In: Accounting
Variable Costing, Absorption Costing
During its first year of operations, Snobegon, Inc. (located in Lake Snobegon, Minnesota), produced 40,500 plastic snow scoops. Snow scoops are oversized shovel-type scoops that are used to push snow away. Unit sales were 38,600 scoops. Fixed overhead was applied at $0.75 per unit produced. Fixed overhead was underapplied by $2,700. This fixed overhead variance was closed to Cost of Goods Sold. There was no variable overhead variance. The results of the year’s operations are as follows (on an absorption-costing basis):
Sales (38,600 units @ $20) | $772,000 |
Less: Cost of goods sold | 550,260 |
Gross margin | $221,740 |
Less: Selling and administrative expenses (all fixed) | 184,500 |
Operating income | $ 37,240 |
Required:
1. Calculate the cost of the firm’s ending inventory under absorption costing. Round unit cost to five decimal places. Round your final answer to the nearest dollar.
$
What is the cost of the ending inventory under variable costing?
Round unit cost to five decimal places. Round your final answer to
the nearest dollar.
$
2. Prepare a variable-costing income statement. Round the unit cost to five decimal places, when required. Round your final answers to the nearest dollar. Use the rounded values in subsequent computations.
Snobegon, Inc. | |
Variable-Costing Income Statement | |
For the First Year of Operations | |
Sales | $ |
Less: Variable cost of goods sold | |
Contribution margin | $ |
Less: | |
Fixed overhead | |
Fixed selling and administrative expenses | |
Operating income | $ |
What is the difference between the two income figures?
$