Kevin Rogers, the production manager of Stitts Metal Products Company, entered the office of controller Ed Harris
Question:
Kevin Rogers, the production manager of Stitts Metal Products Company, entered the office of controller Ed Harris and asked, “Ed, what gives here? I was charged for 330 direct labor hours on job AD22 and my records show that we spent only 290 hours on that job. That 40-hour difference caused the total cost of direct labor and overhead for the job to increase by over $5,500. Are my records wrong, or was there an error in the direct labor assigned to the job?
Harris replied, “Don’t worry about it, Kevin. This job won’t be used in your quarterly performance evaluation. Job AD22 was a federal government job, a cost-plus contract, so the more costs we assign to it, the more profit we make.
We decided to add a few hours to the job in case there is some follow-up work to do. You know how fussy the feds are.” What should Kevin Rogers do? Discuss Ed Harris’s costing procedure.
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