Autotech Manufacturing is engaged in the production of replacement parts for automobiles. One plant specializes in the production of two parts: Part #127 and Part #234. Part #127 produced the highest volume of activity, and for many years it was the only part produced by the plant. Five years ago, Part #234 was added. Part #234 was more difficult to manufacture and required special tooling and setups. Profits increased for the first three years after the addition of the new product. In the last two years, however, the plant faced intense competition, and its sales of Part #127 dropped. In fact, the plant showed a small loss in the most recent reporting period. Much of the competition was from foreign sources, and the plant manager was convinced that the foreign producers were guilty of selling the part below the cost of producing it. The following conversation between Patty Goodson, plant manager, and Joseph Fielding, divisional marketing manager, reflects the concerns of the division about the future of the plant and its products.
Overhead: Setup costs 5 240.000 Machine costs I 350.000 Receiving costs 2, l00.000 Engineering costs 2,000,000 Materialshandling costs 900.000 Total $6,990,000 Part #127 Part #234 Production 500,000 100,000 Selling price $31 86 $24.00 Overhead per unit* $12.83 $5.77 Prime cost per unit $8.53 $6.26 Number of production runs 100 200 Receiving orders 4010 1,000 Machine hours 125,000 60.000 Direct labor hours 250,000 22,500 Engineering hours 5.000 5.000 Material moves 500 400 * Calculated using a plantwide rate based on cirect labor hours. This is the current way of assigning the plant's overhead to its products.Joseph: You know, Patty, the divisional manager is real concerned about the plant's trend. He indicated that in this budgetary environment, we can't afford to carry plants that don't show a profit. We shut one down just last month because it couldn't handle the competition. Patty: Joe, you and I both know that Part #127 has a reputation for quality and value. It has been a mainstay for years. I don't understand what's happening. Joseph: I just received a call from one of our major customers concerning Part #127. He said that a sales representative from another firm offered the part at $20 per unit-$11 less than what we charge. It's hard to compete with a price like that. Perhaps the plant is simply obsolete. Patty: No. I don't buy that. From my sources, I know we have good technology. We are efficient. And it's costing a little more than $21 to produce that part. I don't see how these companies can afford to sell it so cheaply. I'm not convinced that we should meet the price, Perhaps a better strategy is to emphasize producing and selling more of Part #234. Our margin is high on this product, and we have virtually no competition for it. Joseph: You may be right. I think we can increase the price significantly and not lose business. I called a few customers to see how they would react to a 25 percent increase in price, and they all said that they would still purchase the same quantity as before. Patty: It sounds promising. However, before we make a major commitment to Part #234, I think we had better explore other possible explanations. I want to know how our production costs compare to those of our competitors. Perhaps we could be more efficient and find a way to earn our normal return on Part #127. The market is so much bigger for this part. I'm not sure we can survive with only Part #234. Besides, my production people hate that part. It's very difficult to produce