
Fundamentals of Cost Accounting 3rd Edition by William N. Lanen, Shannon W. Anderson, Michael Maher
Edition 3ISBN: 0073527114
Fundamentals of Cost Accounting 3rd Edition by William N. Lanen, Shannon W. Anderson, Michael Maher
Edition 3ISBN: 0073527114Activity-Based Costing: Cost Flows through T-Accounts
Carolina Fashions, a shirt manufacturer, recently switched to activity-based costing from the department product costing method. The manager of Building S, which manufactures the shirts, has identified the following cost drivers and rates for overhead:
Activity Centers | Cost Drivers | Rate per Cost Driver Unit |
Materials handling | Yards of material handled | $1 per yard |
Quality inspections | Number of inspections | $100 per inspection |
Machine setups | Number of machine setups | $800 per setup |
Running machines | Number of machine-hours | $10 per hour |
Direct materials costs were $200,000 and direct labor costs were $100,000 during October, when Building S handled 40,000 yards of materials, made 800 inspections, had 100 setups, and ran the machines for 20,000 hours.
Required
Use T-accounts to show the flow of materials, labor, and overhead costs from the four overhead activity centers through Work-in-Process Inventory and out to Finished Goods Inventory. Use the accounts Materials Inventory, Wages Payable, Work-in-Process Inventory, Finished Goods Inventory, and four overhead applied accounts.
Step 1 of 14
Prepare T- accounts to show the flow of materials, labor, and overhead cost from the four overhead activity centers through work-in-process inventory and out to finished goods inventory:
Materials inventory:
| Date | Account title | Debit | Credit | Balance |
|
| Work in process inventory (40,000 ×$1) |
| $ 40,000 | $ 40,000 |
|
| Transfer to Work in process inventory |
|
| $ 40,000 |
Step 2 of 14
Step 3 of 14
Step 4 of 14
Step 5 of 14
Step 6 of 14
Step 7 of 14
Step 8 of 14
Step 9 of 14
Step 10 of 14
Step 11 of 14
Step 12 of 14
Step 13 of 14
Step 14 of 14
Why don’t you like this exercise?
Other
