ch6 Answers
ch6 Answers
CRITICAL
FUNDA- THINKING CASES, EXCEL,
MENTAL EXERCISES COLLAB. &
LEARNING ASSIGNMENT AND INTERNET
OBJECTIVE MATERIAL EXERCISES PROBLEMS EXERCISES
LO1: Use a differential 24,27,28,29, 45,46,47,48,
analysis to examine 30,31, 42,44 49,50,56,61
income effects across
alternatives, and show
that an opportunity cost
analysis yields identical
results.
LO2: Decide whether to A1,B1 25,32,33,34 62,63 65,66,67,68, 70
make or to buy certain
parts or products.
LO3: Choose whether B3 36
to add or delete a
product line using
relevant information.
LO4: Compute the A2,B2 35 51,53
optimal product mix
when production is
constrained by a scarce
resource.
LO5: Decide whether a A3,B4 37,38 54,55 69
joint product should be
processed beyond the
split-off point.
LO6: Decide whether to A4,B5 40 57,59
keep or replace
equipment.
LO7: Identify irrelevant 26,39,41 52,58,64 71
and misspecified costs.
LO8: Discuss how B6 43 60
performance measures
can affect decision
making.
55
CHAPTER 6
Relevant Information and Decision Making With a Focus on
Operational Decisions
56
6-A2 (10 min.)
1. Contribution margins:
Plain = $70 - $50 = $20
Professional = $100 - $70 = $30
2. Plain Professional
a. Units per hour 2 1
b. Contribution margin per unit $20 $30
Contribution margin per hour $40 $30
Total contribution for 20,000 hours $800,000 $600,000
3. The plain circular saws are the best use of the scarce machine
hours. For a given capacity, the criterion for maximizing
profits is to obtain the greatest possible contribution to profit
for each unit of the limiting or scarce factor. Moreover, fixed
costs are irrelevant unless their total is affected by the choice
of products.
57
6-A3 (15 min.) Table is in thousands of dollars.
58
6-A4 (30-40 min.)
Keep Replace
Three Three
Year Years Years Year Years Years
1 2 & 3 Together 1 2 & 3
Together
Receipts, inflows from operations 40 40 120 80 80 240
Disbursements:
Purchase of "old" equipment (87)* -- (87) (87) -- (87)
Purchase of "new" equipment:
Total costs less proceeds
from disposal of "old"
equipment ($99,000-$16,000) -- -- -- (83) -- (83)
Net cash inflow (outflow) (47) 40 33 (90) 80 70
59
The difference for three years taken together is $70,000 - $33,000 =
$37,000. Note particularly that the $87,000 book value can be
omitted from the comparison. Merely cross out the entire line;
although the column totals will be affected, the net difference will
still be $37,000.
Keep Replace
Three Three
Years Years Year Years Years
1, 2 & 3 Together 1 2 & 3 Together
Sales 910 2,730 910 910 2,730
Expenses:
Other expenses 810 2,430 810 810 2,430
Operating of machine 60 180 20 20 60
Depreciation 29 87* 33 33 99
Total expenses 899 2,697 863 863 2,589
Loss on disposal:
Proceeds ("revenue") -- -- (16) -- (16)
Book value ("expense") -- -- 87 -- 87*
Loss -- -- 71 -- 71
Total charges 899 2,697 934 863 2,660
Net income 11 33 (24) 47 70
* As in part (1), the $87,000 book value can be omitted from the comparison
without changing the $37,000 difference. This would mean dropping the
depreciation item of $29,000 per year (a cumulative effect of $87,000) under
the "keep" alternative, and dropping the book value item of $87,000 in the
loss on disposal computation under the "buy" alternative.
60
Note the motivational factors here. A manager may be
reluctant to replace simply because the large loss on disposal
will severely harm the profit performance in Year 1.
3. The net difference for the three years taken together would be
unaffected because the item is a past cost. You can substitute
any number for the original $87,000 figure without changing
this answer.
Keep: Replace:
Three Years Three Years
Together Together Difference
Receipts, inflows from operations 120 240 120
Disbursements:
Purchase of old equipment (1,000) (1,000) 0
Purchase of new equipment:
Gross price 99
Disposal proceeds of "old" 16 -- ( 83) (83)
Net cash outflow ( 880) ( 843) 37
61
4. Diplomatically, Lee should try to convey the following. All of
us tend to indulge in the erroneous idea that we can soothe the
wounded pride of a bad purchase decision by using the item
instead of replacing it. The fallacy is believing that a current
or future action can influence the long-run impact of a past
outlay. All past costs are down the drain. Nothing can
change what has already happened. The $87,000 has been
spent. Subsequent accounting for the item is irrelevant. The
schedules in parts (1) and (2) clearly show that we may
completely ignore the $87,000 original outlay and still have a
correct analysis. The important point is that the $87,000 is
not an element of difference between alternatives and,
therefore, may be safely ignored. The only relevant items are
those expected future items that will differ between
alternatives.
Three Years
Together
Keep Replace
Operating of machine
(3 x $60; 3 x $20) $180 $ 60
Incremental cost of new machine:
Total cost $99
Less proceeds of old machine 16
Incremental cost -- 83
Total relevant costs $180 $143
62
6-B1 (15-20 min.)
1. Make Buy
Total Per Unit Total Per Unit
Purchase cost €10,000,000 €50
Direct material €5,500,000 €27.5
Direct labor 1,900,000 9.5
Factory overhead, variable 1,100,000 5.5
Factory overhead, fixed
avoided 750,000 3.75
Total relevant costs €9,250,000 €46.25 €10,000,000 €50
Difference in favor of making € 750,000 € 3.75
63
6-B2 (15 min.)
64
6-B3 (15-20 min.)
65
6-B4 (15 min.)
66
3. Steaks to frozen dinners:
Additional revenue from processing further ($860 - $400) $460
Additional cost for processing further 470
Increase (decrease) in profit from processing further $ (10)
67
6-B5 (15-20 min.)
1. Three Years Together
Keep Replace Difference
Cash operating costs $42,000 $24,000 $18,000
Old equipment, book value:
Periodic write-off as
depreciation 15,000 -
68
6-B6 (10 min.)
69
6-1 An opportunity cost does not entail a disbursement of cash at
any future time, whereas an outlay cost does entail an additional
disbursement sooner or later.
70
6-8 The choice in many cases is not really whether to make or
buy. Instead, the choice is how best to use available capacity.
6-10 Four examples of scarce factors are: (a) labor hours, (b)
money (investment capital), (c) supervisory hours, and (d) computer
hours.
6-14 No. Once inventory has been purchased, the price paid is a
sunk cost. It is true that selling at a price less than $5,000 would
produce a reported loss. However, a sale at any price above $0 is
71
economically beneficial provided that the only alternative is to
scrap the inventory.
6-16 No. Past costs are not relevant because they cannot be
affected by a decision. Although past costs are often indispensable
for formulating predictions, past costs themselves are not the
predictions that are the inputs to decision models. Clear thinking is
enhanced by these distinctions.
72
6-20 Two reasons why unit costs should be analyzed with care in
decision making are:
1. Most unit costs are stable only over a certain range of output,
and care must be taken to see that allowances are made when
alternatives are considered outside that range.
2. Some unit costs are an allocation of fixed costs; thus when a
higher volume of output is being considered, unit cost will
decrease proportionately, and vice versa.
6-21 Sales personnel sometimes neglect to point out that the unit
costs are based on outputs far in excess of the volume of their
prospective customer.
73
6-23 The wide use of income statements to evaluate performance
may overly influence managers to maximize short-run performance
that may hurt long-run performance. They may pass up profitable
opportunities to replace equipment because of the large loss on
disposal shown on the first year’s income statement.
74
6-26 Whenever total costs are unitized by dividing by total units
and the resulting unit costs are then used to predict new total costs
based on a different level of production, errors are being made. If
the new production level is higher, predicted total costs are
overestimated. If the new production level is lower, predicted total
costs are underestimated. Never unitize fixed costs if the resulting
unit cost will be used for planning purposes!
Consider the following simple example:
Fixed Cost Variable Cost Total
Total $100 $100 $200
Units 10 10 10
Unit Cost $10 $10 $20
If a new planned number of units is 20, what will be the new,
predicted total cost?
The correct cost function and cost prediction is
Total Cost = $100 + $10 x Number of units
= $100 + $10 x 20
= $300
The correct cost function is based on the two amounts that are
constant within the relevant range – the total fixed cost and the unit
variable cost.
The incorrect unitized cost function and incorrect and overestimated
prediction is
Total Cost = $20 x Number of units
= $20 x 20
= $400
It is easy to see that the error comes from treating fixed costs as if
they were variable.
75
6-27 The amount paid for inventory is a sunk cost. Once a
company has the inventory, it cannot change what it paid for it.
Thus the only relevant issue is what can be done with the inventory.
If there is a choice of selling the inventory for less than what the
company paid for it or not selling it at all, it is certainly better to get
something rather than nothing for it.
76
6-28 (10-15 min.)
1. Independent
Practice Employee Difference
2. Choice as Employee
Revenue $ 110,000
Expenses:
Outlay costs $ 0
Opportunity cost of accounting practice 120,000 120,000
Income effects per year $ (10,000)
77
6-29 (10-15 min.)
Alternative Chosen:
Hold Present Home
Opportunity cost $(10,000)
Outlay cost 6,000
Income effects per year $ (4,000 )
78
6-30 (15-20 min.) Opportunity cost is the maximum available
contribution to profit forgone by using limited resources for a
particular purpose. In this case, the opportunity cost of the machine
when analyzing the alternative to produce 12-oz. bottles of Juice
Cocktails is $90,000, the larger of the $90,000 contribution margin
from additional sales of the 100% Juices or the $75,000 proceeds
from the sale of the machine. The $160,000 historical cost of the
machine is a past cost and thus irrelevant.
79
6-31 (15-20 min.) The first tabulation is probably easier to
understand, but the choice of a tabulation is a matter of taste:
80
6-32 (15 min.)
Make Purchase
Direct materials $300,000
Avoidable overhead costs:
Indirect labor 30,000
Supplies 20,000
Allocated occupancy cost 0
Purchase cost $330,000
Total relevant costs $350,000 $330,000
81
6-33 (20-25 min.)
_______Make______ ________Buy_____
Per Per
Total Bottle Total Bottle
Purchase cost $250,00
0 $.250
Direct materials $80,000 $.080
Direct labor 30,000 .030
Variable overhead 60,000 .060
Avoidable fixed
overhead _ 60,000 .060 _______ ____
Total relevant costs $250,00
$230,000 $.230 0 $.250
Difference in favor of
making $20,000 $.020
Buy and
Use
Facilities Buy and
Buy and for Rent
Leave Other Out
Facilitie Activitie Facilitie
Make s Idle s s
Contribution from other
activities $ 75
Rent revenue $ 55
Relevant cost of bottles $(230) $(250) _(250) _(250)
Net relevant costs $(230) $(250) $(175) $(195)
Nantucket Nectars should buy the bottles and use the facilities for
other activities.
82
83
6-35 (20 min.)
84
6-36 (10-15 min.)
*In addition to the avoidable costs shown, there might be some savings
in sanitary engineering (less cleaning necessary) and depreciation
(less wear and tear on equipment). Unless these savings are more
than the SFR1,200 decrease in operating income, the school will be
worse off financially without the after-school care program.
85
6-37 (10 min.)
Sell at Process
Split-off Further as
as M Super M Difference
Alternative 1 Alternative 2
Super Differential
L M Total L M Total Effects
Revenues $1,000 $750 $1,750 $1,000 $950 $1,950 $200
Joint costs $1,600 $1,600 ---
Separable costs --- 210 210 210
Total costs $1,600 $1,810 $210
Income effects $ 150 $ 140 $ (10)
86
6-39 (5-10 min.)
1. The only relevant item is the $100 to be received for the
calendars. No additional costs will be incurred. Therefore,
profit will be $100 higher if the offer is accepted than if it is
rejected.
2. The amount paid for the calendars is irrelevant. Even if $1
million had been paid for the calendars, the added profit from
selling them for $100 is $100. The $900 paid is a past cost, a
sunk cost, that will not be affected by the decision.
87
6-41 (10 min.)
88
6-42 (10 min.)
89
6-43 (10 min.)
Sell Hold
Division Division
Investment required $5 million $5 million
Income generated ? $500,000 yearly*
*This assumes that the division has truly "turned around" and will now
make a net profit of $500,000 per year for the foreseeable future.
90
6-44 (10-15 min.)
(a) (b)
Work Don't Work
Work, $900 x 6 days x 48 weeks $259,200
Don't work on every other Saturday:
$900 x 5 days x 24 weeks $108,000
$900 x 6 days x 24 weeks 129,600
Totals $259,200 $237,600
3. If she has already decided to take the day off, her opportunity
cost is zero because in any case she would not see patients.
Note that opportunity cost is a "situation-specific" concept.
If one of the possible alternatives is not even allowed into the
feasible set by the decision maker, its financial effects are
irrelevant. On the other hand, if she decided to repair her car
instead of keeping the appointments with patients on a
working Saturday, her opportunity cost for the day would be
$900; for half a day, $450.
91
6-45 (15-25 min.)
1. With American Without American
Airlines Personnel Airlines Personnel
Contribution margin
for October 20:
$150 x 50 $7,500
$ 70 x 50 $3,500
Let X = % of occupancy
Then $110 x X = $70
X = $70 ÷ $110 = 63.636%
92
Percentage of occupancy of the 50 rooms = 31.82 ÷ 50
= .63636
= 63.636%
93
6-47 (10-20 min.)
1. Make Buy
Total Per Unit Total Per Unit
Purchase cost $1,050,000 $21
Direct material $400,000 $8
Direct labor 300,000 6
Variable factory overhead 150,000 3
Fixed factory overhead that
can be avoided by not making 150,000 3
Total relevant costs $1,000,000 $20 $1,050,000 $21
Difference in favor of making $ 50,000 $ 1
2. Buy and
Buy and Leave Buy Use Facilities
Make Facilities Idle and Rent for Oil Filters
Rent revenue $ - $ - $ 65,000 $ -
Contribution from
other products - - - 200,000
Obtaining of parts (1,000,000) (1,050,000) (1,050,000) (1,050,000)
Net relevant costs $(1,000,000) $(1,050,000) $ (985,000) $ (850,000)
The analysis indicates that buying the parts and using the
vacated facilities for the production of other products is the
alternative that should yield the best results in this instance.
The advantage over making the parts is $1,000,000 - $850,000,
= $150,000.
94
6-48 (35-50 min.)
60,000 54,000
Units Units Difference
Sales at $90 and $98, respectively $5,400,000 $5,292,000
Variable costs at $70* 4,200,000 3,780,000
Contribution margin $1,200,000 $1,512,000 $312,000
2. If the total fixed costs do not change, the company will need a
total contribution margin of $1,200,000 from the two products
together. How many units of the new product can be sold?
The clue to the production capacity of the plant is in how
fixed factory overhead was unitized: $300,000 ÷ $6 per unit =
50,000 units of expected sales.
95
New product budget @ 50,000 Units:
Sales at $40 $2,000,000
Variable costs at $30* 1,500,000
Contribution margin, new product $ 500,000
*Direct material $ 6
Direct labor 12
Variable factory overhead 8
Variable selling expense, 10% x $40 4
Total variable costs per unit $30
96
If students do not accept the above analysis, the following
proof may be helpful (in thousands):
New
Old Difference Product 1 Product 2
*An alternate approach to this whole solution is to use the above format and
solve toward the unknown purchases figure. The $4,700,000 is the maximum
allowable variable cost. Because $540,000 of the $4,700,000 represents
selling expense, the remainder, $4,160,000 must be the maximum that may be
paid to the supplier.
**This allocation uses the $2.00 unit cost figure for the new product and
assigns the remaining fixed costs to the old product. Note, however, that how
the total fixed selling costs are allocated is irrelevant because total fixed costs
are unaffected by allocation methods or by how such costs are assigned to
products.
97
6-49 (15-25 min.)
1. Alternative
Without With
Contract Contract
Contribution margin:
(200 rooms x 365 days)($86 - $12)(.85) $4,591,700
(200 - 40)(365)($86-$12)(.95) $4,105,520
(40)(365)($50 - $12) 554,800
Total contribution margin $4,591,700 $4,660,320
Difference in favor of contract $68,620
98
6-50 (10-20 min.)
The basic message here is that airlines can maintain the same
revenue per mile even in the face of switching by some passengers to
lower fares.
1. Without With
Discount Discount
Revenue, 75 @ $.12 $9.00
Revenue
72 @ $.12 $8.64
6 @ $.072 .43
Total per airplane mile $9.00 $9.07
99
2. Let X = number of passengers who switch
Revenue with discount= Revenue without discount
50(.60)($.12) = X($.12)
50($.072) = $.12(X)
$3.60 = $.12(X)
X = $3.60 ÷ $.12 = 30 passengers
100
6-51 (15-20 min.)
Moderately
1. Designer Priced
Items that can be displayed in 8,000 square feet 300 400
Contribution margin per item $120 $65
Contribution margin per turnover of inventory $36,000 $26,000
Relative number of turnovers for a given time period 2 3
Total contribution margin for a given time period $72,000 $78,000
Students should recognize that square feet of floor space is the
limiting or scarce factor. Note that the contribution margin
percentage and the contribution margin per item are greater
for the designer items. Nevertheless, the moderately priced
items will generate a larger contribution margin in total.
Why? Because more moderately priced items are sold in any
given period of time. The analysis above implies sales of 300 x
2 = 600 designer items versus 400 x 3 = 1,200 moderately
priced items. The designer items should be dropped.
101
Moderate priced items displayed = 4/3 x designer items displayed
= 4/3 x 1 = 1 1/3
102
6-52 (15 min.)
The standard line should be produced. The major lesson here
is that gross profit per unit of product is not necessarily indicative
of the relative profitability of products. In this case the limiting
factor (scarce resource) is production capacity. The most desirable
product is the one that maximizes the contribution to profit for the
given production capacity. In this case, the standard product will
yield a $14 contribution per hour of machine time, while the
premium product will yield $12:
Per Unit
Standard Premium
Selling price $28 $38
Variable costs 14 20
Contribution margin per unit of product $14 $18
Divide by machine time per unit of product ÷1 ÷1.5*
Contribution margin per hour of machine time $14 $12
103
6-53 (30-50 min.)
104
2. The lowest price must yield a contribution of $28,800,000.
The contribution per unit would be $28,800,000 divided by
the number of units produced in one year, or:
$28,800,000 ÷ (600,000 hours x 20 unit per hour)
= $28,800,000 ÷ 12,000,000 units = $2.40 per unit
Because the contribution is currently $2.00 per unit at a
selling price of $5.30, the minimum acceptable price must be
$5.70 in order to provide a unit contribution of $2.40.
To double check, consider the following:
100% of Capacity
To Subcomponents To Plug-in
Assemblies
Sales in units 36,000,000 12,000,000
Sales at $2.20 and $5.70 $79,200,000 $68,400,000
Variable costs at $1.40 and $3.30 50,400,000 39,600,000
Contribution margin $28,800,000 $28,800,000
Fixed costs* 21,600,000 21,600,000
Operating income $ 7,200,000 $ 7,200,000
* 36,000,000 x Unit fixed overhead rate of $.60, and 12,000,000 x Unit
fixed overhead rate of ($1.20 + the $.60 transferred-in), respectively.
105
Incidentally, many individuals often jump to the conclusion
that relevant cost analysis is simple: variable costs are always
relevant, and fixed costs are irrelevant. This is an example
where the variable overhead cost is irrelevant. (For that
matter, in this case, the labor cost, another variable cost, is
also irrelevant.) Irrelevant costs can be included in the
analysis. If they are analyzed correctly, they will not make
any difference between alternatives. However, if analyzed
incorrectly, they will provide misleading information.
In short, the answer here is the same as the answers to (1) and
(2). The lowest acceptable price is still $5.70. To prove this,
use the same format as in (2):
100% of Capacity
To Subcom- To Plug-in
ponents Assemblies
Sales in units 36,000,000 12,000,000
Sales at $2.20 and $5.70 $79,200,000 $68,400,000
Variable costs* at $1.64 and $4.02 59,040,000 48,240,000
Contribution margin $20,160,000 $20,160,000
Fixed costs** 12,960,000 12,960,000
Operating income $ 7,200,000 $ 7,200,000
* $1.40 + ($14.40 ÷ 60 units) = $1.64, and
$3.30 + ($14.40 ÷ 20 units) = $4.02
** .6 x $21,600,000 = $12,960,000
106
6-54 (25-40 min.)
Total Number of
Percent
of Total Dresses Capes Handbags Total
Complete sets 70% 1,050 1,050 1,050
Dress and cape 6 90 90
Dress and handbag 15 225 225
Dress only 9 135
Total units if accessories
are introduced 100% 1,500 1,140 1,275
Unit sales if accessories
are not introduced 1,250 --- ---
Incremental sales 250 1,140 1,275
Incremental contribution
margin per unit € 650 € 40 € 20
Total incremental
contribution margin € 162,500 €45,600 €25,500 € 233,600
Additional costs
Additional cutting cost (1,500 x €30) € 45,000
Additional material cost (250 x €320) 80,000
Cutting cost on additional dresses (250 x €100) 25,000
Lost remnant sales (1,250 x €28) 35,000
185,000
Incremental profit € 48,600
107
2. Nonquantitative factors that could influence management in
its decision to manufacture matching capes and handbags
include:
• accuracy of forecasted increase in dress sales.
• accuracy of forecasted product mix.
• company image from dress manufacturer only to a more
extensive supplier of women's apparel.
• competition from other manufacturers of women's apparel.
• whether there is adequate capacity (labor, facilities,
storage, etc.).
2. a. The joint costs can increase by any amount, since they are
sunk and irrelevant. Western should always choose to process
further.
108
6-56 (15-30 min.)
109
6-57 (15-20 min.)
2. New Old
Machine Machine
Units 20,000 20,000
Variable costs $ 80,000 $130,000
Straight-line depreciation 60,000 -
Total cost $140,000 $130,000
Unit cost $7.00 $6.50
110
6-58 (15 min.)
111
6-59 (15-30 min.)
112
3. Keep Replace
113
6-61 (20 min.)
The numbers in this case are a slight modification of those
given in an article in the New York Times, November 21, 1994.
1. On Broadway Off Broadway
Attendance 400 400
Revenue $192,000 $128,000
Expenses 252,000* 102,000
Net profit (loss) $ (60,000) $ 26,000
*$102,000 + $150,000 = $252,000
2. On Broadway Off Broadway
Attendance 750 375
Revenue $360,000 $120,000
Expenses 252,000 102,000
Net profit $108,000 $ 18,000
3. a. $252,000 $60 = 4,200 weekly attendance
4,200 8 = 525 per show attendance
b. $102,000 $40 = 2,550 weekly attendance
2,550 8 = 319 per show attendance
4. On Broadway Off Broadway
Attendance 600 400
Revenue $288,000 $128,000
Expenses 252,000 102,000
Net profit $ 36,000 $ 26,000
Total profit for a 26-week run:
On Broadway: ($36,000 x 26) - $1,295,000 = $(359,000)
Off Broadway: ($26,000 x 26) - $440,000 = $236,000
114
6. a. $1,295,000 $36,000 = 36weeks
b. $ 440,000 $26,000 = 17 weeks
7. Let X be the length of run in weeks at which on-Broadway
profit equals off-Broadway profit:
$36,000 X - $1,295,000 = $26,000 X - $440,000
$10,000 X = $855,000
X = 85.5 weeks
8. Mr. Simon’s decision depends on his predictions of attendance
on Broadway versus off Broadway and his attitude toward
risk. The on-Broadway production has more risk because of
its bigger up-front investment. If the attendance figures in
requirements 4 and 5 are accurate, the off-Broadway
alternative is better for any runs less than 85.5 weeks. If this
may not be a long run, it appears that the off-Broadway
alternative might be best. However, if attendance on
Broadway exceeds 600 per show, especially if it approaches
1,000 per show, the Broadway alternative is better.
There is a trend for non-musical plays to be produced off
Broadway because of the large investment required on
Broadway. Many plays do not last beyond a few weeks, and
even filling a theater to capacity would require almost a 5-
week run just to recoup the initial investment. Weekly profit
would be ($60 x 1,000 x 8) - $252,000 = $228,000, so it would
take $1,295,000 $228,000 = 5.7 weeks to break even. There
is less risk off Broadway, especially because it takes many
fewer theatergoers to reach the break-even point. For
example, at capacity operations it takes 5.7 x 8 x 1,000 =
45,600 attendees to break even on Broadway. Off Broadway
it requires only two-thirds of that number:
($40 x 500 x 8) - $102,000 = $58,000 weekly profit
$440,000 $58,000 = 7.6 weeks to break even
7.6 x 8 x 500 = 30,400 attendees to break even.
115
6-62 (20-30 minutes)
1.
Assume they outsource:
Costs: 30,000 x 12 = $360,000
Less cost savings:
Variable manufacturing costs
($3 + $4 + $5) x 30,000 = $360,000
plus fixed overhead saved
($1.5 x 60,000 units) = $ 90,000
Net cost savings $ 90,000
Therefore, outsource.
2.
If they outsource, their costs are:
(30,000 x $12) + $4.50 x 60,000 =$630,000
116
6-63 (15-20 min.)
3. The main ethical issue involves the impact of the plant closure
on employees and on the community.
117
6-64 (10–15 min.)
2. Sell as is $2,650
Reprocess 2,950
Advantage to reprocessing $ 300
118
6-65 (30-40 min.)
119
4. Minnetonka Corporation needs 12,500 pair of bindings. The
cost to buy 12,500 pair is $131,250. The cost to make 10,000
and buy 2,500 is:
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6-66 (30-45 min.)
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rather than purchasing is the better decision--before considering
required investment.
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6-67 (20 - 30 minutes)
1.
Assume they outsource:
Costs:
25,000 x 38 =$950,000
Less cost savings:
Variable manufacturing costs
(15 + 8 + 10) x 25,000 =$825,000
plus fixed overhead saved
(2 x 40,000 units) =$ 80,000
Net Cost $ 45,000
2.
If they outsource and make the Scanmeister, their cost savings are
$825,000 in variable manufacturing cost. Additionally, they earn a
contribution margin of 10,000 x $15 =$150,000 on the Scanmeister.
Therefore, they would be willing to pay up to $975,000 / 25,000 =
$39 per unit for the outsourced units.
Since the outsourcing price is $29.75 per chip, Nike should not
outsource production. They are better off by $.75 x 20,000 =
$15,000, if they make it themselves. Note that the rent is irrelevant.
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Cost Savings per chip:
Variable manufacturing costs
($12 + $8 + $4.50) $ 24.50
plus fixed overhead saved are:
total depreciation =
$3 x 20,000 = $60,000;
$60,000/15,000 $ 4.00
total supervision =
$30,000/15,000 $ 2.00
Total cost savings $ 30.50
6-69 (25 - 30 min.) For the solution, see the Prentice Hall Web site,
www.prenhall.com/
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6-70 (60 min. or more)
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the firm. Thus, if I wanted an income producing stock, this
would not be a logical investment choice.
3. To learn more about coffee, you would click on the link “The
Story of Coffee.” The links that likely would provide
information about coffee differences, based solely on the titles
given to such links, would be “Tasting Coffee”, “Learning
What You Like”, “Sourcing Great Coffees”, and “Brewing a
Great Cup”.
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