Chapter-04-Testbank - AF201 Chapter 4 Quiz Test Bank PDF

Title Chapter-04-Testbank - AF201 Chapter 4 Quiz Test Bank
Author Kalara Noa
Course Managerial Accounting
Institution The University of the South Pacific
Pages 229
File Size 1.4 MB
File Type PDF
Total Downloads 37
Total Views 159

Summary

AF201 Chapter 4 Quiz Test Bank...


Description

Chapter 04 Testbank Student: ___________________________________________________________________________

1.

Product costing is the process of:

A. accumulating the costs of a production process B. assigning costs to a firm's products C. placing value on fixed assets owned by a producer D. accumulating the costs of a production process AND assigning costs to a firm's products 2.

Under Australian accounting standards, manufactured products are generally:

A. valued at market value and expensed in the period made B. valued at market value and expensed in the period sold C. valued at cost and expensed in the period made D. valued at cost and expensed in the period sold 3.

Consider the following statements regarding product cost information. i. Product cost information is necessary for planning, cost control and providing information for making decisions. ii. Product cost information is not necessary to justify rate increases that are subject to the approval of government authorities. iii. Product cost information is necessary to value inventory on the balance sheet. Which of the statement/s is/are correct?

A. i, ii and iii B. i and ii C. i and iii D. ii i

4.

Manufacturing costs consist of:

A. direct material B. conversion costs C. downstream costs D. direct material and conversion costs, but not downstream costs 5.

As production takes place, all manufacturing costs are debited to the:

A. work in process inventory account B. manufacturing overhead account C. cost of goods sold account D. finished goods account 6.

When products are completed, their product costs are transferred from work in process inventory to the:

A. manufacturing overhead accounts B. finished goods account C. cost of goods sold account D. indirect labour account 7.

To transfer work in process inventory to finished goods inventory:

A. debit finished goods and credit work in process B. debit work in process and credit finished goods C. add direct labour to the work in process inventory D. add direct labour and direct material to the finished goods inventory

8.

Cost of goods sold is closed into the income summary account:

A. at the end of the production cycle B. when the product is sold C. at the end of the accounting period, along with other expenses and revenues of the period D. at no time 9.

The following data apply to Stratford Ltd

Calculate the amount of direct materials used during the year.

A. $36 500 B. $42 500 C. $47 500 D. $53 500

10. The following data apply to Stratford Ltd

Predetermined overhead rate—200 per cent of direct labour cost Calculate the amount of direct labour cost incurred during the year.

A. $20 000 B. $18 000 C. $10 000 D. None of the given answers 11. The following data apply to Stratford Ltd

What was the actual manufacturing overhead incurred during the year?

A. $22 000 B. $20 000 C. $18 000 D. $16 000

12. The following data apply to Stratford Ltd

Calculate the cost of goods manufactured during the year.

A. $62 500 B. $67 500 C. $70 500 D. $72 500 13. Manufacturing overhead:

A. consists of direct material and direct labour costs B. is easily traced to jobs C. should not be assigned to individual jobs because it bears no obvious relationship to them D. is a heterogeneous pool of indirect production costs that can include gas and electricity costs and depreciation 14. A predetermined overhead rate is calculated as follows:

A. budgeted manufacturing overhead/budgeted amount of cost driver B. budgeted amount of cost driver/budgeted manufacturing overhead C. budgeted manufacturing overhead/budgeted amount of nonmanufacturing overhead D. budgeted manufacturing overhead/ budgeted total expenses

15. Which of the following statements is not correct regarding work in process?

A. Work in process is partially completed inventory. B. Work in process consists of direct labour, direct material and allocated manufacturing overhead. C. Work in process is debited as product costs are incurred. D. Work in process is credited when goods are sold. 16. The debit side of the manufacturing overhead account is used to accumulate:

A. actual manufacturing overhead costs as they are incurred throughout the accounting period B. overhead applied, to work in process inventory C. predetermined overhead D. overapplied overhead 17. Gratis Company Ltd applies overhead based on direct labour hours in their printing department. At the beginning of the year, the company estimated that manufacturing overhead would be $550 000, direct labour hours would be 100 000 and direct labour cost would be $1 100 000 in the printing department. What is the printing department's predetermined overhead rate for the year?

A. $0.18 per direct labour hour B. $0.50 per direct labour hour C. $2.00 per direct labour hour D. $5.50 per direct labour hour

18. Brainpower Pty Ltd is an advertising agency that uses a job costing system. Brainpower applies overhead to jobs based on direct professional labour hours. At the beginning of the year, overhead was estimated to be $75 000, direct professional labour hours were estimated to be 15 000, and direct professional labour cost was projected to be $225 000. During the year, Brainpower incurred actual overhead of $80 000, actual direct labour hours of 14 500 and actual direct labour cost of $222 000. What was Brainpower's overapplied or underapplied overhead during the year?

A. $5000 underapplied B. $5000 overapplied C. $7500 underapplied D. $7500 overapplied 19. Process costing is normally used when:

A. large numbers of different products are manufactured B. large numbers of nearly identical products are manufactured C. small numbers of nearly identical products are manufactured D. the fixed costs of manufacturing exceed the variable cost of manufacturing 20. If a manufacturer underestimated the manufacturing overhead budget and overestimates the activity base for the year, what is the result?

A. Overapplied factory overhead B. Underapplied factory overhead C. Overstated finished goods inventory D. Understated work in process inventory

21. If manufacturing overhead is overapplied for the period, a method to bring the balance of the manufacturing overhead account to zero would be:

A. Debit cost of goods sold, credit manufacturing overhead B. Debit work in process inventory, credit manufacturing overhead C. Debit manufacturing overhead, credit raw materials inventory D. Debit manufacturing overhead, credit cost of goods sold 22. The estimates used to calculate the predetermined overhead rate:

A. will generally prove to be incorrect to some degree B. will usually result in a non-zero balance left in the manufacturing overhead account at the end of the year C. are likely to result in either overapplied or underapplied overhead D. All of the given answers 23. When underapplied or overapplied overhead is allocated among the three accounts work in process, finished goods and cost of goods sold, this process is called:

A. proratio n B. just-in-time costing C. zero-based costing D. overhead application 24. When underapplied or overapplied manufacturing overhead is prorated, to which of the following accounts can amounts be assigned?

A. Direct materials, manufacturing overhead and direct labour B. Cost of goods sold, work in process and finished goods C. Direct materials, finished goods and cost of goods sold D. Direct materials, work in process inventory and finished goods inventory

25. If the manufacturing overhead account has a credit balance, then:

A. manufacturing overhead is overapplied B. manufacturing overhead is underapplied C. cost of goods sold is understated D. manufacturing overhead is underapplied AND cost of goods sold is understated 26. To accumulate costs under job costing:

A. the cost of direct labour is assigned to each production job B. the cost of direct material is assigned to each production job C. the cost of manufacturing overhead is allocated to each production job D. All of the given answers 27. Total manufacturing cost includes:

A. direct material and direct labour in a job costing system B. direct labour and manufacturing overhead in a process costing system C. direct material, direct labour and manufacturing overhead in both job costing and process costing D. direct labour and manufacturing overhead in both a job costing and a process costing system 28. The assignment of direct labour costs to individual jobs is based on:

A. actual total payroll costs divided equally among all the jobs in process. B. estimated total payroll costs divided equally among all the jobs in process. C. the actual time spent on each job multiplied by the wage rate. D. the estimated time spent on each job multiplied by the wage rate.

29. Leisure Life manufactures a variety of sporting equipment. The firm's predetermined overhead application rate was 150 per cent of direct labour cost. Job 101 included direct materials of $15 000 and direct labour of $6000. The manufacturing overhead applied to Job 101 during the year was:

A. $400 0 B. $600 0 C. $800 0 D. $900 0 30. Leisure Life manufactures a variety of sporting equipment. The firm's predetermined overhead application rate was 150 per cent of direct labour cost. Job 104 included direct material of $20 000 and total costs were $25 000. The manufacturing overhead applied to Job 104 to date is:

A. $500 0 B. $200 0 C. $300 0 D. $250 0 31. Which of the following is true regarding job costing?

A. It is a type of product costing system used for small numbers of products produced in distinct batches. B. It is used exclusively in manufacturing environments. C. It is used for continuous mass production of products. D. It is used exclusively for products of a similar nature. 32. In which of the following industries could process costing be used?

A. Petroleum refining B. Food processing C. Paper mills D. All of the given answers

33. In which of the following industries could job costing be used?

A. Machine shop and specialty manufacturing B. Bread making C. Cement production D. Food processing 34. Which of the following statements is false?

A. In job costing, costs are accumulated by job order. B. In process costing, the cost per unit is found by averaging the costs incurred over the units produced. C. In process costing, the production costs are assigned to each unit produced. D. In job costing, the cost of each unit of a particular job is found by dividing the total cost of the job by the number of units in the job. 35. In the valuation of inventory at the end of an accounting period, the following costs are included:

A. manufacturing costs. B. manufacturing and upstream costs. C. manufacturing and downstream costs. D. manufacturing, upstream and downstream costs. 36. Managers using costing data for making decisions will usually use the following data in product cost information.

A. Manufacturing costs B. Manufacturing and upstream costs C. Manufacturing and downstream costs D. Manufacturing, upstream and downstream costs

37. Which of the following statements is most complete and correct?

A. Job costing traces costs to departments and process costing traces costs to products. B. Job costing develops the cost of products and process costing develops the costs of processes. C. Both job and process costing develop the cost of products. D. Both job and process costing are concerned with the cost of departments. 38. Which of the following statements is false? i. Job costing accumulates costs by jobs or batches. ii. Process costing accumulates costs by departments or processes. iii. Process costing accumulates costs for specific time periods. iv. Job costing accumulates costs by departments.

A. i and ii B. i i C. i v D. iii and iv 39. If a manufacturing firm ends the year with underapplied overhead, one method of treatment is:

A. Debit manufacturing overhead, credit cost of goods sold B. Debit cost of goods sold, credit manufacturing overhead C. Debit work in process, credit manufacturing overhead D. Debit finished goods inventory, credit manufacturing overhead 40. On completion of products under a job cost system, costs are transferred as follows:

A. Debit finished goods inventory, credit work in process B. Debit work in process, credit finished goods inventory C. Debit cost of goods sold, credit work in process inventory D. Debit work in process inventory, credit cost of goods sold

41. Product costs may be used for which of the following purposes. i. Valuation of inventories ii. Management decision making iii. Pricing decisions iv. Cost control

A. i and ii B. ii, iii and iv C. i, ii and iii D. All of the given answers 42. Which of the following industries are likely to be using process costing? i. Petroleum ii. Computer manufacture iii. Sugar refining iv. Furniture manufacture

A. i and ii B. ii and iii C. i and iii D. ii and iv

43. Select the relevant information from the following, and calculate the cost of goods available for sale:

Total manufacturing costs were $5390. Cost of goods available for sale is:

A. $530 0 B. $532 0 C. $592 0 D. None of the given answers 44. Which of the following would appear on the debit side of the overhead account?

A. Actual overhead cost incurred in the period B. Overhead applied (charged) to production C. Overapplied overhead for the period D. Actual overhead cost incurred in the period AND overapplied overhead for the period 45. Which of the following would appear on the credit side of the overhead account?

A. Actual overhead cost incurred in the period B. Overhead applied (charged) to production C. Underapplied overhead for the period D. Overhead applied (charged) to production AND underapplied overhead for the period

46. In calculating its predetermined overhead rate, a firm incorrectly called some items of indirect labour ‘direct labour'. Since the firm uses direct labour costs as the basis for application of overhead costs, the effect of this error is to:

A. underestimate the overhead rate B. overestimate the overhead rate C. underestimate direct labour costs D. underestimate the denominator used for allocating overhead 47. Which of the following statements correctly completes this sentence? ‘For a manufacturing firm, when goods are completed and ready for sale …'

A. the firm's total assets are increased. B. the firm's total assets are decreased. C. there is no change in the value of the firm's assets. D. the firm's work in process inventory is increased.

48. Howard Corporation has a job order costing system. The following debits (credits) appear in the firm's work in process account for the month of June:

Overhead is applied at 90 per cent of direct labour cost. There is only one job still in process at the end of June, and this job has been charged with $2250 factory overhead. What was the amount of direct materials charged to that job?

A. $225 0 B. $250 0 C. $425 0 D. $900 0 49. For a particular period, Petersen's opening and closing work in process balances were $20 000 and $14 000 respectively. Direct materials used was $200 000 and overhead applied was $130 000. Cost of goods manufactured was $490 000. What was the amount of direct labour cost incurred for the period?

A. $148 000 B. $154 000 C. $160 000 D. $504 000

50. Richardson & Sons purchased direct material worth $15 000 during the most recent period. At the end of the period the direct material account balance was $6000 larger than the beginning balance. Cost of goods sold was $150 000. Overhead is applied at 50 per cent of direct labour cost. Other account balances are:

What is the amount of prime cost added to production for the period?

A. $900 0 B. $29 000 C. $33 000 D. $36 000 51. The following information relates to Wells Fargo for July 2008:

Assuming underapplied or overapplied overhead is transferred to cost of goods sold at the end of the period, which of the following would be the entry to the cost of goods sold account?

A. $80 000 debit B. $80 000 credit C. $40 000 credit D. $40 000 debit

52. The amount of overhead applied to jobs using a predetermined (budgeted) rate is rarely equal to the actual cost of overhead incurred for a period. Which of the following is not a valid explanation for this?

A. Actual spending for overhead is not equal to budgeted spending for overhead. B. Actual use of the overhead allocation base is not equal to the budgeted use of the allocation base. C. Budget estimates of overhead were unrealistically low. D. Direct costs were unexpectedly high. 53. A firm's total overhead incurred for the year was $40 000, and at year-end the overhead component of WIP, FG and COGS were as follows:

If underapplied or overapplied overhead is to be prorated, what is the amount (to the nearest dollar) that will be transferred to WIP because of the proration?

A. Credit WIP with $945 B. Debit WIP with $945 C. Credit WIP with $974 D. Debit WIP with $974 54. If the work in process inventory has increased during the period, which of the following statements is definitely true?

A. Cost of goods sold will be greater than cost of goods manufactured. B. Cost of goods manufactured will be greater than cost of goods sold. C. Total manufacturing costs for the period will be greater than cost of goods manufactured. D. Total manufacturing costs for the period will be less than cost of goods manufactured.

55. Which of the following costs should be considered when managers are making short term profitability analysis decisions?

A. Marketing costs B. Design costs C. Research and development costs D. None of these 56. Which of the following costs should managers focus on when making long term strategic pricing decisions?

A. Marketing costs B. Design costs C. Research and development costs D. All of these 57. Which of the following statements about product costing is false?

A. Product costs may differ depending on the decision context. B. Organisations should aim to have only one product costing system. C. In designing a product costing system, managers need to make a careful assessment of costs and benefits associated with each element of the product cost. D. Both current costs and future costs are relevant for managerial decisions. 58. Bambie Ltd. applies overheads based on direct labour hours. The company has budgeted 50 000 direct labour hours at a cost of $10 per hour, and manufacturing overhead of $750 000 in the assembly division for the year. The actual direct labour hours used for the year turns out to be 47 000 hours. What is the applied overhead for the year?

A. $705 000 B. $70 500 C. $750 000 D. 500 000

59. Which of the following about using proration to dispose of underapplied or overapplied overhead is correct?

A. Proration is a less accurate method than closing the account to COGS, because it arbitrarily allocates overhead between COGS account, WIP account, and finished goods account. B. Proration is a less accurate method than closing the account to COGS, because the process affects three accounts rather than just one account. C. Proration is a more accurate method than closing the account to COGS, because it recognises that over/under estimation of overhead rate affects more than just the COGS account. D. Proration is a more accurate method than closing the account to COGS, because the potential distortion is s...


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