please explain in detail 1-6
For Specific Date For Year 2013 Work-in-process inventory, Jan 1, 2013 Direct materials inventory, Dec. 31, 2013 Finished goods inventory, Dec. 31, 2013 Accounts payable, Dec. 31, 2013 Accounts receivable, Jan. 1, 2013 Work-in-process inventory, Dec 31, 2013 Finished goods inventory, Jan 1, 2013 Accounts receivable, Dec. 31, 2013 Accounts payable, Jan. 1, 2013 Direct materials inventory, Jan 1, 2013 Plant utilities Indirect manufacturing labor Depreciation-plant and equipment Revenues Miscellaneous manufacturing overhead Marketing, distribution, and customer service costs Direct materials purchased Direct manufacturing labor Plant supplies used Property taxes on plant Prepare an income statement and a supporting schedule of cost of anods manufactured. (For additional questions regarding these facts, see the next problem.) Required Required 2-31 Terminology, interpretation of statements (continuation of 2-30). 1. Calculate total prime costs and total conversion costs. 2. Calculate total inventoriable costs and period costs. 3. Design costs and R&D costs are not considered product costs for financial statement purposes. When might managers regard some of these costs as product costs? Give an example. 4. Suppose that both the direct materials used and the depreciation on plant and equipment are related to the manufacture of 1 million units of product. Determine the unit cost for the direct materials assigned to those units and the unit cost for depreciation on plant and equipment. Assume that yearly depreciation is computed on a straight-line basis. 5. Assume that the implied cost-behavior patterns in requirement 4 persist. That is, direct material costs behave as a variable cost and depreciation on plant and equipment behaves as a fixed cost. Repeat the computations in requirement 4, assuming that the costs are being predicted for the manufacture of 2 million units of product. Determine the effect on total costs. 6. Assume that depreciation on the equipment (but not the plant) is computed based on the number of units produced because the equipment deteriorates with units produced. The depreciation rate on equipment is $2 per unit. Calculate the depreciation on equipment assuming (a) 1 million units of product are produced and (b) 2 million units of product are produced