Sirhuds Inc, a maker of smartwatches, reports the information below on its product. The company uses absorption costing and has a target markup of 40% of absorption cost per unit. Direct materials cost Direct labor cost Variable overhead cost Fixed overhead cost Variable selling and administrative expenses Fixed selling and administrative expenses Expected production (and sales) $ 136 per unit $ 66 per unit $ 44 per unit $ 175.000 per year 5 21 per unit $ 210,000 per year 14,000 units per year Compute the target selling price per unit under absorption costing. (Do not round intermediate calculations. Round your final answer to 2 decimal places.) Per unit Direct materials Direct labor Variable overhead Fixed overhead Total product cost using absorption costing Target profit Target selling price $ 0.00 $ 0.00 Jacqule Inc. reports the following annual cost data for its single product. Normal production and sales level Sales price Direct materials Direct labor Variable overhead Fixed overhead 62,000 units $ 56.20 per unit $ 9.20 per unit $ 6.70 per unit $ 11.20 per unit $ 781,200 in total Complete the below table using absorption costing (Round cost per unit answers to 2 decimal places.) Production volume 62,000 units 84,000 units Cost of goods sold: Cost of goods sold per unit Number of units sold Total cost of goods sold Cost of goods sold per unit Number of units sold Total cost of goods sold Jacquie Inc. Income statement through gross margin Sales volume 62,000 units 62.000 units If Jacquie increases its production to 84,000 units, while sales remain at the current 62,000-unit level, by how much would the company's gross margin increase or decrease under absorption costing? Assume the company has idle capacity to double current production. Number of units sold Change in fixed overhead cost per unit Change in cost of goods sold