Module 5 – Activity-based Costing
Revision materials
TRUE/FALSE
1.   If a company undercosts one of its products, then it will overcost at least one of its
     other products.
2.   Indirect labor and distribution costs would most likely be in the same activity-cost pool.
3.   An activity-based costing system is necessary for costing services that are similar.
4.   Availability of reliable data and measures should be considered when choosing a cost-
     allocation base.
5.   For service organizations, activity-based cost systems may be used to clarify appropriate cost
     assignments.
6.   Information derived from an ABC analysis might be used to eliminate nonvalue-added
     activities.
7.   Costing systems with multiple cost pools are considered ABC systems.
8.   Simply because activity-based costing systems employ more activity-cost drivers they
     provide more accurate product costs than traditional systems.
MULTIPLE CHOICE
1.   Misleading cost numbers are MOST likely the result of misallocating
     a.   direct material costs.
     b. direct manufacturing labor costs.
     c.   indirect costs.
     d. all of the above.
2.   ABC systems
     a.  highlight the different levels of activities.
     b. limit cost drivers to units of output.
     c.  allocate costs based on the overall level of activity.
     d. generally undercost complex products.
3.   Product lines that produce different variations (models, styles, or colors) often require
     specialized manufacturing activities that translate into
     a.   fewer indirect costs for each product line.
     b.   decisions to drop product variations.
     c.   a greater number of direct manufacturing labor cost allocation rates.
     d.   greater overhead costs for each product line.
THE FOLLOWING INFORMATION APPLIES TO QUESTIONS 4 THROUGH 8.
Merriman Company provides the following ABC costing information:
      Activities                              Total Costs           Activity-cost drivers
      Account inquiry hours                     $400,000                    10,000 hours
      Account billing lines                     $280,000                  4,000,000 lines
      Account verification accounts             $150,000                 40,000 accounts
      Correspondence letters                    $ 50,000                     4,000 letters
        Total costs                             $880,000
     The above activities are used by Departments A and B as follows:
                                           Department A                   Department B
      Account inquiry hours                   2,000 hours                    4,000 hours
      Account billing lines                 400,000 lines                  200,000 lines
      Account verification accounts       10,000 accounts                 8,000 accounts
      Correspondence letters                  1,000 letters                  1,600 letters
4.   How much of the account inquiry cost will be assigned to Department A?
     a.  $80,000
     b. $400,000
     c.  $160,000
     d. none of the above
5.   How much of the account billing cost will be assigned to Department B?
     a.  $28,000
     b. $280,000
     c.  $14,000
     d. none of the above
6.   How much of account verification costs will be assigned to Department A?
     a.  $30,000
     b. $37,500
     c.  $150,000.
     d. $10,000
7.    How much of the total costs will be assigned to Department A?
      a.  $158,000
      b. $80,000
      c.  $224,000
      d. $880,000
8.    How much of the total costs will be assigned to Department B?
      a.  $158,000
      b. $80,000
      c.  $224,000
      d. $880,000
THE FOLLOWING INFORMATION APPLIES TO QUESTIONS 9 AND 10.
Nichols Inc. manufactures remote controls. Currently the company uses a plant-wide rate for
allocating manufacturing overhead. The plant manager believes it is time to refine the method
of cost allocation and has the accounting department identify the primary production
activities and their cost drivers:
       Activities                            Cost driver               Allocation Rate
       Material handling                 Number of parts                     $2 per part
       Assembly                              Labor hours                   $20 per hour
       Inspection               Time at inspection station               $3 per minute
The current traditional cost method allocates overhead based on direct manufacturing labor
hours using a rate of $200 per labor hour.
9.    What are the indirect manufacturing costs per remote control assuming the traditional
      method is used and a batch of 500 remote controls are produced? The batch requires
      1,000 parts, 10 direct manufacturing labor hours, and 15 minutes of inspection time.
      a.   $2,000.00 per remote control
      b. $0.25 per remote control
      c.   $2.00 per remote control
      d. $4.00 per remote control
10.   What are the indirect manufacturing costs per remote control assuming an activity-
      based-costing method is used and a batch of 50 remote controls are produced? The
      batch requires 100 parts, 6 direct manufacturing labor hours, and 2.5 minutes of
      inspection time.
      a.   $4.00 per remote control
      b. $6.55 per remote control
      c.   $24.00 per remote control
      d. $327.50 per remote control
                                           Solutions
True/False
1.     Answer:    True
2.     Answer: False
       Indirect labor and distribution costs would not be in the same activity-cost pool because
       their cost drivers are very dissimilar. A cost driver of indirect labor would include direct
       labor hours, while a cost driver of distribution costs would include cubic feet of cargo
       moved.
3.     Answer: False
       An activity-based costing system is only necessary when services are dissimilar and
       different amounts of resources are used by each service.
4.     Answer:    True
5.     Answer:    True
6.     Answer:    True
7.     Answer: False
       The uniqueness of ABC systems is not simply multiple cost pools, but that the cost
       pools each relate to different activities.
8.     Answer: False
       When there are more activity-cost drivers, there is also more room for error, which may
       not result in more accurate products costs.
MCQs
     1.    C
     2.    A
     3.    D
     4.    A
          ($400,000 / 10,000) x 2,000 = $80,000
    5.     C
           ($280,000 / 4,000,000) x 200,000 = $14,000
    6.     B
           ($150,000 / 40,000) x 10,000 = $37,500
    7.    A
      ($400,000 / 10,000)          x 2,000         = $80,000
      ($280,000 / 4,000,000)       x 400,000       = $28,000
      ($150,000 / 40,000)          x 10,000        = $37,500
      ($50,000 / 4,000)            x 1,000         = $12,500
                                                    $158,000
    8.    C
      ($400,000 / 10,000)          x 4,000         = $160,000
      ($280,000 / 4,000,000)       x 200,000       = $ 14,000
      ($150,000 / 40,000)          x 8,000         = $ 30,000
      ($50,000 / 4,000)            x 1,600         = $ 20,000
                                                     $224,000
    9.     D
      10 hours x $200 = $2,000 per batch / 500 units per batch = $4.00 per unit
    10.    B
($2 x 100) + ($20 x 6) + ($3 x 2.5) = $327.50 per batch / 50 units per batch = $6.55 per unit