In a normal costing system, the Work-in-Process Control account is increased (debited) by

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Multiple Choice -Theoretical 1. All of the following would most likely use a job order costing system except: a. a dental practice. b. an auto repair shop. c. a small appliance maker. d. an architectural firm. a. Raw materials, work in process, cost of goods sold, finished goods b. Raw materials, work in process, finished goods, cost of goods sold c. Raw materials, overhead, work in process d. Direct material, finished goods, work in process 2. Which of the following costs is not charged to Work in Process in a normal cost system? a. Actual overhead b. Actual direct materials c. Actual direct labor d. Estimated indirect labor 8. The journal entry to apply overhead to production would include: a. a debit to Manufacturing Overhead Control. b. credits to various accounts such as Cash,  Accumulated Depreciation, and Accounts Payable. c. a credit to Manufacturing Overhead Control. d. a credit to Work W ork in Process. 3. Which of the following product costs would be charged to Work in Process assuming a standard costing system? a. Actual direct material costs b. Actual overhead costs c. Actual direct labor costs d. Applied overhead costs 9. The journal entry to transfer production from the Finishing Department to Finished Goods would include a: a. credit to Finished Goods. b. debit to Cost of Goods G oods Manufactured. c. credit to WIP  – Finishing. d. credit to Cost of Goods Go ods Manufactured. 4. Select the incorrect job order costing system characteristic. a. Costs are accumulated by job. b. A job may consist of multiple units provided all units are similar. c. Costs of different jobs cannot logically be averaged so a unique cost must be determined for each job. d. Jobs are usually produced to distinct customer specifications. 10. M Corporation manufactures a specialty line of  jeans using using a job-order-cost system. system. During May, the following costs were incurred in completing Job M1: direct materials, $13,700; direct labor, $4,800; administrative, $1,400; and selling, $5,600. Overhead was applied at the rate of $25 per machine hour, and Job M1 required 800 machine hours. If Job M1 resulted in 7,000 good jeans, the cost of goods sold per unit would be a. $5.50. b. $6.30. c. $5.70. d. $8.50. 5. Which of the following serves at a subsidiary ledger for the Work in Process account? a. Standard cost card b. Material requisition form c. Job requisition form d. Job order cost sheet 6. Which of the following is not a source document used in job order costing systems? a. Cost of production report b. Employee time sheet c. Job cost sheet d. Material requisition form 7. Select the response that represents the correct flow of costs in a job order costing system. 11. Q Company uses a normal cost system. The following information is from its financial records for the year: Total manufacturing costs, $2,500,000 Cost of goods manufactured, $2,425,000 Applied overhead, 30% of total manufacturing costs Predetermined OH rate, 80% of direct labor cost  Assuming t he company’s work in process inventory at January 1 was 75 percent of its December 31 work in process inventory, what is the carrying value of the company’s work in process inventory at December 31? a. $75,000 b. $100,000 c. $225,000 d. $300,000 12. Which of the following costing systems does not involve computing cost variances? a. Actual costing system b. Normal costing system c. Standard costing system d. All of the above systems involve computing cost variances 13. Select the incorrect statement concerning standard costs and job order costing. a. A standard cost system determines product cost by using predetermined norms in the inventory accounts for prices and/or quantities of cost components. b. Standards can be used in a job order cost system only if a company typically engages in  jobs that produce fairly similar products. c. Under GAAP, standard cost job order systems may not substitute for actual or normal costing systems. d. Standard cost variances can be computed for actual-to-standard differences regardless of whether standards have been established for both quantities and prices or for prices or rates only. 15. Which of the following statements is true concerning job order costing and management decision making? a. Job order costing assists managers in their planning, controlling, decision making and performance evaluations functions. b. Job order costing allows managers to trace costs associated with specific current jobs to better estimate costs of future jobs. c. Job order costing provides a means by which managers can better control the costs associated with their operations. d. All of the above are true statements. 16. Select the incorrect statement regarding the accounting for product losses. a. Normal losses that are anticipated on all jobs are estimated and included in the development of the predetermined OH rate. b. Normal losses that are associated with a particular job are charged to a loss account in the period they are incurred. c. Abnormal losses are charged to a loss account in the period they are incurred. d. The difference between normal and abnormal loss is one of degree and therefore must be determined by management. 16. Cost of goods sold is a component of the income statement. In a merchandising establishement, this refers to purchases adjusted for changes in inventory. In a manufacturing company, what replaces purchases to arrive at cost of goods sold. a. Fixed mfg. overhead. b. WIP c. Finished Goods d. CGM 17. Actual costs are: a. the costs incurred b. budgeted costs c. estimated costs d. forecasted costs 18. Budgeted costs are: a. the costs incurred this year b. the costs incurred last year c. planned or forecasted costs d. competitor’s costs 19. Classifying a cost as either direct or indirect depends upon: a. the behavior of the cost in response to volume changes b. whether the cost is expensed in the period in which it is incurred c. whether the cost can be easily identified with the cost object d. whether an expenditure is avoidable or not in the future 20. All of the following are true EXCEPT that indirect costs: a. may be included in prime costs b. are not easily traced to products or services c. vary with the selection of the cost object d. may be included in manufacturing overhead 1. All of the following are reasons for using predetermined overhead rates in product costing except: a. to overcome the problem of fluctuations in activity levels that have no impact on fixed overhead costs. b. to overcome the problem caused by overhead containing both fixed and variable costs. c. to adjust for variations in actual overhead costs that are unrelated to fluctuations in activity. d. to allow management to determine whether a product, product line, or customer is profitable. 4. Select the incorrect matching of cost and cost level. a. b. Facility level : Equipment maintenance c. Product level : Product development d. Batch level : Setup costs 5. Which costing system assigns costs within multiple cost pools to products using multiple drivers? a. 3. Select the incorrect statement concerning overapplied overhead. a. The overhead control account will have a debit balance. b. The amount of overhead transferred to WIP from the overhead control account exceeded the actual amount of overhead incurred. c. Overapplied overhead must be closed at year-end because a single year’s activity level was used to set the predetermined overhead rate. d. Overapplied overhead may result if the company’s actual utilization of capacity is greater than expected. Activity-based costing b. Variable costing c. Traditional costing d. None of the above 6. The use of activity-based costing normally results in: a. 2. What is the best method for disposing of significant underapplied factory overhead? a. Charge the underapplied amount to cost of goods sold b. Prorate the underapplied amount to cost of goods sold, finished goods, and work in process c. Prorate the underapplied amount to inventory only (work in process and finished goods) d. Charge the underapplied amount to a loss account at the end of the period Unit level : Direct material substantially lower unit costs for low-volume products than is reported by traditional product costing. b. equalizing setup costs for all product lines. c. decreased setup costs being charged to lowvolume products. d. substantially greater unit costs for low-volume products than is reported by traditional product costing. 7. Because of the changes that are occurring in the basic operations of many firms, all of the following represent trends in the way indirect costs are allocated except: a. treating direct labor as an indirect manufacturing cost in an automated factory. b. using throughput time as an application base to increase awareness of the costs associated with lengthened throughput time. c. preferring plant-wide application rates that are applied to machine hours rather than incurring the cost of detailed allocations. d. using several machine cost pools to measure product costs on the basis of time in a machine center 8. Activity-Based Costing is appropriate for which of the following organizations? a. One that produces and sells a wide variety of products. b. One that produces and sells a single complex product. c. One that provides a single service to customers. d. All of the above 9. A number of barriers must be overcome to implement activity-based costing systems successfully. Select the barrier that is not matched up properly with its type. a. Fear of change Individual barrier b. Regulatory agencies Environmental barrier c. Corporate culture issues Organizational barrier B) customers C) departments D) All of these answers are correct. 2) Actual costs are: A) the costs incurred B) budgeted costs C) estimated costs D) forecasted costs 3) The general term used to identify both the tracing and the allocation of accumulated costs to a cost object is: A) cost accumulation B) cost assignment C) cost tracing D) conversion costing d. All of the above barriers are properly classified 10. The document that summarizes the expected quantities and costs needed to produce a unit is called a a. bill of materials. b. total cost of ownership document. c. operations flow document. d. standard cost card. 11. Which of the following items is not included in annual inventory carrying costs? a. Inventory storage cost b. Inventory purchase cost c. Insurance on inventory d. Property taxes on inventory 5) The collection of accounting data in some organized way is: A) cost accumulation B) cost assignment C) cost tracing D) conversion costing 6) Budgeted costs are: A) the costs incurred this year B) the costs incurred last year C) planned or forecasted costs D) competitor's costs 12. When the level of safety stock is increased: a. lead time will increase. b. carrying costs will decrease. c. the frequency of stock outs will decrease. d. lead time will decrease. 7) Cost assignment : A) is always arbitrary B) is includes tracing and allocating C) is the same as cost accumulation D) is finding the difference between budgeted and actual costs Answer: B 11) Cost accounting: A) provides information on the efficiency of factory labor B) provides information on the cost of servicing commercial customers C) provides information on the performance of an operating division D) All of these answers are correct. 8) A cost system determines the cost of a cost object  by: A) accumulating and then assigning costs B) accumulating costs C) assigning and then accumulating costs D) assigning costs 1) Cost objects include: A) products 2) Which of the following statements about the direct/indirect cost classification is NOT true? A) Indirect costs are always traced. B) Indirect costs are always allocated. C) The design of operations affects the direct/indirect classification. D) The direct/indirect classification depends on the choice of cost object. 3) Cost tracing is: A) the assignment of direct costs to the chosen cost object B) a function of cost allocation C) the process of tracking both direct and indirect costs associated with a cost object D) the process of determining the actual cost of the cost object 4) Cost allocation is: A) the process of tracking both direct and indirect costs associated with a cost object B) the process of determining the actual cost of the cost object C) the assignment of indirect costs to the chosen cost object D) a function of cost tracing 5) The determination of a cost as either direct or indirect depends upon the: A) accounting system B) allocation system C) cost tracing system D) cost object chosen 6) Classifying a cost as either direct or indirect depends upon: A) the behavior of the cost in response to volume changes B) whether the cost is expensed in the period in which it is incurred C) whether the cost can be easily identified with the cost object D) whether an expenditure is avoidable or not in the future 10) Indirect manufacturing costs: A) can be traced to the product that created the costs B) can be easily identified with the cost object C) generally include the cost of material and the cost of labor D) may include both variable and fixed costs 11) All of the following are true EXCEPT that indirect costs: A) may be included in prime costs B) are not easily traced to products or services C) vary with the selection of the cost object D) may be included in manufacturing overhead A band of normal activity or volume in which specific cost-volume relationships are maintained is referred to as the: A) average range B) cost-allocation range C) cost driver range D) relevant range 1) A unit cost is computed by: A) multiplying total cost by the number of units B) dividing total cost by the number of units C) dividing variable cost by the number of units D) adding variable cost to fixed cost 12) For a manufacturing company, direct material costs may be included in: A) direct materials inventory only B) merchandise inventory only C) both work-in-process inventory and finished goods inventory D) direct materials inventory, work-in-process inventory, and finished goods inventory accounts 13) For a manufacturing company, direct labor costs may be included in: A) direct materials inventory only B) merchandise inventory only C) both work-in-process inventory and finished goods inventory D) direct materials inventory, work-in-process inventory, and finished goods inventory accounts 14) For a manufacturing company, indirect manufacturing costs may be included in: A) direct materials inventory only B) merchandise inventory only C) both work-in-process inventory and finished goods inventory D) direct materials inventory, work-in-process inventory, and finished goods inventory accounts 18) Manufacturing overhead costs are also referred to as: A) indirect manufacturing costs B) prime costs C) period costs D) direct material 20) Direct materials inventory would normally include: A) direct materials in stock and awaiting use in the manufacturing process B) goods partially worked on but not yet fully completed C) goods fully completed but not yet sold D) products in their original form intended to be sold without changing their basic form 21) Work-in-process inventory would normally include: A) direct materials in stock and awaiting use in the manufacturing process B) goods partially worked on but not yet fully completed C) goods fully completed but not yet sold D) products in their original form intended to be sold without changing their basic form 22) Finished goods inventory would normally include: A) direct materials in stock and awaiting use in the manufacturing process B) goods partially worked on but not yet fully completed C) goods fully completed but not yet sold D) products in their original form intended to be sold without changing their basic form 24) ________ are the acquisition costs of all materials that eventually become part of the cost object and can  be traced to the cost object. A) Direct manufacturing labor costs B) Direct material costs C) Indirect manufacturing costs D) Manufacturing overhead costs 25) ________ include the compensation of all manufacturing labor that can be traced to the cost object. A) Direct manufacturing labor costs B) Indirect manufacturing costs C) Direct material costs D) Manufacturing overhead costs 26) ________ are all manufacturing costs that are related to the cost object but CANNOT be traced to that cost object. A) Direct material costs B) Period costs C) Indirect manufacturing costs D) Direct manufacturing labor costs 42) Prime costs include: A) direct materials and direct manufacturing labor costs B) direct manufacturing labor and manufacturing overhead costs C) direct materials and manufacturing overhead costs D) only direct materials 43) Conversion costs include: A) direct materials and direct manufacturing labor costs B) direct manufacturing labor and manufacturing overhead costs C) direct materials and manufacturing overhead costs D) only direct materials 44) Total manufacturing costs equal: A) direct materials + prime costs B) direct materials + conversion costs C) direct manufacturing labor costs + prime costs D) direct manufacturing labor costs + conversion costs 48) Which of the following formulas determine cost of goods sold in a merchandising entity? A) Beginning inventory + Purchases + Ending inventory = Cost of goods sold B) Beginning inventory + Purchases - Ending inventory = Costs of goods sold C) Beginning inventory - Purchases + Ending inventory = Cost of goods sold D) Beginning inventory - Ending inventory - Purchases = Cost of goods sold 49) Which of the following formulas determine cost of goods sold in a manufacturing entity? A) Beginning work-in-process inventory + Cost of goods manufactured - Ending work-in-process inventory = Cost of goods sold B) Beginning work-in-process inventory + Cost of goods manufactured + Ending work-in-process inventory = Cost of goods sold C) Cost of goods manufactured - Beginning finished goods inventory - Ending finished goods inventory = Cost of goods sold D) Cost of goods manufactured + Beginning finished goods inventory - Ending finished goods inventory = Cost of goods sold 3) A ________ is a grouping of individual indirect cost items. A) cost allocation base B) cost assignment C) cost pool D) job-costing system 5) Direct costs A) are anything for which a measurement of costs is desired. B) are costs related to a particular cost object that can  be traced to that cost object in an economically feasible (cost-effective) way C) focus specifically on the costing needs of the CFO D) provide all information for management decision needs 7) Assigning direct costs to a cost object is called: A) cost allocation B) cost assignment C) cost pooling D) cost tracing 8) ________ is the process of distributing indirect costs to products. A) Cost allocation B) Job cost recording C) Cost pooling D) Cost tracing 9) A ________ links an indirect cost to a cost object. A) cost-allocation base B) cost pool C) cost assignment D) cost tracing 10) Which of the following includes both traced direct costs and allocated indirect costs? A) cost tracing B) cost pools C) cost assignments D) cost allocations 11) The cost allocation base A) is a grouping of individual indirect cost items. B) are costs related to a particular cost object that cannot be traced to that cost object in an economically feasible way. C) is anything for which a measurement of costs is desired. D) is a systematic way to link an indirect cost or group of indirect costs to cost objects. 1) ________ costing is used by a business to price homogeneous products. A) Actual B) Job C) Process D) Traditional 2) Process costing: A) allocates all product costs, including materials and labor B) results in different costs for different units  produced C) is commonly used by general contractors who construct custom-built homes D) is used exclusively in manufacturing 3) ________ costing is used by a business to price unique products for different jobs. A) Actual B) Job C) Process D) Traditional 4) Job costing: A) can only be used in manufacturing B) records the flow of costs for each customer C) allocates an equal amount of cost to each unit made during a time period D) is commonly used when each unit of output is identical 5) Job-costing may only be used by: A) service companies B) merchandising companies C) manufacturing companies D) All of these may use job-costing 6) Many large companies which have multiple  production methods and processes have hybrid costing systems that are: A) job-costing B) actual costing C) process costing D) a mix of job-costing and process costing 3) Actual costing is a costing system that traces direct costs to a cost object by A) using the budgeted direct cost rates times the  budgeted quantities of direct-cost inputs. B) using the actual direct costs rates times the  budgeted quantities of the direct-cost inputs. C) using the actual direct cost rates times the actual quantities of the direct-cost inputs. D) using the budgeted direct cost rates times the actual quantities of the direct cost inputs. 2) For a given job the direct costs associated with the  job are: A) actual overhead B) direct material C) direct manufacturing labor D) Both b and c are correct. 3) Place the following steps in the order suggested by the seven steps used to assign costs to individual jobs: A. Identify indirect costs B. Compute the total cost of the job C. Select cost-allocation bases D. Compute the indirect cost rate A) ACDB B) CADB C) BACD D) DCAB 4) The basic source document for direct manufacturing labor is the: A) job-cost record B) materials-requisition record C) labor-time record D) All of these answers are correct. 5) Problems with accurate costing occur when: A) incorrect job numbers are recorded on source documents B) bar coding is used to record materials used on the  job C) a computer screen requests an employee number  before that employee is able to work on information related to a specific job D) All of these answers are correct 6) The budgeted indirect-cost rate for each cost pool is computed as A) budgeted annual indirect costs divided by budgeted annual quantity of cost allocation base. B) budgeted annual quantity of cost allocation base divided by budgeted annual indirect costs. C) actual annual indirect costs divided by budgeted annual quantity of cost allocation base. D) budgeted annual indirect costs divided by budgeted actual quantity of cost allocation base. 11) In a job-costing system, a manufacturing firm typically uses an indirect-cost rate to estimate the  ________ allocated to a job. A) direct materials B) direct labor C) manufacturing overhead costs D) total costs 12) A job-cost sheet details the: A) direct materials purchased and paid B) direct labor costs incurred C) indirect labor costs incurred D) actual indirect overhead costs incurred 13) A job-cost record uses information from: A) a materials requisition record to record raw material purchases from suppliers B) a receiving report that indicates the type and quantity of each item received in an order from a supplier C) a labor-time card to record an employee's wage rate and hours spent on a particular job D) All of these answers are correct. 14) Costs that are subject to short-run fluctuations for given jobs are: A) actual costs B) budgeted direct costs C) budgeted indirect costs D) normal costs 15) Annual cost rates are preferred over actual cost rates for all of the following reasons EXCEPT: A) budgeted costs allow managers to have cost information on a timely basis B) budgeted costs may be subject to short-run fluctuations C) budgeted indirect-cost rates are known prior to the inception of a new job D) budgeted-cost rates can be used to allocate direct or indirect costs 1) The budgeted indirect-cost rate is calculated: A) at the beginning of the year B) during the year C) at the end of each quarter D) at the end of the year 2) The difference between actual costing and normal costing is: A) normal costing uses actual quantities of direct costs B) actual costing uses actual quantities of direct-costs C) normal costing uses budgeted indirect-costs D) actual costing uses actual quantities of cost allocation bases 3) Which of the following statements about normal costing is true? A) Direct costs and indirect costs are traced using an actual rate. B) Direct costs and indirect costs are traced using  budgeted rates. C) Direct costs are traced using a budgeted rate, and indirect costs are allocated using an actual rate. D) Direct costs are traced using an actual rate, and indirect costs are allocated using a budgeted rate. 4) When using a normal costing system, manufacturing overhead is allocated using the  ________ manufacturing overhead rate and the  ________ quantity of the allocation base. A) budgeted; actual B) budgeted; budgeted C) actual; budgeted D) actual; actual 5) Which of the following statements about actual costing and normal costing is true? A) Manufacturing costs of a job are available earlier under actual costing. B) Corrective actions can be implemented sooner under normal costing. C) Manufacturing costs are available earlier under normal costing. D) Both B and C are correct. 1) In a normal costing system, the Manufacturing Overhead Control account: A) is increased by allocated manufacturing overhead B) is credited with amounts transferred to Work-inProcess C) is decreased by allocated manufacturing overhead D) is debited with actual overhead costs 2) The Materials Control account is increased when: A) direct materials are purchased B) indirect materials are purchased C) materials are requisitioned for production D) Both A and B are correct. 3) All of the following are true of the Work-in-Process Control account EXCEPT that: A) it tracks all direct material purchases B) the balance equals the sum of amounts from all in process individual job-cost records C) it is an asset account D) it tracks job costs from beginning through completion 5) All of the following increase (are debited to) the Work-in-Process Control account EXCEPT: A) actual plant insurance costs B) direct materials C) allocated manufacturing overhead costs D) direct manufacturing labor 6) When direct materials are requisitioned the  ________ account is increased. A) Manufacturing Overhead Control B) Work-in-Process Control C) Materials Control D) Accounts Payable Control 7) Payment of the factory rent increases the: A) Work-in-Process Control account B) Manufacturing Overhead Control account C) Both A and B are correct. D) None of these answers are correct. 9) Actual (rather than allocated) manufacturing overhead costs are included in the: A) Work-in-Process Control account B) Finished Goods Control account C) Manufacturing Overhead Control account D) Both A and B are correct. 10) The ending balance in the Work-in-Process Control account represents the costs of all jobs that: A) have not been completed B) have been completed but not sold C) have been completed and sold to customers D) are reported on the income statement 11) For externally reported inventory costs, the Workin-Process Control account is increased (debited) by: A) marketing costs B) allocated plant utility costs C) the purchase costs of direct and indirect materials D) customer-service costs 14) All of the following items are debited to Work-inProcess EXCEPT: A) allocated manufacturing overhead B) completed goods being transferred out of the plant C) direct labor consumed D) direct materials consumed 17) Which of the following statements regarding manufacturing overhead allocation is FALSE? A) It includes all manufacturing costs that cannot be directly traced to a product or service. B) The costs can be grouped in either a single indirectcost pool or in multiple indirect-cost pools. C) Total costs are unknown at the end of the accounting period. D) Allocated amounts are debited to Work-in-Process. 18) When a job is complete: A) Work-in-Process Control is debited B) Finished Goods Control is credited C) the cost of the job is transferred to Manufacturing Overhead Control D) actual direct materials, actual direct manufacturing labor, and allocated manufacturing overhead will comprise the total cost of the job 19) During an accounting period, job costs are computed on an ongoing basis by the use of: A) actual allocation rates B) budgeted indirect-cost rates C) overallocated indirect-cost rates D) underallocated indirect-cost rates 20) The advantage of using normal costing instead of actual costing is: A) indirect costs are assigned at the end of the year when they are known B) the job cost is more accurate under normal costing C) indirect costs are assigned to a job on a timely  basis D) normal costing provides a higher gross profit margin 1) The spreading of underallocated or overallocated overhead among ending work-in-process, finished goods, and cost of goods sold is called: A) the adjusted allocation rate approach B) the proration approach C) the write-off of cost of goods sold approach D) None of these answers are correct 2) The method that restates all overhead entries in the general ledger and subsidiary ledgers using actual cost rates rather than budgeted cost rates is called A) the adjusted allocation rate approach B) the proration approach C) the write-off of cost of goods sold approach D) None of these answers are correct. 3) When the allocated amount of indirect costs are less than the actual amount, indirect costs have bee n: A) overabsorbed B) underapplied C) underallocated D) Both underapplied and underallocated are correct. 4) One reason indirect costs may be overapplied is  because: A) the actual allocation base quantity exceeds the  budgeted quantity B) budgeted indirect costs exceed actual indirect costs C) requisitioned direct materials exceed budgeted material costs D) Both A and B are correct. 5) The ________ approach adjusts individual job-cost records to account for underallocated or overallocated overhead. A) adjusted allocation-rate B) proration C) write-off to cost of goods sold D) Both A and B are correct. 7) The approach often used when dealing with small amounts of underallocated or overallocated overhead is the ________ approach. A) adjusted allocation-rate B) proration C) write-off to cost of goods sold D) Both A and B are correct. 8) The ________ approach carries the underallocated or overallocated amounts to overhead accounts in the following year. A) adjusted allocation-rate B) proration C) write-off to cost of goods sold D) None of these answers are correct. 9) A company would use multiple cost-allocation  bases: A) if managers believed the benefits exceeded the additional costs of that costing system B) because there is more than one way to allocate overhead C) because this is a simpler approach than using one cost allocation base D) if managers believe that using multiple costallocation bases is the only acceptable method 12) When using a normal costing system, year-end accounting records will show that indirect costs are: A) applied improperly B) underallocated C) overbudgeted D) overallocated 1) If products are different, then for costing purposes: A) an ABC costing system will yield more accurate cost numbers B) a simple costing system should be used C) a single indirect-cost rate should be used D) none of the above 2) Overcosting a particular product may result in: A) loss of market share B) pricing the product too low C) operating efficiencies D) understating total product costs 3) Undercosting of a product is most likely to result from: A) misallocating direct labor costs B) underpricing the product C) overcosting another product D) overstating total product costs 4) A company produces three products; if one product is overcosted then: A) one product is undercosted B) one or two products are undercosted C) two products are undercosted D) no products are undercosted 5) 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 these answers are correct. 7) The use of a single indirect-cost rate is more likely to: A) undercost high-volume simple products B) undercost low-volume complex products C) undercost lower-priced products D) Both B and C are correct. 8) Uniformly assigning the costs of resources to cost objects when those resources are actually used in a nonuniform way is called: A) overcosting B) undercosting C) peanut-butter costing D) department costing 1) ABC systems create: A) one large cost pool B) homogenous activity-related cost pools C) activity-cost pools with a broad focus D) activity-cost pools containing many direct costs 3) 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 4) A single indirect-cost rate may distort product costs  because: A) there is an assumption that all support activities affect all products B) it recognizes specific activities that are required to  produce a product C) costs are not consistently recorded D) it fails to measure the correct amount of t otal costs 5) Traditional cost systems distort product costs  because: A) they do not know how to identify the appropriate units B) competitive pricing is ignored C) they emphasize financial accounting requirements D) they apply average support costs to each unit of  product 6) Which of the following statements about activity based costing is NOT true? A) Activity-based costing is useful for allocating marketing and distribution costs. B) Activity-based costing is more likely to result in major differences from traditional costing systems if the firm manufactures only one product rather than multiple products. C) Activity-based costing seeks to distinguish batchlevel, product-sustaining, and facility-sustaining costs, especially when they are not proportionate to one another. D) Activity-based costing differs from traditional costing systems in that products are not crosssubsidized. 7) Activity-based costing (ABC) can eliminate cost distortions because ABC: A) develops cost drivers that have a cause-and-effect relationship with the activities performed B) establishes multiple cost pools C) eliminates product variations D) recognizes interactions between different departments in assigning support costs 16) Activity-based costing is most likely to yield  benefits for companies with all of the following characteristics EXCEPT: A) numerous products that consume different amounts of resources B) operations that remain fairly consistent C) a highly competitive environment, where cost control is critical D) accessible accounting and information systems expertise to maintain the system 17) Each of the following statements is true EXCEPT: A) traditional product costing systems seek to assign all manufacturing costs to products B) ABC product costing systems seek to assign all manufacturing costs to products C) traditional product costing systems are more refined than an ABC system D) cost distortions occur when a mismatch (incorrect association) occurs between the way indirect costs are incurred and the basis for their assignment to individual products 1) The most likely example of an output unit-level cost is: A) general administrative costs B) paying suppliers for orders received C) engineering costs D) machine depreciation 2) The most likely example of a batch-level cost is: A) utility costs B) machine repairs C) product-designing costs D) setup costs 3) Design costs are an example of: A) unit-level costs B) batch-level costs C) product-sustaining costs D) facility-sustaining costs 4) ________ costs support the organization as a whole. A) Unit-level B) Batch-level C) Product-sustaining D) Facility-sustaining 5) It is usually difficult to find good cause-and-effect relationships between ________ and a cost allocation  base. A) unit-level costs B) batch-level costs C) product-sustaining costs D) facility-sustaining costs 6) To set realistic selling prices: A) all costs should be allocated to products B) costs should only be allocated when there is a strong cause-and-effect relationship C) only unit-level costs and batch-level costs should  be allocated D) only unit-level costs should be allocated 1) Put the following ABC implementation steps in order: A Compute the allocation rates. B Compute the total cost of the products. C Identify the products that are the cost objects. D Select the cost allocation bases. A) DACB B) DBCA C) BADC D) CDAB 2) ABC systems identify ________ costs used by  products. A) all B) short-term fixed C) short-term variable D) long-term fixed 4) When designing a costing system, it is easiest to: A) calculate total costs first and then per-unit cost B) calculate per-unit costs first and then total costs C) calculate long-term costs first and then short-term costs D) calculate short-term costs first and then long-term costs 8) Unit-level cost drivers are most appropriate as an overhead assignment base when: A) several complex products are manufactured B) only one product is manufactured C) direct labor costs are low D) factories produce a varied mix of products 6) A manufacturing firm produces multiple families of  products requiring various combinations of different types of parts. Of the following, the most appropriate cost driver for assigning materials handling costs to the various products is: A) direct labor hours B) number of units produced C) number of parts used D) number of suppliers involved 9) With traditional costing systems, products manufactured in small batches and in small annual volumes may be ________ because batch-related and  product-sustaining costs are assigned using unitrelated drivers. A) overcosted B) fairly costed C) undercosted D) ignored 2) It only makes sense to implement an ABC system when: A) ABC provides information to make better decisions B) its benefits exceed implementation costs C) ABC traces more costs as direct costs D) there is a strong cause-and-effect relationship  between costs in the cost pools and their costallocation bases 3) Which of the following is a sign that an ABC system may be useful? A) There are small amounts of indirect costs. B) Products make diverse demands on resources  because of differences in volume, process steps, batch size, or complexity. C) Products a company is less suited to produce and sell show small profits. D) Operations staff agrees with accountants about the costs of manufacturing and marketing products and services. 4) Smaller cost distortions occur when the traditional systems' single indirect-cost rate and the activity-costdriver rates: A) use the same total costs for computations B) are similar in proportion to each other C) are more different than alike D) use the same cost driver units 3) One department indirect-cost rate is sufficient when: A) activities relate to more than one level of the cost hierarchy B) product costs are significantly cross-subsidized C) the same allocation base is appropriate for all departmental activities D) it is a service department 16) Using activity-cost rates rather than department indirect-cost rates to allocate costs results in different  product costs when: A) a single activity accounts for a sizable portion of department costs B) there are several homogeneous cost pools C) different activities have the same cost-allocation  base D) different products use different resources in the same proportion 5) Activity-based costing systems provide better  product costs when they: A) employ more activity-cost drivers B) employ fewer activity-cost drivers C) identify and cost more indirect cost differences among products D) always yield more accurate product costs than traditional systems 17) A key reason for using an ABC system rather than a department-costing system is because ABC assigns indirect costs: A) using broader averages B) more simply than a department-costing system C) in a less costly manner D) to reflect differences required by different  processes as well as customers 3) Activity-based-costing information: A) should be used when services place similar demands on resources B) usually results in peanut-butter costing C) will yield inaccurate cost numbers when products are similar D) may assist in improving product design and efficiency 2) Unacceptable units of production that are discarded or sold for reduced prices are referred to as: A) reworked units B) spoilage C) scrap D) defective units 2) The unique feature of an ABC system is the emphasis on: A) costing individual jobs B) department indirect-cost rates C) multiple-cost pools D) individual activities 3) Unacceptable units of production that are subsequently repaired and sold as acceptable finished goods are: A) reworked units B) spoilage C) scrap D) defective units 5) Material left over when making a product is referred to as: A) reworked units B) spoilage C) scrap D) defective units 3) Costs of normal spoilage are usually accounted for as: A) part of the cost of goods sold B) part of the cost of goods manufactured C) a separate line item in the income statement D) an asset in the balance sheet 4) Costs of abnormal spoilage are usually accounted for as: A) part of the cost of goods sold B) part of the cost of goods manufactured C) a separate line item in the income statement D) an asset in the balance sheet 5) The loss from abnormal spoilage account would appear: A) on the balance sheet B) as a detailed item in the retained earnings schedule of the balance sheet C) as a detailed item on the income statement D) Either A or B is correct. 6) Normal spoilage should be computed using as the  base the: A) total units completed B) total good units completed C) total actual units started into production D) None of these answers is correct. 7) Companies that attempt to achieve zero defects in the manufacturing process treat spoilage as: A) scrap B) reworked units C) abnormal spoilage D) normal spoilage 9) NOT counting spoiled units in the equivalent-unit calculation results in: A) lower cost per good unit. B) higher cost per good unit C) better management information D) Both A and C are correct. 10) Recognition of spoiled units when computing output units: A) highlights the costs of normal spoilage to management B) distorts the accounting data C) focuses management's attention on reducing spoilage D) Both A and C are correct. 3) A difference between job costing and process costing is that: A) job-costing systems usually do not distinguish  between normal spoilage attributable to all jobs and normal spoilage attributable to a specific job B) job-costing systems usually distinguish between normal spoilage attributable to a specific job and spoilage common to all jobs C) process costing normally does not distinguish  between normal spoilage attributable to a specific job and spoilage common to all jobs D) Both B and C are correct. 3) In accounting for scrap, which one of the following statements is FALSE? A) Normal scrap is accounted for separately from abnormal scrap B) In accounting for scrap, there is no distinction  between the scrap attributable to a specific job and scrap common to all jobs C) Initial entries to scrap accounting records are most often made in dollar terms D) All of these answers are correct.

Which of the following are debited to the work in process control account?

(5) Work-in-Process Control Account - This account is debited with the total cost of production, which includes—direct materials, direct employee, direct expenses, production overhead recovered, and is credited with the amount of finished goods completed and transferred.

What is a normal job costing system?

What is normal costing? Normal costing is a standard cost system that accounts for materials, labor, and overhead when determining the cost of producing products.

How does a job costing system differ from a process costing system?

A process costing system is used by companies that produce similar or identical units of product in batches employing a consistent process. A job costing system is used by companies that produce unique products or jobs.

What is the difference between actual costing systems and normal costing systems?

Both actual and normal costing methods use actual amounts for direct material and labor costs. The difference is in how the overhead is allocated to each item produced. Actual costing uses actual mounts for the direct materials and labor, while normal costing just uses the actual amounts.