
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: 0073527114Compute Costs per Equivalent Unit: FIFO Method
Refer to the data in Exercise 8-29. Compute the cost per equivalent unit for direct materials and for conversion costs using the FIFO method.
Step 1 of 2
Cost per equivalent units of direct materials and conversion costs
All units cannot be wholly completed at the end of a specific period. Some units may be partially complete. Expenses (Material cost and conversion costs) might have been incurred on such units to the extent of their completion. Hence, in order to determine the actual production in a process, the concept of equivalent units is used. The partially completed units are multiplied with their percentage of completion and the resultant figure is considered as whole units produced.
First, calculate the physical units at the end of the period as follows:
| Particulars | Number of units |
| Balance at the start of the period (a) | 48,000 |
| Add: Units input (b) = (a) + (b) – (d) | 84,000 |
| Less: Units transferred out (c) | 102,000 |
| Balance at the end of period (d) | 30,000 |
Now, calculate the equivalent units using FIFO method as follows:
| Particulars | Units (a) | Materials | Conversion Costs | ||
| % of completion in the period (b) | Equivalent Units (a) × (b) | % of completion in the period (c) | Equivalent Units (a) × (c) | ||
| Work in process at the beginning | 48,000 | 70% (100 – 3) | 33,600 | 70% (100 – 3) | 33,600 |
| Work completed during the period | 54,000 (102000 – 48000) | 100% | 54,000 | 100% | 54,000 |
| Work in process at the end | 30,000 | 80% | 24,000 | 40% | 12,000 |
| Total | 132,000 | 111,600 | 99,600 |
Step 2 of 2
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