Question
1. Standard Product Cost Sana Rosa Furniture Company manufactures designer home furniture. Sana Rosa uses a standard cost system. The direct labor, direct materials, and
1.
Standard Product Cost
Sana Rosa Furniture Company manufactures designer home furniture. Sana Rosa uses a standard cost system. The direct labor, direct materials, and factory overhead standards for an unfinished dining room table are as follows:
Direct labor: | standard rate | $23.00 per hr. |
standard time per unit | 2.50 hrs. | |
Direct materials (oak): | standard price | $11.00 per bd. ft. |
standard quantity | 15 bd. ft. | |
Variable factory overhead: | standard rate | $3.20 per direct labor hr. |
Fixed factory overhead: | standard rate | $1.20 per direct labor hr. |
a. Determine the standard cost per dining room table. If required, round your answer to two decimal places. $ per dining room table
b. A standard cost system provides Rosa Furniture management a cost control tool using the principle of . Using this principle, cost deviations from standards can be investigated and corrected.
2. Budget Performance Report
Genie in a Bottle Company (GBC) manufactures plastic two-liter bottles for the beverage industry. The cost standards per 100 two-liter bottles are as follows:
Cost Category | Standard Cost per 100 Two-Liter Bottles | |||||
Direct labor | $1.5 | |||||
Direct materials | 6.28 | |||||
Factory overhead | 0.38 | |||||
Total | $8.16 |
At the beginning of July, GBC management planned to produce 550,000 bottles. The actual number of bottles produced for July was 594,000 bottles. The actual costs for July of the current year were as follows:
Cost Category | Actual Cost for the Month Ended July 31 | |||||||||
Direct labor | $8,732 | |||||||||
Direct materials | 36,408 | |||||||||
Factory overhead | 2,280 | |||||||||
Total | $47,420 |
3. Enter all amounts as positive numbers.
a. Prepare the July manufacturing standard cost budget (direct labor, direct materials, and factory overhead) for WBC, assuming planned production.
Genie in a Bottle Company | |
Manufacturing Cost Budget | |
For the Month Ended March 31 | |
Standard Cost at Planned Volume (550,000 Bottles) | |
Manufacturing costs: | |
Direct labor | $ |
Direct materials | |
Factory overhead | |
Total | $ |
b. Prepare a budget performance report for manufacturing costs, showing the total cost variances for direct materials, direct labor, and factory overhead for July. Enter a favorable variance as a negative number using a minus sign and an unfavorable variance as a positive number. Round your answers to two decimal places.
Genie in a Bottle Company | |||
Manufacturing Costs-Budget Performance Report | |||
For the Month Ended March 31 | |||
Actual Costs | Standard Cost at Actual Volume (594,000 Bottles) | Cost Variance- (Favorable) Unfavorable | |
Manufacturing costs: | |||
Direct labor | $ | $ | $ |
Direct materials | |||
Factory overhead | |||
Total manufacturing cost | $ | $ | $ |
c. The Company's actual costs were $1050.4 than budgeted. direct labor and direct material cost variances more than offset a small factory overhead cost variance.
Direct Materials Variances
Silicone Engine Inc. produces wrist-worn tablet computers. The company uses Thin Film Crystal (TFC) LCD displays for its products. Each tablet uses one display. The company produced 450 tablets during December. However, due to LCD defects, the company actually used 500 LCD displays during December. Each display has a standard cost of $6.40. LCD displays were purchased for December production at a cost of $3,150.
Determine the price variance, quantity variance, and total direct materials cost variance for December. Enter a favorable variance as a negative number using a minus sign and an unfavorable variance as a positive number. And, enter your final variance amounts to the nearest whole dollar.
Price variance | $ | |
Quantity variance | $ | |
Total direct materials cost variance | $ |
4. Direct Labor Variances
Greeson Clothes Company produced 15,000 units during June of the current year. The Cutting Department used 2,900 direct labor hours at an actual rate of $11.30 per hour. The Sewing Department used 4,800 direct labor hours at an actual rate of $11.00 per hour. Assume that there were no work in process inventories in either department at the beginning or end of the month. The standard labor rate is $11.20. The standard labor time for the Cutting and Sewing departments is 0.20 hour and 0.30 hour per unit, respectively.
a. Determine the direct labor rate, direct labor time, and total direct labor cost variance for the Cutting Department and Sewing Department. Enter a favorable variance as a negative number using a minus sign and an unfavorable variance as a positive number.
Cutting Department | Sewing Department | |
Direct labor rate variance | $ | $ |
Direct labor time variance | $ | $ |
Total direct labor cost variance | $ | $ |
b. The two departments have opposite results. The Cutting Department has a(n) rate and a(n) time variance, resulting in a total cost variance. In contrast, the Sewing Department has a(n) rate variance but has a time variance, resulting in a total cost variance.
5. Factory Overhead Cost Variances
Blumen Textiles Corporation began April with a budget for 32,000 hours of production in the Weaving Department. The department has a full capacity of 43,000 hours under normal business conditions. The budgeted overhead at the planned volumes at the beginning of April was as follows:
Variable overhead | $76,800 |
Fixed overhead | 51,600 |
Total | $128,400 |
The actual factory overhead was $129,900 for April. The actual fixed factory overhead was as budgeted. During April, the Weaving Department had standard hours at actual production volume of 33,000 hours. Enter a favorable variance as a negative number using a minus sign and an unfavorable variance as a positive number. Round your interim computations to the nearest cent, if required.
a. Determine the variable factory overhead controllable variance. $
b. Determine the fixed factory overhead volume variance. $
6. Flexible Budgeting and Variance Analysis
I Love My Chocolate Company makes dark chocolate and light chocolate. Both products require cocoa and sugar. The following planning information has been made available:
Standard Amount per Case | ||||||
Dark Chocolate | Light Chocolate | Standard Price per Pound | ||||
Cocoa | 10 lb. | 7 lb. | $4.2 | |||
Sugar | 8 lb. | 12 lb. | 0.6 | |||
Standard labor time | 0.3 hr. | 0.4 hr. |
Dark Chocolate | Light Chocolate | |||
Planned production | 3,900 cases | 11,700 cases | ||
Standard labor rate | $13.5 per hr. | $13.5 per hr. |
I Love My Chocolate does not expect there to be any beginning or ending inventories of cocoa or sugar. At the end of the budget year, I Love My Chocolate Company had the following actual results:
Dark Chocolate | Light Chocolate | |||
Actual production (cases) | 3,700 | 12,200 | ||
Actual Price per Pound | Actual Pounds Purchased and Used | |||
Cocoa | $4.3 | 123,000 | ||
Sugar | 0.55 | 171,600 | ||
Actual Labor Rate | Actual Labor Hours Used | |||
Dark chocolate | $13.2 per hr. | 1,010 | ||
Light chocolate | 13.8 per hr. | 5,000 |
Required:
Prepare the following variance analyses for both chocolates and total, based on the actual results and production levels at the end of the budget year:
- Direct materials price variance, direct materials quantity variance, and total variance.
- Direct labor rate variance, direct labor time variance, and total variance.
Enter a favorable variance as a negative number using a minus sign and an unfavorable variance as a positive number. If there is no variance, enter a zero.
a. | Direct materials price variance | $ | |
Direct materials quantity variance | $ | ||
Total direct materials cost variance | $ | ||
b. | Direct labor rate variance | $ | |
Direct labor time variance | $ | ||
Total direct labor cost variance | $ |
2. The variance analyses should be based on the amounts at volumes. The budget must flex with the volume changes. If the volume is different from the planned volume, as it was in this case, then the budget used for performance evaluation should reflect the change in direct materials and direct labor that will be required for the production. In this way, spending from volume changes can be separated from efficiency and price variances.
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