Decision-Making Process: Student - Feedback@sti - Edu
Decision-Making Process: Student - Feedback@sti - Edu
Decision-Making Process: Student - Feedback@sti - Edu
Decision-Making Process
Making decisions is an important management function. However, management’s decision-making process
does not always follow the same pattern because decisions vary significantly in their scope, urgency, and
importance. It is possible, though, to identify some steps that management frequently uses in the process.
5. Make decisions
Once the decision model is formulated and the pertinent data are collected, the appropriate manager
makes a decision. In this step, the manager compares the alternatives by looking at the advantages and
disadvantages. After implementing a decision, the results of the decision are evaluated to improve future
decisions.
ILLUSTRATION:
Marvel Company produces a ball bearing used in bantam cars. Each ball bearing sells for P45, and the
company sells approximately 500,000 ball bearings each year. Unit cost data for 201A are given below:
Direct material P12
Direct labor 10
Fixed manufacturing overhead 8
Variable manufacturing overhead 4
Variable distribution costs 4
Fixed distribution costs 2
Marvel has received an offer from a potential customer to purchase 50,000 ball bearings at a price of P37
each. If the offer is accepted, variable distribution costs will increase by P2 per ball bearing for shipping
and insurance. The company has excess capacity to produce the offer.
1. What is the relevant unit cost to this special order?
2. Should Marvel accept the offer? By how much will the profit increase or decrease if the order is
accepted?
SOLUTION:
To make the decision, consider the relevant costs.
1. Relevant cost per unit
Variable manufacturing costs:
Direct materials P12.00
Direct labor 10.00
Variable manufacturing overhead 4.00 P26.00
Given the excess capacity of Marvel, the offer should be accepted because the company will have an
increase in profit of P250,000 even if there is an additional P2 variable distribution cost. The relevant cost
per unit is P32.00, but the selling price is P37.00.
B. Make or Buy
When a manufacturer assembles parts in producing a finished product, management must decide
whether to make or buy the components. The decision to buy parts or services is often called
outsourcing.
ILLUSTRATION:
Ancient One Company has 18,000 hours of excess capacity. It needs 20,000 units of a components used
in its product lines. Each unit is estimated to take one-half machine hour for production. The following
information about the unit cost is available:
If Ancient One buys the components rather than producing them, it will save 60% of fixed manufacturing
overhead per unit.
1. What are the relevant costs per unit to make and to buy, respectively?
2. Should Ancient One make or buy the components?
SOLUTION:
In making the decisions, the manager must consider the cost to make and the cost to buy the component.
1. Relevant costs
Cost to make Cost to buy Difference
2. Ancient One Company is better off making the components because it will save P32,000 if the
company will make the components rather than buying it from an outside supplier.
Decision rule:
If the direct contribution margin* is positive – Retain or continue
If the direct contribution margin is negative – Eliminate
*Direct contribution margin is computed after deducting the avoidable fixed costs to the total contribution margin.
The following information is available for Titan Company. Based on this information, the management is
considering eliminating product line C. They assumed that by operating only product lines A and B, they
would have higher profits. It was also determined that if product line C is discontinued, 60% of the fixed
overhead can be avoided and 50% of the fixed selling and administrative expenses can also be avoided.
Notice that the net loss to continue the product C is P40,000. If product C is eliminated, the net loss to
be absorbed by the entire company will increase to P58,000 or a net differential cost of P18,000.
Therefore, the manager should decide that continuing the product line is better than eliminating it.
Decision rule:
If demand > shutdown point – Continue
If demand < shutdown point – Shutdown
If demand = shutdown point – Either decision could give the same loss, it depends on the decision
of the manager.
ILLUSTRATION:
Hydra Company is in the fish canning industry. Its regular monthly production from January to October
averages 200 tons of tuna fish that produces 2,000,000 cans of canned tuna, which may be sold for P10
per can in the market. Its annual fixed costs amount to P36,000,000, which are evenly allocated in a
twelve- month period.
During November and December, the supply of tuna fish goes down to an average of 40 tons or 400,000
cans of canned tuna monthly. Management is considering shutting down operations during November and
December on the belief that the company will be saved from greater losses during these months. If
management decides to shut down operations, additional costs of P100,000 monthly will be incurred for
security and insurance of the plant. The company will also spend an additional P120,000 in restarting the
operations in January.
The following data are gathered from the records of Hydra Company:
Direct materials P6.20
Direct labors 0.55
Variable overhead 0.25
Total variable cost per can P6.00
Variable selling and administrative expenses averages P0.10 per can. It is assumed that the market can
absorb all canned tuna produced. Shutdown operations will reduce fixed costs during November and
December by 40%.
1. Compute the shutdown costs.
2. Compute shutdown savings.
3. Determine the shutdown point.
4. Evaluate the result of continued operations and compare with the shutdown of operations.
SOLUTION:
1. Shutdown costs
Unavoidable fixed costs during the shutdown period
[(P36 million/12) x 2 months x 60%] P3,600,000
Additional costs incurred (100,000 x 2 months) 200,000
Restarting costs 120,000
Total shutdown costs P3,920,000
2. Shutdown savings
Total normal fixed costs if to operate
[(P36 million/12) x 2 months] P6,000,000
Total shutdown costs P3,920,000
Shutdown savings P2,080,000
3. Shutdown point
𝑆ℎ𝑢𝑡𝑑𝑜𝑤𝑛 𝑠𝑎𝑣𝑖𝑛𝑔𝑠
𝑆ℎ𝑢𝑡𝑑𝑜𝑤𝑛 𝑝𝑜𝑖𝑛𝑡 =
𝐶𝑜𝑛𝑡𝑟𝑖𝑏𝑢𝑡𝑖𝑜𝑛 𝑚𝑎𝑟𝑔𝑖𝑛 𝑝𝑒𝑟 𝑢𝑛𝑖𝑡
𝑃2,080,000
=
[10.00 − (𝑃6.00 + 𝑃0.10)]
= 533,333 𝑐𝑎𝑛𝑠
4. The company should continue operations because they will incur an additional loss of P1,040,000
if the operations are shut down. Since the demand is 800,000, which is greater than the shutdown
point, it is more practical for the company to continue the operations even if it will still incur a loss.
Result of continued operations
Sales (800,000 x P10) P8,000,000
Variable Costs:
Cost of Goods Sold (800,000 x P6.00) P4,800,000
Selling and Admin. (800,000 x P0.10) 80,000 4,880,000
Contribution Margin (CM) P3,120,000
Fixed Costs P6,000,000
Net Loss from Continued Operations (P2,880,000)
Total Shutdown Costs 3,920,000
Advantage of Continued Operations P1,040,000
ILLUSTRATION:
Wakanda Company uses a joint process to produce products A, B, and C. The joint production costs for
201A were P400,000 and were allocated using relative sales value at the split-off point method.
Each product may be sold at its split-off point or processed further. Additional processing costs are entirely
variable.
Additional
Sales Value at Processing Final Sales
Product Split-off Costs Value
A P200,000 P80,000 400,000
B 400,000 100,000 480,000
C 80,000 120,000 160,000
Total P680,000 P300,000 P1,040,000
1. To maximize profit, which product/s should be sold at a split-off point and be processed further,
respectively?
2. If the alternative were to sell at the split-off point or to process further all the products, which
alternative would be recommended?
SOLUTION:
1. To maximize profit, only A should be processed further while product B and C should be sold at
split-off.
Product A Product B Product C
Final Sales Value P400,000 P480,000 P160,000
Sales Value at Split-off 200,000 400,000 80,000
Increase in Sales Value 200,000 80,000 80,000
Additional Costs 80,000 100,000 120,000
Differential Income P120,000 (P20,000) (P40,000)
2. To process further is a better alternative because the total differential income for all the products
is P60,000.
ILLUSTRATION:
Sharp Rocket Company manufactures and sells three (3) product lines with contribution margin per unit and
the required production time as follows:
CM per Machine hour per
unit unit of product
Product A P9.00 3 hours
Product B 12.00 2 hours
Product C 6.00 2 hours
The company has a capacity of 40,000 machine hours a month. The market can absorb P2,000 units of
product A, 12,000 units of B, and 15,000 units of C.
1. What is the most profitable product line based on the contribution margin per machine hour?
2. Compute the maximum contribution margin for the month that will meet the conditions stated.
SOLUTION:
1. Product B is the most profitable product based on the contribution margin per machine hour. After the
products were ranked, the company must first produce the products with the highest CM per machine
hour.
CM per Machine CM per
Ranking
unit hour machine hour
Product A P9.00 3 hours P3.00 2nd
Product B 12.00 2 hours P6.00 1st
Product C 6.00 2 hours P2.00 3rd
2. Maximum contribution margin
Units of Machine hours (MH CM per
Product x units of product) machine hour Total CM
Product B 12,000 24,000 P6.00 P144,000
Product A 2,000 6,000 P3.00 18,000
Product C 5,000 *10,000 P2.00 20,000
19,000 40,000 P182,000
*40,000 – 24,000 – 6,000 = 10,000
Since there are limited resources to produce all the products, the company must produce the more
profitable products. In this case, all of the 12,000 units of product B and 2,000 units of product A will
be produced. Consequently, only 10,000 machine hours were left to produce product C. In this case,
only 5,000 units were produced, not 15,000.
G. Retain or Replace Equipment
Management often has to decide whether to continue using an asset or to replace it. Sometimes,
decisions regarding whether to replace equipment are clouded by behavioral decision-making errors. For
example, a manager spent P90,000 repairing a machine a month ago, and that same machine breaks
down again today. The manager might be inclined to think that, because the company recently spent a
large amount of money to repair the machine, the machine should now be repaired rather than replaced.
However, the amount spent in the past to repair the machine is irrelevant to the current decision because
it is a sunk cost.
Similarly, suppose a manager spent P1 million to purchase a new machine. Six months later, a new and
significantly more efficient machine comes on the market. The manager might be inclined to think that the
company should not buy the new machine because of the recent purchase. The manager might fear that
buying a different machine so quickly might call into question the value of the previous decision. Again, the
fact that the company recently bought a new machine is not relevant. Instead, the manager should use
incremental or differential cost analysis to determine whether the savings generated by the efficiencies of
the new machine would justify its purchase.
ILLUSTRATION:
Pym Technologies, Inc. is considering replacing its old machine with a book value of P75,000 and still has
a remaining useful life of five (5) years. The old machine will be replaced with a new one that will cost
P250,000, with five-year useful life and no salvage value.
The annual operating costs of the old machine amount to P90,000, which can be reduced by 60% if a new
machine is acquired. The old machine would require reconditioning that will cost P10,000 if not replaced,
which will be incurred before it starts operations. The old machine will have no disposal value after five (5)
years but can be disposed now at P20,000. Ignoring the time value of money and income taxes,
determine the differential cost.
SOLUTION:
Cost of the new machine P250,000
Add: Operating costs (P90,000 x 40% x 5) 180,000
Less: Disposal value of old machine (20,000)
Reconditioning cost of old machine (10,000)
Total relevant cost to replace P400,000
Total relevant cost to retain (P90,000 x 5) 450,000
Differential cost P50,000
The book value of the old machine is a sunk cost and is not relevant to the decision. Reconditioning costs
of the old machine is an avoidable cost and is relevant to the decision if the decision is to replace the old
machine.
Decision: The manager should decide to replace the old with new equipment since the total relevant cost
to replace is lower than the total relevant costs if the old machine is retained.
References:
Garrison, R. H., Noreen, E. W., & Brewer, P. C. (2018). Managerial Accounting. New York: McGraw-Hill Education.
Hilton, R. W., & Platt, D. E. (2017). Managerial Accounting: Creating Value in a Dynamic Business Environment. New York: McGraw-Hill Education.
Payongayong, L. S. (2016). Management Services Part 2. Manila: Polytechnic University of the Philippines.
Weygandt, J. J., Kimmel, P. D., Kieso, D. E., & Aly, I. M. (2018). Managerial Accounting: Tools for Business Decision-Making. Canada: John Wiley & Sons, Inc.