In: Accounting
Sweeten Company had no jobs in progress at the beginning of March and no beginning inventories. The company has two manufacturing departments--Molding and Fabrication. It started, completed, and sold only two jobs during March—Job P and Job Q. The following additional information is available for the company as a whole and for Jobs P and Q (all data and questions relate to the month of March):
Molding | Fabrication | Total | |||||||
Estimated total machine-hours used | 2,500 | 1,500 | 4,000 | ||||||
Estimated total fixed manufacturing overhead | $ | 12,000 | $ | 16,200 | $ | 28,200 | |||
Estimated variable manufacturing overhead per machine-hour | $ | 2.20 | $ | 3.00 | |||||
Job P | Job Q | |||||
Direct materials | $ | 21,000 | $ | 12,000 | ||
Direct labor cost | $ | 27,400 | $ | 10,700 | ||
Actual machine-hours used: | ||||||
Molding | 2,500 | 1,600 | ||||
Fabrication | 1,400 | 1,700 | ||||
Total | 3,900 | 3,300 | ||||
Sweeten Company had no underapplied or overapplied manufacturing overhead costs during the month.
Required:
For questions 1-8, assume that Sweeten Company uses a plantwide predetermined overhead rate with machine-hours as the allocation base. For questions 9-15, assume that the company uses departmental predetermined overhead rates with machine-hours as the allocation base in both departments.
7. Assume that Sweeten Company used cost-plus pricing (and a markup percentage of 80% of total manufacturing cost) to establish selling prices for all of its jobs. What selling price would the company have established for Jobs P and Q? What are the selling prices for both jobs when stated on a per unit basis assuming 20 units were produced for Job P and 30 units were produced for Job Q? (Do not round intermediate calculations. Round your final answers to nearest whole dollar.)