Week 10 - Lecture note - Relevant information and Differential Analysis
Week 10 - Lecture note - Relevant information and Differential Analysis
Differential Analysis:
The Key to Decision Making
Chapter 14
Learning Objective 1
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Relevant Costs:
1.Cost of Gasoline ($0.100 per mile) – This is a variable
Identifying Relevant Costs
cost based on how much the car is driven.
Automobile Costs (based on 10,000 miles driven per year)
Annual Cost Cost per 2. Maintenance and repair
of Fixed Items Mile
1 Annual straight-line depreciation on car $ 2,800 $ 0.280
2 Cost of gasoline 0.100
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Annual cost of auto insurance and license
Maintenance and repairs
1,380 0.138
0.065
3.Reduction in Resale Value of Car per Mile of Wear
5 Parking fees at school 360 0.036
6 Total average cost $ 0.619 ($0.026 per mile) – This cost increases as the car is
Some Additional Information
used.
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Reduction in resale value of car per mile of wear
Round-tip airfare
$ 0.026
$ 104
4.Round-trip Airfare ($104) – This is relevant if the
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Benefits of relaxing on plane trip
Cost of putting dog in kennel while gone $
????
40
alternative is flying instead of driving.
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Benefit of having car in Kuala Lumpur
Hassle of parking car in Kuala Lumpur
????
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5.Cost of Putting Dog in Kennel While Gone ($40) –
rắc rối khi đỗ xe 13 Per day cost of parking car in Kuala Lumpur $ 25
This cost applies only if flying is chosen.
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6.Per Day Cost of Parking Car in Kuala Lumpur ($25) –
This cost applies if the car is taken on the trip.
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Learning Objective 2
Prepare an analysis
showing whether a
product line or other
business segment should
be dropped or retained.
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Adding/Dropping Segments
One of the most
important decisions
managers make is
whether to add or drop
a business segment.
Ultimately, a decision
to drop an old segment
or add a new one is
going to hinge primarily To assess this impact,
on the impact the it is necessary to
decision will have on carefully analyze
net operating income. the costs.
© 2015 McGraw-Hill Education Garrison, Noreen, Brewer, Cheng & Yuen 18
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Adding/Dropping Segments
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Adding/Dropping Segments
Segment Income Statement
Digital Watches
Sales $ 500,000
Less: variable expenses
Variable manufacturing costs $ 120,000
Variable shipping costs 5,000
Commissions 75,000 200,000
Contribution margin $ 300,000
Less: fixed expenses
General factory overhead $ 60,000
Salary of line manager 90,000
Depreciation of equipment 50,000
Advertising - direct 100,000
Rent - factory space 70,000
General admin. expenses 30,000 400,000
Net operating loss $ (100,000)
© 2015 McGraw-Hill Education Garrison, Noreen, Brewer, Cheng & Yuen 21
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Adding/Dropping Segments
Segment Income Statement
Digital Watches
Sales $ 500,000
An
Less: investigation
variable expenses has revealed that the fixed
Variable manufacturing costs $ 120,000
general factory overhead and
Variable shipping costs
fixed general
5,000
administrative
Commissions expenses will not75,000
be affected200,000
by
dropping the
Contribution digital watch line. The fixed general
margin $ 300,000
Less: fixed expenses
factory overhead and general administrative
General factory overhead $ 60,000
expenses
Salary of lineassigned
manager to this product
90,000would be
reallocated
Depreciation to other product
of equipment lines.
50,000
Advertising - direct 100,000
Rent - factory space 70,000
General admin. expenses 30,000 400,000
Net operating loss $ (100,000)
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Adding/Dropping Segments
Segment Income Statement
Digital Watches
Sales $ 500,000
Less: variable expenses
The equipment used to
Variable manufacturing costsmanufacture
$ 120,000
digital
Variable watches
shipping has no resale5,000
costs
Commissions
value or alternative use. 75,000 200,000
Contribution margin $ 300,000
Less: fixed expenses
General factory overhead $ 60,000
Salary of line manager 90,000
Should Lovell
Depreciation of equipment retain or drop
50,000
Advertising - direct the digital watch
100,000segment?
Rent - factory space 70,000
General admin. expenses 30,000 400,000
Net operating loss $ (100,000)
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Learning Objective 3
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Smoother flow of
parts and materials
Better quality
control
Realize profits
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Direct materials $ 9
Direct labor 5
Variable overhead 1
Depreciation of special equip. 3
Supervisor's salary 2
General factory overhead 10
Unit product cost $ 30
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Opportunity Cost
An opportunity cost is the benefit that is
foregone as a result of pursuing some course
of action.
Opportunity costs are not actual cash outlays
and are not recorded in the formal accounts of
an organization.
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Learning Objective 4
Prepare an analysis
showing whether a special
order should be accepted.
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Special Orders
Jet Corporation. makes a single product whose normal
selling price is $20 per unit.
A foreign distributor offers to purchase 3,000 units for
$10 per unit.
This is a one-time order that would not affect the
company’s regular business.
Annual capacity is 10,000 units, but Jet Corporation is
currently producing and selling only 5,000 units.
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Special Orders
Jet Corporation
Contribution Income Statement
Revenue (5,000 × $20) $ 100,000
Variable costs:
Direct materials $ 20,000
Direct labor 5,000
Manufacturing overhead 10,000$8 variable cost
Marketing costs 5,000
Total variable costs 40,000
Contribution margin 60,000
Fixed costs:
Manufacturing overhead $ 28,000
Marketing costs 20,000
Total fixed costs 48,000
Net operating income $ 12,000
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Special Orders
If Jet accepts the special order, the incremental
revenue will exceed the incremental costs. In other
words, net operating income will increase by $6,000.
This suggests that Jet should accept the order.
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Quick Check
Northern Optical ordinarily sells the X-lens for $50.
The variable production cost is $10, the fixed
production cost is $18 per unit, and the variable
selling cost is $1. A customer has requested a
special order for 10,000 units of the X-lens to be
imprinted with the customer’s logo. This special
order would not involve any selling costs, but
Northern Optical would have to purchase an
imprinting machine for $50,000.
(see the next page)
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Quick Check
What is the rock bottom minimum price below which
Northern Optical should not go in its negotiations
with the customer? In other words, below what
price would Northern Optical actually be losing
money on the sale? There is ample idle capacity to
fulfill the order and the imprinting machine has no
further use after this order.
a. $50
b. $10
c. $15
d. $29
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Learning Objective 5
Determine the most
profitable use of a
constrained resource and
the value of obtaining
more of the constrained
resource.
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The machine or
process that is
limiting overall output
is called the
bottleneck – it is the
constraint.
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Quick Check
How many units of each product can be
processed through Machine A1 in one minute?
Product 1 Product 2
a. 1 unit 0.5 unit
b. 1 unit 2.0 units
c. 2 units 1.0 unit
d. 2 units 0.5 unit
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Quick Check
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Product 1 Product 2
Production and sales (units) 1,300 2,200
Contribution margin per unit $ 24 $ 15
Total contribution margin $ 31,200 $ 33,000
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Quick Check
Colonial Heritage makes reproduction colonial
furniture from select hardwoods.
C hairs Tables
S elling price per unit $80 $400
V ariable cost per unit $30 $200
B oard feet per unit 2 10
M onthly dem and 600 100
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Quick Check
C hairs T ables
Selling price per unit $80 $400
Variable cost per unit $30 $200
Board feet per unit 2 10
M onthly dem and 600 100
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Quick Check
As before, Colonial Heritage’s supplier of hardwood
will only be able to supply 2,000 board feet this
month. Assume the company follows the plan we
have proposed. Up to how much should Colonial
Heritage be willing to pay above the usual price to
obtain more hardwood?
a. $40 per board foot
b. $25 per board foot
c. $20 per board foot
d. Zero
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Quick Check
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Managing Constraints
It is often possible for a manager to increase the capacity of a
bottleneck, which is called relaxing (or elevating) the constraint,
in numerous ways such as:
1. Working overtime on the bottleneck.
2. Subcontracting some of the processing that would be done
at the bottleneck.
3. Investing in additional machines at the bottleneck.
4. Shifting workers from non-bottleneck processes to the
bottleneck.
5. Focusing business process improvement efforts on the
bottleneck.
6. Reducing defective units processed through the bottleneck.
These methods and ideas are all consistent with the Theory
of Constraints, which was introduced in Chapter 1.
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Learning Objective 6
Prepare an analysis
showing whether joint
products should be sold at
the split-off point or
processed further.
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Joint Costs
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Joint Products dàn khoai khai thác lên được nhiều loại
For example,
Oil in the petroleum
refining industry,
a large number
Common of products are
Joint
Input
Production Gasoline extracted from
Process crude oil,
including
gasoline, jet fuel,
Chemicals
home heating oil,
lubricants,
asphalt, and
Split-Off various organic
Point chemicals.
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Joint Products
Joint costs
are incurred
up to the Oil
Separate Final
split-off point Processing Sale
Common
Joint Final
Production Gasoline
Input Sale
Process
Separate Final
Chemicals
Processing
Sale
Split-Off Separate
Point Product
Costs
© 2015 McGraw-Hill Education Garrison, Noreen, Brewer, Cheng & Yuen 76
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End of Chapter 14
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