In: Accounting
Corbett Company develops software. The market is very competitive and Corbett's competitors continue to introduce new products at low prices. Corbett offers a wide variety of software - from simple programs to extremely complex programs. Like most software companies Corbett's raw materials costs are insignificant. You have recently been hired by Corbett as a business analyst and attended a seminar on Activity-Based Costing (ABC) and are considering using it at Corbett. Working with the Software Department Manager you identigy the following activities, related costs, and cost-allocation bases.
Activity Estimated indirect acitivity costs Allocation base estimated quantity of allocation base
Applications development $1,800,000 New applications 6 new applications
Content production 2,800,000 Lines of code 14 million lines
Testing 248,000 Testing hours 1,600 testing hours
Total indirect costs 4,848,000
Corbett is planning to develop the following new applications
1) X-Page
2) X-Secure
X-page requires 680,000 lines of code and 90 hours of testing, while x-secure requires 10.2 million lines of code and 540 hours of testing. Corbett expects to produce and sell 20,000 units of x-page and 8 units of x-secure.
1) Compute the cost allocation rate for each activity.
2) Use the ABC allocation rates to compute the indirect cost of each unit of x-page and x-secure.
3) The company's original single-allocation based cost system allocated indirect costs to products at $113 per programmer hour. x-page requires 8,000 programmer hours while x-secure requires 12,000 programmer hours. Compute the total indirect costs allocated to x-page and x-secure under the original system. Compute the indirect cost per unit for each product.
4) Write a memo to the General Manager of Corbett Company comparing the ABC costs per unit to the costs from the simpler original system. Explain why the unit costs changed and whether you think the new ABC system is likely to pass the cost-benefit test.