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Accounting Principles 8th Edition

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Title: Accounting Principles 8th Edition Subject: Chapter 26 Author: Dan & Suzanne Ward Last modified by: bob gutschick Created Date: 3/28/1997 6:03:02 PM – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Accounting Principles 8th Edition


1
Preview of Chapter 21
Financial and Managerial Accounting Weygandt
Kimmel Kieso
2
Managements Decision-Making Process
  • Making decisions is an important management
    function.
  • Does not always follow a set pattern.
  • Decisions vary in scope, urgency, and importance.
  • Steps usually involved in process include

Illustration 21-1
3
Managements Decision-Making Process
4
  • Types of Decision Making
  • Programmed Decisions routine, almost automatic
    process.
  • Managers have made decision many times before.
  • There are rules or guidelines to follow.
  • Example Deciding to reorder office supplies.
  • Non-programmed Decisions unusual situations
    that have
  • not been often addressed.
  • No rules to follow since the decision is new.
  • These decisions are made based on information,
    and a mangers intuition, and judgment.
  • Example Should the firm invest in a new
    technology?

5
  • Decisions are broadly taken at three levels
  • Strategic decisions big choices of identity
    and direction. Who are we? Where are we
    heading?
  • These decisions are often complex and
    multi-dimensional. May involve large dollars and
    have a long-term impact usually made by senior
    management.
  • Tactical decisions how to manage performance
    to achieve the strategy (from senior management).
  • What resources are needed? What is the
    timescale?
  • These decisions are distinctive but within
    clearer boundaries. They may involve significant
    resources, have medium-term implications and may
    be taken by senior or middle managers.
  • Operational decisions routine and follow known
    rules.
  • How many? To what specification?
  • These decisions involve more limited resources,
    have a shorter-term application and can be taken
    by middle or first line managers.

6
Managements Decision-Making Process
7
Managements Decision-Making Process
8
Managements Decision-Making Process
  • The steps are
  • a. Identify the problem and assign
    responsibility.
  • b. Determine / evaluate possible courses
    of action.
  • c. Make a decision.
  • d. Review the results of the decision.
  • Accountings contribution to this process
    primarily occurs in steps (b) and (d)
    evaluating possible courses of action, and
    reviewing results.

9
Managements Decision-Making Process
  • In making business decisions,
  • Considers both financial and non-financial
    information.
  • Financial information
  • Revenues and costs, and
  • Effect on overall profitability.
  • Non-financial information
  • Effect on employee turnover
  • The environment
  • Overall company image.

10
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11
Managements Decision-Making Process
Incremental Analysis Approach
  • Decisions involve a choice among alternative
    actions.
  • Process used to identify the financial data that
    change under alternative courses of action.
  • Both costs and revenues may vary or
  • Only revenues may vary or
  • Only costs may vary

12
Managements Decision-Making Process
  • Important concepts in incremental analysis
  • Relevant cost.
  • Revenues or Costs that DIFFER between options
  • Option 1 Buy a Honda Civic with a GPS
    20,500
  • Option 2 Buy Honda Civic without GPS 21,000

13
Managements Decision-Making Process
  • Important concepts in incremental analysis
  • Opportunity cost.
  • Potential benefit lost when you choose one thing
    over another the next best choice.
  • Opportunity costs of going away to college
    full-time include
  • wages that could have been earned,
    the value of any
    activities missed to study,
    value of items that you could have
    bought with tuition money.

14
Managements Decision-Making Process
  • Important concepts in incremental analysis
  • Sunk Costs.
  • Cost that cannot be changed or avoided by any
    present or future choice.
  • Money spent on a non-refundable deposit.
  • Concert tickets already bought for this weekend.

15
Managements Decision-Making Process
How Incremental Analysis Works
  • Sometimes involves changes that seem contrary to
    intuition.
  • Variable costs sometimes do not change under
    alternatives.
  • Fixed costs sometimes change between
    alternatives.
  • Incremental analysis not the same as CVP analysis.

16
Types of Incremental Analysis
  1. Accept an order at a special price.
  2. Make or buy component parts or finished products.
  3. Sell or process further them further
  4. Repair, retain, or replace equipment.
  5. Eliminate an unprofitable business segment or
    product.

17
Accept an Order at a Special Price
  • Obtain additional business by making a major
    price concession to a specific customer.
  • Assumes that sales of products in other markets
    are not affected by special order.
  • Assumes that company is not operating at full
    capacity.

18
Accept an Order at a Special Price
  • Illustration Sunbelt Company produces 100,000
    Smoothie blenders per month, which is 80 of
    plant capacity.
  • Variable manufacturing costs are 8 per unit.
  • Fixed manufacturing costs are 400,000, or 4 per
    unit.
  • The blenders are normally sold directly to
    retailers at 20 each.
  • Sunbelt has an offer to purchase an additional
    2,000 blenders at 11 per unit. Acceptance of
    the offer would not affect normal sales of the
    product. The units can be manufactured without
    increasing plant capacity. What should
    management do?

19
Accept an Order at a Special Price
  • Fixed costs do not change since within existing
    capacity thus fixed costs are not relevant.
  • Variable manufacturing costs and expected
    revenues change thus both are relevant to the
    decision.

20
Cobb Company incurs costs of 28 per unit (18
variable and 10 fixed) to make a product that
normally sells for 42. A foreign wholesaler
offers to buy 5,000 units at 25 each. Cobb will
incur additional shipping costs of 1 per unit.
Compute the increase or decrease in net income
Cobb will realize by accepting the special order,
assuming Cobb has excess operating capacity.
Should Cobb Company accept the special order?
Accept or Reject?
Accept or Reject?
21
Make or Buy
  • Illustration Baron Company incurs the following
    annual costs in producing 25,000 ignition
    switches for motor scooters.

Instead of making its own switches company can
purchase the switches at a price of 8 each.
What should management do?
22
Make or Buy
  • Total manufacturing cost is 1 higher per unit
    than purchase price.
  • Must absorb at least 50,000 of fixed costs under
    either option.

23
Make or Buy Opportunity Cost
Illustration Assume that through buying the
switches, Baron Company can use the released
productive capacity to generate additional income
of 38,000 from producing a different product.
This lost income is an additional cost of
continuing to make the switches in the
make-or-buy decision.
24
Review Question
  • In a make-or-buy decision, relevant costs are

a. Manufacturing costs that will be saved. b.
The purchase price of the units. c.
Opportunity costs. d. All of the above.
25
  • J Company must decide whether to make or buy some
    of its components for appliances it makes. Costs
    of making 166,000 electrical cords for its
    appliances are as follows.
  • Direct materials 90,000 Variable overhead
    32,000
  • Direct labor 20,000 Fixed overhead
    . 24,000
  • Instead of making the electrical cords at an
    average cost per unit of 1.00 (166,000
    166,000), company has an opportunity to buy the
    cords at 0.90 each. If company purchases the
    cords, all variable costs and 1/4 of the fixed
    costs will be eliminated.
  • Prepare an analysis of whether company should
    make or buy the cords.
  • What if the released productive (manufacturing)
    capacity will generate additional income of
    5,000?

26
(a) Prepare an incremental analysis showing
whether the company should make or buy the
electrical cords.
Juanita Company will incur 1,400 of additional
costs if it buys the electrical cords rather than
making them.
27
  • (b) Will your answer be different if the released
    productive capacity will generate additional
    income of 5,000?

Yes, net income will be increased by 3,600 if
Juanita Company purchases the electrical cords
rather than making them.
28
Sell or Process Further
  • May have option to sell product at a given point
    in production or to process further and sell at a
    higher price.
  • Decision Rule
    Process further as long as the
    incremental revenue from processing exceeds the
    incremental processing costs.

29
Sell or Process Further - Single-Product Case
  • Illustration W makes tables. Cost to make an
    unfinished table is 35. The selling price per
    unfinished unit is 50.
  • W has unused capacity that can be used to
    finish the tables and sell them at 60 per unit.
  • Direct materials will increase 2
  • Direct labor costs will increase 4.
  • Variable overhead costs will increase by 2.40
    (60 of direct labor).
  • No increase is anticipated in fixed overhead.

30
Sell or Process Further - Single-Product Case
The incremental analysis on a per unit basis is
as follows.
Should Woodmasters sell or process further.
Should Woodmasters sell or process further?
31
Sell or Process Further - Multiple-Product Case
Joint product situation for Marais Creamery.
Cream and skim milk are products that result from
the processing of raw milk.
Joint product costs are sunk costs and thus not
relevant to the sell-or-process further decision.
32
Sell or Process Further - Multiple-Product Case
Cost and revenue data per day for cream.
Determine whether the company should simply sell
the cream or process it further into cottage
cheese.
33
Sell or Process Further - Multiple-Product Case
Analysis of whether to sell cream or process into
cottage cheese.
Marais should or should not process the cream
further?
Marais should or should not process the cream
further?
34
Sell or Process Further - Multiple-Product Case
Cost and revenue data per day for skim milk.
Determine whether the company should sell the
skim milk or process it further into condensed
milk.
35
Sell or Process Further - Multiple-Product Case
Analysis of whether to sell skim milk or process
into condensed milk.
Marais should or should not process the milk
further?
Marais should or should not process the milk
further?
36
Review Question
  • The decision rule is a sell-or-process-further
    decision
  • Process further as long as the incremental
    revenue from processing exceeds

a. Incremental processing costs. b. Variable
processing costs. c. Fixed processing costs. d.
No correct answer is given.
37
Repair, Retain, or Replace Equipment
  • Decision Replace old machine with new. Old
    machine originally cost 110,000. Book value is
    40,000. It has a remaining useful life of four
    years (_at_ depreciation rate of 70,000 per year).
  • New machine costs 120,000.
  • Expected salvage value after 4-year useful life
    is zero.
  • New machine will decrease variable mfg costs from
    640,000 to 500,000
  • The old machine can be sold for 5,000.

38
Repair, Retain, or Replace Equipment
Prepare the incremental analysis for the
four-year period.
REPLACE Machine
KEEP Machine
Retain or Replace?
Retain or Replace?
39
Repair, Retain, or Replace Equipment
  • Additional Considerations
  • The book value of old machine does not affect the
    decision.
  • Book value is a sunk cost.
  • Costs which cannot be changed by future decisions
    (sunk cost) are not relevant in incremental
    analysis.
  • However, any trade-in allowance or cash disposal
    value of the existing asset is relevant.

40
Eliminate an Unprofitable Segment
  • Key Focus on Relevant Costs.
  • Consider effect on related product lines.
  • Fixed costs allocated to the unprofitable segment
    must be absorbed by the other segments.
  • Net income may decrease when an unprofitable
    segment is eliminated.
  • Decision Rule Retain the segment unless fixed
    costs eliminated exceed contribution margin lost.

41
Eliminate an Unprofitable Segment
  • Illustration Company makes 3 models of tennis
    rackets
  • Profitable lines Pro and Master
  • Unprofitable line Champ

Should Champ be eliminated?
42
Eliminate an Unprofitable Segment
  • Prepare income data after eliminating Champ
    product line. Assume fixed costs are allocated
    2/3 to Pro and 1/3 to Master.

Total income is decreased by 10,000.
43
Eliminate an Unprofitable Segment
  • Incremental analysis of Champ provided the same
    results
  • Do Not Eliminate Champ

44
Review Question
  • If an unprofitable segment is eliminated

a. Net income will always increase. b. Variable
expenses of the eliminated segment will have to
be absorbed by other segments. c. Fixed
expenses allocated to the eliminated segment will
have to be absorbed by other segments. d. Net
income will always decrease.
45
LambCo makes accessories including hats and
scarves. Sales of hats and scarves were
400,000, variable expenses were 310,000, and
fixed expenses were 120,000 for a net loss of
30,000. If LambCo eliminates hats and scarves,
20,000 of fixed costs will remain. Should
LambCo eliminate the hats and scarves.
46
Other Considerations in Decision-Making
Qualitative Factors
  • Potential effects of decision on existing
    employees and the community.
  • Cost savings that may be obtained from
    outsourcing or from eliminating a plant should be
    weighed against these qualitative attributes.
  • Cost of lost morale that might result.

47
Other Considerations in Decision-Making
Relationship of Incremental Analysis and
Activity-Based Costing
  • Many companies have shifted to activity-based
    costing (ABC).
  • The primary reason for using ABC is that it
    results in a more accurate allocation of
    overhead.
  • ABC will result in better identification of
    relevant costs and, therefore, better incremental
    analysis.
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