Managerial Accounting II Flashcards

1
Q

Consists of the organization’s operating and financial plans for a specified period.

A

Master budget

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2
Q

The master budget consists of:

A

1) Operating plans

2) Financial plans

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3
Q

The emphasis is on obtaining and using current resources.

A

Operating budget

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4
Q

Operating budget contains the:

A

1) Sales budget,
2) Production budget,
3) Direct materials budget, etc.

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5
Q

The emphasis is on obtaining the funds needed to purchase operating assets.

A

Financial budget

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6
Q

Financial budget contains the:

A

1) Capital budget,
2) Cash budget,
3) Pro forma statement of financial position, etc.

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7
Q

Is the starting point for the cycle that produces the annual profit plan (the master budget). It is based on the sales forecast.

A

Sales budget

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8
Q

Follows directly from the sales budget. It is concerned with units only.

A

Production budget

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9
Q

Is concerned with both units and input prices.

A

Direct materials budget

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10
Q

Depends on wage rates, amounts and types of production, numbers and skill levels of employees to be hired.

A

Direct labor budget

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11
Q

Reflects the nature of overhead as a mixed cost.

A

Manufacturing overhead budget

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12
Q

Combines the projections for the three major inputs (materials, labor, and overhead). The result directly affects the pro forma income statement.

A

Cost of goods sold budget

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13
Q

Is the largest cost for a manufacturer.

A

Cost of goods sold

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14
Q

Consists of the individual budgets for R&D, design, marketing, distribution, customer service, and administrative costs.

A

Nonmanufacturing budget

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15
Q

The variable and fixed portions of selling and administrative cost must be treated.

A

Separately

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16
Q

Is used to decide whether the budgeted activities will result in an acceptable level of income.

A

Pro forma income statement

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17
Q

Types of budget methodologies are:

A

1) Project budget,
2) Activity-based budgeting (ABB),
3) Zero-based budgeting (ZBB),
4) Continuous budget

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18
Q

Consists of all the costs expected to attach to a particular project.

A

Project budget

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19
Q

Applies activity-based costing principles to budgeting. It focuses on the numerous activities necessary to produce and market goods and services and requires analysis of cost drivers.

A

Activity-based budgeting (ABB)

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20
Q

Is a budget and planning process in which each manager must justify his or her department’s entire budget every budget cycle.

A

Zero-based budgeting (ZBB)

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21
Q

Is revised on a regular basis. Typically, such a budget is continuously extended for an additional month or quarter in accordance with new data as the current month or quarter ends.

A

Continuous budget

22
Q

Is a tool for understanding the interaction of revenues with fixed and variable costs.

A

Cost-volume-profit (CVP) analysis [also called breakeven analysis]

23
Q

Is the level of output at which all fixed costs and cumulative variable costs have been covered.

A

Breakeven point

24
Q

= Unit selling price - Unit variable cost

A

Unit contribution margin (UCM)

25
Q

= Fixed costs divided by UCM

A

Breakeven point in units

26
Q

= Fixed costs divided by Contribution margin ratio

A

Breakeven point in dollars

27
Q

Is the amount by which sales can decline before losses occur

A

Margin of safety

28
Q

= Total sales in dollars - Breakeven point in dollars

A

Margin of safety in dollars

29
Q

= Margin of safety (in dollars) divided by Total sales (in dollars)

A

Margin of safety (%)

30
Q

By treating target income as an additional fixed cost, CVP analysis can be used to calculate

A

Target unit volume

31
Q

= (Fixed costs divided by Target operating income) divided by UCM

A

Target unit volume

32
Q

= (Fixed costs divided by Target operating income) divided CMR

A

Target sales in dollars

33
Q

Operating income can be substituted with net income using the following formula:

A

Net income = Operating income x (1 - Tax rate)

34
Q

In decision making, an organization must focus only

A

Relevant revenues and costs

35
Q

To be relevant, the revenues and costs must:

A

1) Be made in the future,
2) Differ among the possible alternative courses of action, and
3) Be avoidable

36
Q

Terminates an operation, product or product line, business segment, branch, or major customer.

A

Disinvestment decisions

37
Q

In general, the firm should disinvest if.

A

The marginal cost of a project exceeds the marginal revenue.

38
Q

When a manufacturer has excess production capacity,

A

There is no opportunity cost involved when accepting a special order.

39
Q

When a manufacturer has excess production capacity: The company should accept the order if

A

The minimum price for the product is equal to the variable costs.

40
Q

When a manufacturer lacks excess production capacity,

A

The differential (marginal or incremental) costs of accepting the order must be considered

41
Q

The entity should use available resources as efficiently as possible before

A

Outsourcing

42
Q

In determining whether to sell a product at the split-off point or process the item further at additional cost, the joint cost of the product is

A

Irrelevant because it is a sunk cost

43
Q

The primary distinction between centralized and decentralized organizations is

A

The degree of freedom of decision making by managers at many levels

44
Q

A well-designed responsibility accounting system establishes responsibility centers. Their purposes are to:

A

1) Encourage managerial effort to attain organizational objectives,
2) Motivate managers to make decisions consistent with those objectives, and
3) Provide a basis for managerial compensation

45
Q

Responsibility centers are classified as:

A

1) Cost centers,
2) Revenue centers,
3) Profit centers, and
4) Investment centers.

46
Q

Are charged by one segment of an organization for goods and services it provides to another segment of the same organization.

A

Transfer prices

47
Q

Is used by profit and investment centers (a cost center’s costs are allocated to producing departments).

A

Transfer pricing

48
Q

There are three basic methods for determining transfer prices.

A

1) Cost plus pricing
2) Market pricing
3) Negotiated pricing

49
Q

Set price at the selling segment’s full cost of production plus reasonable markup.

A

Cost plus pricing

50
Q

Uses the price the selling segment could obtain on the open market.

A

Market pricing

51
Q

Gives the segments the freedom to bargain among themselves to agree on a price.

A

Negotiated pricing

52
Q

The minimum price that a seller is willing to accept is calculated as follows:

A

Minimum transfer price = Incremental cost to date divided by Opportunity cost of selling internally