In a system that uses multiple predetermined overhead rates, overhead is applied ______.

1.

LO 6.1Active Frame, Inc., manufactures clear and tinted sport glasses. The manufacturing of clear glasses takes 45,000 direct labor hours and involves 1,700 parts and 115 inspections. The manufacturing of tinted glasses takes 115,000 direct labor hours and involves 1,400 parts and 450 inspections. The traditional method applies $560,000 of overhead on the basis of direct labor hours. What is the amount of overhead per direct labor hour applied to the clear glass products?

  1. $933.33
  2. $157,500
  3. $322.500
  4. $402,500

2.

LO 6.1TyeDye Lights makes two products: Party and Holiday. It takes 80,900 direct labor hours to manufacture the Party Line and 93,500 direct labor hours to manufacture the Holiday Line. Overhead consists of $225,000 in the machine setup cost pool and $149,960 in the packaging cost pool. The machine setup pool has 52,000 setups for the Party product and 98,000 setups for the Holiday product. The packaging cost pool has 26,000 parts in the Party product and 39,200 parts for the Holiday product. Using the traditional cost method of direct labor hours, what is the predetermined overhead rate?

  1. $1.50 per direct labor hour
  2. $2.15 per direct labor hour
  3. $2.30 per direct labor hour
  4. $3.80 per direct labor hour

3.

LO 6.2Which is not a step in analyzing the cost driver for manufacturing overhead?

  1. identify the cost
  2. identify non-value-added costs
  3. analyze the effect on manufacturing overhead
  4. identify the correlation between the potential driver and manufacturing overhead

4.

LO 6.2Overhead costs are assigned to each product based on ________.

  1. the proportion of that product’s use of the cost driver
  2. a predetermined overhead rate for a single cost driver
  3. price of the product
  4. machine hours per product

5.

LO 6.3Which of the following is a reason a company would implement activity-based costing?

  1. The cost of record keeping is high.
  2. The additional data obtained through traditional allocation are not worth the cost.
  3. They want to improve the data on which decisions are made.
  4. A company only has one cost driver.

6.

LO 6.3Which is the correct formula for computing the overhead rate?

  1. estimated use of the cost driver for production/estimated overhead for the activity
  2. estimated overhead for the product/estimated use of the cost driver for the activity
  3. estimated use of the cost driver for production/estimated overhead for the activity
  4. estimated overhead for the activity/estimated use of the cost driver for the activity

7.

LO 6.3A company anticipates the cost to heat the building will be $21,000. Product A takes up 500 square feet of space, while Product B takes up 200 square feet. The activity rate per product using activity-based costing would be which of the following?

  1. $30/square foot
  2. $4.20/square foot
  3. $11/square foot
  4. $15.20/square foot

8.

LO 6.3A company calculated the predetermined overhead based on an estimated overhead of $70,000, and the activity for the cost driver was estimated as 2,500 hours. If product A utilized 1,350 hours and product B utilized 1,100 hours, what was the total amount of overhead assigned to the products?

  1. $35,000
  2. $30,800
  3. $37,800
  4. $68,600

9.

LO 6.3Which is not a step in activity-based costing?

  1. identify the activities performed by the organization
  2. identify the cost driver(s) associated with each activity
  3. compute a cost rate per production
  4. assign costs to products by multiplying the cost driver rate by the volume of the cost driver units consumed by the product

10.

LO 6.3What is the proper order of tasks in an ABC system?

  1. identify the cost drivers, assign the costs to the products, calculate the overhead application rate for each cost pool, identify the cost pools
  2. assign the costs to the products, identify the cost drivers, calculate the overhead application rate for each cost pool, identify the cost pools
  3. identify the cost drivers, identify the cost pools, calculate the overhead application rate for each cost pool, assign the costs to the products
  4. identify the cost pools, identify the cost drivers, calculate the overhead application rate for each cost pool, assign the costs to the products

11.

LO 6.3Which is not a task typically associated with ABC systems?

  1. calculating the overhead application rate for each cost pool
  2. applying a single cost rate
  3. identifying a cost driver
  4. more correctly allocating overhead costs

12.

LO 6.4Which statement is correct?

  1. Activity-based cost systems are less costly than traditional cost systems.
  2. Activity-based cost systems are easier to implement than traditional cost systems.
  3. Activity-based cost systems are more accurate than traditional cost systems.
  4. Activity-based cost systems provide the same data as traditional cost systems.

13.

LO 6.4Activity-based costing systems:

  1. use a single predetermined overhead rate based on machine hours instead of on direct labor
  2. frequently increase the overhead allocation to at least one product while decreasing the overhead allocation to at least one other product
  3. limit the number of cost pools
  4. always result in an increase of at least one product’s selling price

14.

LO 6.4Activity-based costing is preferable in a system:

  1. when multiple products have similar product volumes and costs
  2. with a large direct labor cost as a percentage of the total product cost
  3. with multiple, diverse products
  4. where management needs to support an increase in sales price

15.

LO 6.5Absorption costing is also referred to as:

  1. direct costing
  2. marginal costing
  3. full costing
  4. variable costing

16.

LO 6.5Under variable costing, a unit of product includes which costs?

  1. direct material, direct labor, and manufacturing overhead
  2. direct material, direct labor, and variable manufacturing overhead
  3. direct material, direct labor, and fixed manufacturing overhead
  4. direct material, direct labor, and all variable manufacturing overhead

17.

LO 6.5Under absorption costing, a unit of product includes which costs?

  1. direct material, direct labor, and manufacturing overhead
  2. direct material, direct labor, and variable manufacturing overhead
  3. direct material, direct labor, and fixed manufacturing overhead
  4. direct material, direct labor, and all variable manufacturing overhead

18.

LO 6.5A downside to absorption costing is:

  1. not including fixed manufacturing overhead in the cost of the product
  2. that it is not really useful for managerial decisions
  3. that it is not allowable under GAAP
  4. that it is not well designed for cost-volume-profit analysis

19.

LO 6.5When the number of units in ending inventory increases through the year, which of the following is true?

  1. Net income is the same for variable and absorption costing.
  2. Net income is higher for variable costing than for absorption costing.
  3. Net income is higher for absorption costing than for variable costing.
  4. There is no relationship between net income and the costing method.

20.

LO 6.5Product costs under variable costing are typically:

  1. higher than under absorption costing
  2. lower than under absorption costing
  3. the same as with absorption costing
  4. higher than absorption costing when inventory increases

What is a single predetermined overhead rate called?

A predetermined overhead rate, also known as a plant-wide overhead rate, is a calculation used to determine how much of the total manufacturing overhead cost will be attributed to each unit of product manufactured. The rate is determined by dividing the fixed overhead cost by the estimated number of direct labor hours.

How is the predetermined overhead rate calculated?

A predetermined overhead rate is calculated at the start of the accounting period by dividing the estimated manufacturing overhead by the estimated activity base. The predetermined overhead rate is then applied to production to facilitate determining a standard cost for a product.

What factors cause overhead costs?

A cost driver is a factor that causes overhead costs.

What is the term used when a company applies less overhead to production than it actually incurs multiple choice 1?

Underapplied overhead is the opposite of overapplied overhead. Overapplied overhead occurs when expenses incurred are actually less than what a company accounts for in its budget. This means that a company comes in under budget and achieves a lower amount of overhead costs during the accounting period.

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