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Marginal Costing Tutorial

This document provides a tutorial on marginal costing and break-even analysis, covering various calculations including: 1. Calculating profit using marginal costing given fixed costs, variable costs, selling price, and output level. 2. Finding the break-even point given fixed expenses, selling price, and variable cost per unit. 3. Calculating profit-volume ratio, break-even point, and new break-even point if price is reduced, using total sales, selling price, variable cost, and fixed cost. It provides examples of different calculations that can be done using marginal costing including profit, break-even point, profit-volume ratio, sales volume needed to earn a given profit

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RajyaLakshmi
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
171 views

Marginal Costing Tutorial

This document provides a tutorial on marginal costing and break-even analysis, covering various calculations including: 1. Calculating profit using marginal costing given fixed costs, variable costs, selling price, and output level. 2. Finding the break-even point given fixed expenses, selling price, and variable cost per unit. 3. Calculating profit-volume ratio, break-even point, and new break-even point if price is reduced, using total sales, selling price, variable cost, and fixed cost. It provides examples of different calculations that can be done using marginal costing including profit, break-even point, profit-volume ratio, sales volume needed to earn a given profit

Uploaded by

RajyaLakshmi
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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TUTORIAL ON MARGINAL COSTING

1. From the following information, calculate the amount of profit


using marginal cost technique:
Fixed cost Rs. 3,00,000
Variable cost per unit Rs. 5
Selling price per unit Rs. 10
Output level 1,00,000 units..
2. From the following particulars find out break-even point:
Fixed Expenses Rs. 1.00.000
Selling price Per unit Rs. 20
Variable cost per unit Rs. 15
3. From the following information calculate :
1. P I V Ratio
2. Break-Even Point
3. If the selling price is reduced to Rs. 80, calculate New
Break-Even Point:
Total sales Rs 5,00,000
Selling price per unit Rs 100
Variable cost per unit Rs 60
Fixed cost Rs. 1,20,000
4. Sales Rs. 2,00,000
Profit Rs. 20,000
Variable Cost 60%
You are required to calculate:
(1) P I V Ratio
(2) Fixed Cost
(3) Sales volume to earn a profit of Rs. 50,000
5. From the following particulars, calculate :
(a) P / V Ratio
(b) Profit when sales are Rs. 40,000, and
(c) New break-even point if selling price is reduced by
10%
Given Fixed cost = Rs. 8,000
Break-even point = Rs. 20,000
Variable cost = Rs. 60 per unit

6. A company manufactures a product, currently utilizing 80% capacity a


turnover of Rs. 8,00,000 at Rs.25 per unit. The cost data are as under:
Material Cost Rs. 7.50 per unit, Labour Cost Rs. 6.25 per unit. Semi-
Variable Cost (including variable cost of Rs. 3.75 per unit) Rs.
1,80,000.
Fixed Cost Rs. 90,000 upto 80% level of output, beyond this an
additional Rs. 20,000 will be incurred.
Calculate:

(1) Activity level at Break-Even Point.

(2) Number of units to be sold to earn a net income of 8% of sales.

(3) Activity level needed to earn a profit of Rs. 95,000.

(4) What should be the selling price per unit, if break-even point is to
be brought down to 40% activity level?
Also calculate the volume of sales to earn profit of Rs. 6,000
7. From the following data, calculate:
(a) P I V Ratio.
(b) Profit when sales are Rs. 40,000.
(c) New break-even point if selling
price is reduced by 20%.
Fixed Expenses Rs. 8,000.
Break-Even point Rs. 10,000.
8. Sales Price - Rs. 20 unit
Variable manufacturing
cost - Rs. 11 per unit
Variable selling cost - Rs.
3 per unit.
Fixed factory overheads - Rs. 5,40,000 per year.
Fixed selling costs - Rs. 2,52,000 per unit.
Calculate:
(a) BEP Volume and Value.
(b) Sales required to earn a profit of Rs. 60,000.
(c) Sales required to earn a profit of 10% of sales.
9. From the following data, find out how many units should be
sold to earn a net profit of 10% on sales. Selling price per unit Rs.
20,variable cost per unit Rs. 14 and Fixed cost (total) Rs. 7,92,000
10. A company estimates that next year it will earn a profit of Rs. 50,000.
The budgeted fixed costs and sales are Rs. 2,50,000 and Rs. 9,93.000
respectively. Find out the break-evenpoint for the company.

11. Plant I produces a product which costs Rs. 3 per unit when produced in
quantities of 10,000 Units and Rs. 2.50 per Unit when produced in
quantities of 20,000 units. You are asked to estimate total fixed
costs. (a)
Find out;
(a) PN Ratio
(b) Sales required to break-even point and
(c) Margin of safety
12 The PN ratio of Gupta & Co. is 60% during 2003. Sales were Rs 1,50,000 and
the fixed cost Rs 15,000. Calculate:

(a) Total variable expenses


(b)Total contribution
(c) Profit and
(d) Profit if sales are increased to Rs. 2,25,000

13.The projected capacity of a plant, when sold, would return Rs. 70,000 in sales
income to the company. The variable costs for this production volume were
determined to be Rs. 30,000. The fixed costs are Rs. 20,000. Determine the
following:

(I) the break-even point of the business

(2) the profit or loss to the business on sales of Rs. 49,000; Rs. 2S,OOO
(3) the amount of sales that will enable the business to
earn a net profit of Rs. 25,OOO
14 From the following data, find out the break-even point; PN
ratio, and margin of safety ratio.
Fixed costs 6,00,000 30%
Variable costs 12,00.000 60%
Net profit 2,00.000 10%
Sales 20,00,000 100%
15.A company budgets for a production of 1,50,000 units. The variable cost per
unit is Rs. 14 and fixed cost is Rs. 2 per unit. The company fixes its seIling price to
fetch a profit of 15% on cost.
(a) What is the break-even point?
(b) What is the profit-volume ratio?
(c) If it reduces its selling price by 5%, how the revised seIling price affect
the break-even point and the profit-volume ratio?
(d) If a profit increase of 10% is desired more than the budget, what should
be the sales at the reduced prices?

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