In: Accounting
Keep-or-Drop: Traditional Versus Activity-Based Analysis
Nutterco, Inc., produces two types of nut butter: peanut butter and cashew butter. Of the two, peanut butter is the more popular. Cashew butter is a specialty line using smaller jars and fewer jars per case. Data concerning the two products follow:
Peanut Butter |
Cashew Butter |
Unused Capacitya |
units of Purchaseb |
|
Expected sales (in cases) | 50,000 | 10,000 | - | - |
Selling price per case | $100 | $80 | - | - |
Direct labor hours | 40,000 | 10,000 | - | As needed |
Receiving orders | 500 | 250 | 250 | 500 |
Packing orders | 1,000 | 500 | 500 | 250 |
Material cost per case | $50 | $49 | - | - |
Direct labor cost per case | $12 | $8 | - | - |
Advertising costs | $300,000 | $70,000 | - | - |
aPractical capacity less expected usage (all unused capacity is permanent). | ||||
bIn some cases, activity capacity must be purchased in steps (whole units). These steps are provided as necessary. The cost per step is the fixed activity rate multiplied by the step units. The fixed activity rate is the expected fixed activity costs divided by practical activity capacity. |
Annual overhead costs are listed below. These costs are classified as fixed or variable with respect to the appropriate activity driver.
Activity | Fixeda | Variableb |
Direct labor benefits | $0 | $200,000 |
Machine | 200,000 | 250,000 |
Receiving | 200,000 | 22,500 |
Packing | 100,000 | 45,000 |
Total costs | $500,000 | $517,500 |
aCosts associated with practical activity capacity. The machine fixed costs are all depreciation with direct labor hours as the driver. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
bThese costs are for the actual levels of the cost driver. 2. Prepare an activity-based segmented income statement. Use a minus sign to indicate a negative product margin.
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