Management Accounting
Assessment Task 2 – Individual Assignment
Due date: Week 11 (17th May, Sunday 11pm)
Weighting: 25%
Length and/or format: Maximum 1,500 words (excluding calculations)
How to submit: A copy of the assignment must be uploaded onto LEO through Turnitin system.
Please save your file as: “student name ACCT204 Assessment 2.
Instructions for this task
• All assignments must be handed in on the due date. • Late assignments will be penalised. • Assignments submitted after the due will incur a 10% penalty of the maximum marks available for that assignment. Assignments received more than three calendar days after the due date will not be allocated a mark. Due dates will be strictly adhered to and extensions will be granted only in cases of extreme circumstances. A student may apply to the NLiC for an extension to the submission date of an assignment. Requests for extension must be made on the appropriate form on or before the due date for submission, and must demonstrate exceptional circumstances which warrant the granting of an extension.
• Assignments must: ➢ Be typed using 1.5 lines spacing left justified. ➢ Use Ariel or Times New Roman font size 12. ➢ Display a 2.5 cm margin on all sides. ➢ Include page number on each page.
PART 1 -CASE STUDY
Creamy Creations Pty Ltd manufactures a wide range of delicious cakes and pastries. At the annual Christmas party, the company’s Chairman, Robert Cole, treated his employees to a nostalgic review of the firm’s history. He told them:
Twenty years ago we had only three product lines—pies, finger buns and lamingtons. We were flat out producing large volumes of each product, using very simple machinery and a lot of hard work.
Oh My! How Things Have Changed! We still make and sell a lot of pies and lamingtons, but we also produce a wide range of low-volume lines, such as Danish pastries, doughnuts and vanilla slices. I hear you sighing, and no wonder; these low-volume products are a pain in the neck. They are complex to produce and their short production runs involve a lot of extra machinery setups and material handling. But the accountants tell me that these speciality lines have wonderful profit margins, so we must not complain.
Robert then outlined the dramatic changes that had occurred within the business over the past 20 years. In the factory he had seen the introduction of computer-controlled mixing machines and ovens that replaced a lot of the direct labour operations, and an increased emphasis on quality and delivery performance. Indeed, right across the business, more and more effort had been placed on keeping the customer happy.
However, his speech cast a gloomy shadow across the Christmas festivities when he warned:
Despite all this progress, the company seems to be struggling. Our profits are declining, and if things don’t improve over the next few months, this may be our last Christmas together. To survive we must all work very hard. We must focus on increasing sales, particularly of our high-margin speciality products.
The company’s management accountant, Pamela Lou, had become concerned about the conventional product costing system at Creamy Creations. The manufacturing people were also sure that the costing system was distorting product costs.
Required:
PART 2-CALCULATION
Earnest Cabinet Company Ltd designs and builds upscale kitchen cabinets for luxury homes. Many of the kitchen cabinet and counter arrangements are customer made, but occasionally the entity does mass production on order. Its budgeted manufacturing overhead costs for the year 2020 are as follows:
Overhead cost pools
Budgeted overhead
Purchasing
$ 114 400
Handling materials
$ 164 320
Production (cutting, milling, finishing)
$ 400 000
Setting up machines
$ 174 480
Inspecting
$ 184 800
Inventory control (raw materials and finished goods)
$ 252 000
Power
$ 360 000
Total budgeted overhead costs
$1 650 000
For the last 3 years, Earnest Cabinet Company Ltd has been charging overhead to products on the basis of machine hours. For the year 2020, 100 000 machine hours are budgeted.
Ron Adams, Managing Director of Earnest Cabinet, recently directed his accountant, John Clarke, to implement the activity-based costing system he has repeatedly proposed. At Ron’s request, John and the production foreman identify the following cost drivers and their usage for the previously budgeted overhead cost pools:
Overhead cost pools
Activity cost drivers
Total drivers Purchasing Number of orders 650 Handling materials Number of moves 8 000 Production (cutting, milling, finishing) Direct labour hours 100 000 Setting up machines Number of set-ups 1 200 Inspecting Number of inspections 6 000 Inventory control (raw materials and finished goods) Number of components 36 000 Power Square metres occupied 90 000
Larry Smith, sales manager, has received an order for 50 kitchen cabinet arrangements from Metro Builders Pty Limited. At Larry’s request, John prepares cost estimates for producing components for 50 cabinet arrangements so Larry can submit a contract price per kitchen arrangement to Metro Builders Pty Limited. He accumulates the following data for the production of 50 kitchen cabinet arrangements.
Direct materials $180 000 Direct labour $200 000 Machine hours 15 000 Direct labour hours 12 000 Number of purchase orders 50 Number of material moves 800 Number of machine set-ups 100 Number of inspections 450 Number of components (cabinets and accessories) 3 000 Number of square metres occupied 8 000
Required