CEMEX® fabricates large concrete slabs. The company had achieved remarkable grow
ID: 2471678 • Letter: C
Question
CEMEX® fabricates large concrete slabs. The company had achieved remarkable growth in recent years, becoming an important player in the production of specialized concrete slabs that are used in commercial buildings and high rises. Despite its rapid growth and rise in sales, CEMEX has experienced a significant rise in production costs recently, forcing managers to look into the causes of this problem. To better manage production costs, assume that you and your teammates were hired by the company as cost accountants to help them design a standard costing system to monitor production costs at the concrete slab factory. Setting Cost Standards To gather information for creating the cost standards for the fiscal year (2013), you first studied the accounting and production records for the past year. Then, you reviewed the 2013 fiscal year’s production scheduled, which showed a planned production volume of 90,000 concrete slabs. Direct costs standards You also identified the following production inputs and direct costs for producing the slabs: cement mix, sand, water, and direct labor. Because sand and water are readily available at a plant’s reservoir, the company does not incur any costs for these two inputs. Therefore, the only material cost incurred is for the cement mix. After speaking with process engineers, the standard cost per cement mix is set at $10 per ton of cement. You also estimate that it should take about 1 ton of cement mix per each slab of concrete. In addition, the cost standard for direct labor is set at $10 per hour, and the standard of quantity of labor required to produce 100 slabs of concrete is set at one direct labor hour. In other words, it costs about $0.10 cents in direct labor to produce one single concrete slab. Manufacturing overhead cost standards You turn next to estimate manufacturing overhead costs. Variable overhead costs consisted of the salaries of supervisors, depreciation of equipment, and electricity costs mainly related to the use of the ovens and machinery. You estimated the fiscal year’s variable manufacturing overhead costs at $80,000 and decided to use direct labor hours to allocate variable manufacturing overhead into units of output (slabs). You also estimated that the plant would work 40,000 direct labor hours on the fiscal year. Thus, the variable overhead standard rate is set at $2 per direct labor hour. 2 You then classified all remaining overhead costs as fixed and estimated the fiscal year’s fixed overhead spending at $180,000. After considering several allocation bases for the fixed overhead costs, you decided that volume of production would be appropriate as the allocation base to apply fixed overhead costs. With a planned production of 90,000 slabs for the fiscal year, the standard fixed overhead allocation rate is set at $2 per unit of output (per slab). Refer to Exhibit 1 for a summary of the costs standards mentioned previously. Actual results The following actual costs and production data are reported at the plant at the end of the fiscal year (assume that the fiscal year has already ended): • 100,000 slabs were produced. • The company purchased 130,000 tons of cement mix for $975,000. • 120,000 tons of cement mix was used in production. • Direct labor costs incurred were $16,500 and 1,100 direct labor hours were worked during the year. • Actual fixed manufacturing overhead costs amounted to $175,000 and variable manufacturing overhead to $2,500. EXHIBIT 1 – Summary of Direct and Overhead Cost Standards Production Inputs Standard Direct materials: Cost of cement mix $10 per ton Quantity of cement mix 1 ton per slab Standard cost per slab ($10 per ton x 1 ton per slab) $10 per slab Direct labor: Labor pay rate $10 per hour Quantity of labor per unit of output 100 slabs per labor hour Standard cost per slab ($10 per hour x 1 hour per 100 slabs) 0.10 cents per slab Fixed manufacturing overhead: Planned (budgeted) fixed overhead $180,000 Volume of allocation base (slabs produced) 90,000 slabs Standard cost per slab ($180,000 ÷ 90,000 slabs) $2 per slab Variable manufacturing overhead: Planned (budgeted) variable overhead $ 80,000 Volume of allocation base (direct labor hours) 40,000 direct labor hours Standard cost per slab ($80,000 ÷ 40,000 slabs) $2 per direct labor hour 3 Requirements
Reconcile the four manufacturing overhead costs variances in the accounting books. What do you conclude, is the amount of overhead applied to the actual units in the period under- or over-allocated?
Explanation / Answer
Therefore the overhead applied to the actual units produced are over absorbed.
The four manufacturing overhead variances are calculated as under: Variable overhead spending variance is the difference between Actual variable overhead incurred and standard variable overhead cost for actual hours taken. Variable overhead spending variance : Standard variable cost for actual direct labor hours taken (A) Actual variable manufacturing overhead cost (B) Variance (A-B) (1,100×$2) $2,500 $ (300) Unfavorable =$2,200 Variable manufacturing overhead efficiency variance is the difference between standard variable cost for actual direct labor hours taken and standard variable cost for standard direct labor hours. Variable overhead spending variance : Standard variable cost for standard direct labor hours (A) Standard variable cost for actual direct labor hours taken (B) Variance (A-B) (1,000×$2) (1,100×$2) =$2,000 =$2,200 $ (200) Unfavorable Fixed overhead volume variance is the difference between absorbed fixed overhead and budgeted fixed overhead Fixed overhead volume variance: Fixed OH absorption rate per unit of output=$180,000/90,000 slabs(planned)=$2 per slab Absorbed fixed overhead Budgeted Fixed Overhead Fixed Overhead Volume Variance Actual output×Fixed OH absorption rate per unit of output Budgeted output×Fixed OH absorption rate per unit of output 100,000×$2 90,000×$2 =$200,000 =$180,000 $ 20,000 F Fixed overhead efficiency variance is the difference between budegeted fixed overhead cost for standard labor hours and budgeted fixed overhead cost for actual direct labor hours. Fixed overhead efficiency variance : Standard labor hours for actual output of 100,000 slabs are 1,000 direct labor hours : (100,000/100labor hours for 1 slab) Fixed overhead rate per hour : Budgeted fixed overhead/budgeted direct labor hours for 90,000 slabs : $180,000/900 direct labor hours =$200 Actual direct labor hours taken=1,100 hours Fixed overhead efficiency variance = [(1,000×$200)-(1,100×$200)] =$20,000U Calculation of under/over absorption of fixed manufacturing overhead cost: The absorbed fixed manufacturing overhead is $200,000 and actual fixed overhead incurred is $175,000. Absorbed fixed manufacturing overhead-Actual fixed manufacturing overhead=Under/over absorption of overhead $200,000-$175,000=$25,000(Overabsorption of overhead)Related Questions
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