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book Fundamentals of Cost Accounting 3rd Edition by William N. Lanen, Shannon W. Anderson, Michael Maher cover

Fundamentals of Cost Accounting 3rd Edition by William N. Lanen, Shannon W. Anderson, Michael Maher

Edition 3ISBN: 0073527114
book Fundamentals of Cost Accounting 3rd Edition by William N. Lanen, Shannon W. Anderson, Michael Maher cover

Fundamentals of Cost Accounting 3rd Edition by William N. Lanen, Shannon W. Anderson, Michael Maher

Edition 3ISBN: 0073527114
Exercise 21

Plantwide versus Department Allocation

Munoz Sporting Equipment manufactures baseball bats and tennis rackets. Department B produces the baseball bats, and Department T produces the tennis rackets. Munoz currently uses plantwide allocation to allocate its overhead to all products. Direct labor cost is the allocation base. The rate used is 200 percent of direct labor cost. Last year, revenue, materials, and direct labor were as follows:

 

Baseball Bats

Tennis Rackets

Revenue

$1,350000

$900,000

Direct labor

250000

125,000

Direct materials

550,000

275,000

Required

a.Compute the profit for each product using plantwide allocation.


b.Maria, the manager of Department T, was convinced that tennis rackets were really more profitable than baseball bats. She asked her colleague in accounting to break down the overhead costs for the two departments. She discovered that had department rates been used, Department B would have had a rate of 150 percent of direct labor cost and Department T would have had a rate of 300 percent of direct labor cost. Recompute the profits for each product using each department's allocation rate (based on direct labor cost).


c.Why are the results different in requirements (a) and (b)?

Step-by-step solution
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Step 1 of 5

a.

The cost poll is entire plant in the plant wide allocation method. In this method only one overhead allocation rate assigned to all departments in a particular plant. Generally, a word plant refers to multidepartment segment, store, and university. These concepts of plant wide allocation can be used to both the manufacturing and nonmanufacturing organizations.

Compute the profit for the each product using plant wide allocation:

Profit is calculated as follows using plant wide allocation method for both products.

Details

Baseball bats

Tennis Rackets

Revenue (a)

$ 1,350,000

$ 900,000

Direct labor

$ 250,000

$ 125,000

Direct material

$ 550,000

$ 275,000

Total direct cost

$ 800,000

$ 400,000

Overhead

$ 500,000

$ 250,000

Total overhead

$ 500,000

$ 250,000

Total cost (b)

$ 1,300,000

$ 650,000

Profit (a)-(b)

$ 50,000

$ 250,000


Step 2 of 5


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Step 5 of 5

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Fundamentals of Cost Accounting 3rd Edition by William N. Lanen, Shannon W. Anderson, Michael Maher
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