see the case and answer the question.
Just need answer Question 1 !
Q1. Using the traditional costing method, compute the overhead costs per product.
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910B11
ACTIVITY-BASED COSTING AND MANAGEMENT
Owen P. Hall, Charles McPeak and Samuel Seaman wrote this case solely to provide material for class discussion. The authors do
not intend to illustrate either effective or ineffective handling of a managerial situation. The authors may have disguised certain
names and other identifying information to protect confidentiality.
Richard Ivey School of Business Foundation prohibits any form of reproduction, storage or transmission without its written
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Copyright © 2010, Richard Ivey School of Business Foundation Version: (A) 2010-09-10
CASE OVERVIEW
The CFO at the Rubrics Corporation, a midsize hardware manufacturing firm, had become aware of the
ongoing imbalance between the product’s budgeted and actual costs. The Rubrics Corporation normally
allocated overhead to products using a single direct cost driver, usually direct labor hours or direct labor
dollars. This practice sometimes led to inaccuracies, since indirect costs were not incurred equally across
products. For example, Rubrics’ CFO had forecasted $10,000,000 in direct labor costs and $15,000,000 in
overhead for a particular project last year, resulting in an overhead rate of 150 per cent. For each dollar of
direct labor charged, $1.50 of overhead had been allocated. The shortcoming of this costing method was
that overhead costs failed to reflect varying manufacturing intensity between products.
Often referred to as smoothing, traditional costing allocates overhead costs evenly per direct labor hours or
dollars. Unfortunately, direct costing can result in a discrepancy between the budgeted overhead and the
actual overhead used. Often, certain products require more maintenance or floor space. Traditional
costing allocates overhead based on direct expenses without compensating for a product’s greater or lesser
use of overhead costs.
Activity-based costing (ABC) was first introduced in the United States during the 1970s. Since then, ABC
had enjoyed wide acceptance as a more accurate alternative to traditional costing, especially in
manufacturing. Instead of budgeting overhead using direct cost drivers, ABC splits overhead into activity
cost drivers, leading to a more tangible assignment of costs.
Calculating ABC is more complicated than calculating traditional costing. Once management identifies
the activity cost drivers, overhead rates are assigned per cost driver. The rates are estimated by dividing
budgeted costs per driver by the anticipated resource requirements for each cost driver. For instance, rent
could be allocated based on the square footage occupied by inventory in producing a given product or
service. Say X Company estimates next year’s rental costs to be $30,000 for its 15,000-square-foot
factory. X Company can calculate the rental overhead rate by dividing $30,000 by 15,000 to get 2. After
calculating the overhead rates for each activity driver (rent, depreciation, maintenance, etc), the rates are
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This document is authorized for use only by Siyu Cheng in ACCT615-01-W20-CSUSB taught by Taewoo Kim, California State University – San Bernardino from Jan 2020 to Mar 2020.
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applied to the individual requirements of each product. Continuing the previous example, suppose X
Company manufactures two products, Y and Z, requiring 10,000 and 5,000 square feet of factory space,
respectively. X Company can calculate each product’s individual use of factory rent by multiplying 10,000
and 5,000 by 2, resulting in $20,000 for Y and $10,000 for Z.
The objective of ABC is to align actual consumption with specific product/service costs. The ABC
approach is normally associated with multiple products or services using shared and often common indirect
resources. A benefit of ABC is that products requiring higher concentrations of overhead costs are
revealed, allowing management to focus attention on opportunities for reducing those costs or to price
more appropriately.
Activity-based costing allocates overhead to a product based on the actual amount of overhead used by that
product. Whenever common resources are expended in different ways across products, a weighting
mechanism is required for accurate allocation. ABC can be equally valuable in service industries.
Financial institutions have diverse products and customers, resulting in cross-product, cross-customer
subsidies. Often, personnel expenses represent the largest single component of non-interest expense in
financial institutions. Accordingly, these costs must also be attributed more accurately to products and
customers via activity-based accounting.
The ABC methodology is an involved process with many steps, including: identifying direct product costs,
identifying cost activities, selecting cost-allocation basis (CAB), identifying indirect costs per CAB,
computing overhead rate per cost activity, calculating overhead costs based upon each product’s use of the
various cost activities, and then adding direct expenses and indirect expenses to yield total product costs.
Despite the complexity, the benefits of ABC can be significant: management can distinguish profitable
from unprofitable products, cost controls can be established to eliminate unnecessary costs, and products
can be better priced. However, prior to implementing ABC, management should consider whether the cost
savings from more accurate budgeting are greater than the research costs of identifying overhead cost
drivers and each product’s individual resource requirements.
RUBRICS’ SITUATION
The Rubrics Corporation made four products: widgets, gadgets, smidgets, and smadgets. Exhibit 1
summarizes the direct labor, overhead, and direct material costs associated with these products.
Rubrics’ CFO was considering implementing an activity-based costing system as a means of improving
product pricing. Exhibit 2 presents the cost allocation bases for the three main overhead cost drivers
(depreciation, set-up, and rent). Exhibit 3 shows the product resource requirements by cost driver. Notice,
for example, that the set-up requirement for widgets is 200 hours.
Among other things, the CFO wanted to compare the overhead estimates per product based on the
traditional costing and ABC methods. In addition, the CFO wanted to understand, computer or calculate
the following:
1. Using the traditional costing method, compute the overhead costs per product.
2. Using the traditional costing method, compute the total costs per product.
3. Under ABC:
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This document is authorized for use only by Siyu Cheng in ACCT615-01-W20-CSUSB taught by Taewoo Kim, California State University – San Bernardino from Jan 2020 to Mar 2020.
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a. Calculate the activity-based overhead rates per activity cost driver.
b. For each product, compute the overhead costs per activity cost driver.
c. Using the overhead costs from b., calculate the total costs per product.
4. Assuming ABC allocated overhead more accurately, which products were incorrectly priced using the
traditional costing method? What difficulties might result from incorrectly budgeted products? Hint:
Think about how capital resources should be allocated to the most efficient opportunities.
5. What actions might be explored to deal with the mispriced products?
6. Compare assigned costs per product under both methods. Why had activity-based costing changed the
total costs assigned to each product?
7. What were two circumstances where traditional and ABC costing would likely yield similar or equal
overhead costs?
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This document is authorized for use only by Siyu Cheng in ACCT615-01-W20-CSUSB taught by Taewoo Kim, California State University – San Bernardino from Jan 2020 to Mar 2020.
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Exhibit 1
DIRECT LABOR, OVERHEAD, AND DIRECT MATERIALS COSTS
Total direct labor $1,000,000
Total overhead $2,000,000
Overhead rate 200% of direct labor
Widgets direct labor $100,000
Gadgets direct labor $300,000
Smidgets direct labor $400,000
Smadgets direct labor $200,000
Widgets direct material $100,000
Gadgets direct material $200,000
Smidgets direct material $150,000
Smadgets direct material $250,000
Units built 1,000 of each product
Exhibit 2
OVERHEAD COST DRIVERS
Cost allocation bases Total costs Quantity of CAB
Depreciation $300,000 3,000 machine hours
Set-up $700,000 1,000 set-up hours
Rent $1,000,000 100,000 square feet
Exhibit 3
PRODUCT RESOURCE REQUIREMENTS BY COST DRIVER
Widgets Gadgets Smidgets Smadgets
500 machine hours 900 machine hours 400 machine hours 1,200 machine hours
200 set-up hours 300 set-up hours 100 set-up hours 400 set-up hours
20,000 square feet 30,000 square feet 10,000 square feet 40,000 square feet
For the exclusive use of S. Cheng, 2020.
This document is authorized for use only by Siyu Cheng in ACCT615-01-W20-CSUSB taught by Taewoo Kim, California State University – San Bernardino from Jan 2020 to Mar 2020.