
Mathematics, 02.08.2019 15:30
question
Mathematics, 02.08.2019 15:30
Questions on the website: 13722362