Check Starfax, Inc, menufactures a small part that is widely used in various electronic products such as home computers. Results for the first three years of operations were as follows (absorption costing basis): Sales Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 $1,040,000 924,000 116,000 $1,040,000 880,000 Cost of goods sold Gross margin 882,000 720,000 162,000 142,000 Selling and administrative expenses 160,000 150,000 150,000 Net operating income (loss) 10,000 $ 20,000 $ (34,000) In the latter part of Year 2, a competitor went out of business and in the process dumped a large number of units on the market. As a result, Starfax's sales dropped by 10 % during Year 2 even though production increased during the year. Management had expected sales to remain constant at 40,000 units; the increased production was designed to provide the company with a buffer of protection against unexpected spurts in demand. By the start of Year 3, management could see that it had excess inventory and that spurts in demand were unlikely. To reduce the excessive inventories, Starfax cut back production during Year 3, as shown below es Year 3 Production in units Sales in units Year 1 40,000 40,000 Year 2 45,000 36,000 36,000 40,000 Additional information about the company follows: a. The company's plant is highly automated. Variable manufacturing expenses (direct materlals, direct labor, and variable manufacturing overhead) total only $4.00 per unit, and fixed manufocturing overhead expenses total $720,000 per year b. A new fixed manufacturing overhead rate is computed each year based that year's actual foxed manufacturing overhead costs divided by the actual number of units produced. c. Variable selling and administrative expenses were $2 per unit sold in each year. Fixed selling and administrative expenses totaled $70,000 per year d. The company uses a FIFO inventory flow assumption. (FIFO means first-in first-out. In other words, it assumes that the oldest units in inventory are sold first.) Starfax's management can't understand why profits doubied during Year 2 when sales dropped by 10% and why a loss was incurred during Year 3 when sales recovered to previous levels Niit