Variable Costing
Variable Costing
Variable Costing
1. Which of the following statements is true for a firm that uses variable costing?
a. The cost of a unit of product changes because of changes in number of units manufactured.
b. Profits fluctuate with sales.
c. An idle facility variation is calculated.
d. Product costs include variable administrative costs.
3. Which method of inventory costing treats direct manufacturing costs and manufacturing overhead costs,
both variable and fixed, as inventoriable costs?
a. Direct costing.
b. Variable costing
c. Absorption costing.
d. Conversion costing.
4. Which one of the following statements is correct regarding absorption costing and variable costing?
a. Overhead costs are treated in the same manner under both costing methods.
b. If finished goods inventory increases, absorption costing results in higher income.
c. Variable in a manufacturing costs are lower under variable costing.
d. Gross margins are the same under both costing methods.
5. The costing method that is properly classified for both external and internal reporting purposes is
External Internal
Reporting Reporting
a. Activity-based costing No Yes
b. Job-order costing No Yes
c. Variable costing No Yes
d. Process costing No No
6. Absorption costing and variable costing are two different methods of assigning costs to units produced of the
cost item listed below, identify the one that not correctly accounted for as a product cost.
Part of Product
Cost under
Absorption Variable
Cost Cost
a. Manufacturing supplies Yes Yes
b. Insurance on factory Yes No
c. Direct labor cost Yes Yes
d. Packaging and
shipping costs Yes Yes
7. Jansen, Inc. pays Bonuses to its managers based on operating income. The company uses absorption
costing, and overhead is applied on the basis of direct labor hours. To increase bonuses, Jansen's managers
may do all of the following except
a. Produce those products requiring the most direct labor.
b. Defer expenses such as maintenance to a future period.
c. Increase production schedules independent of customer demands.
d. Decrease production of those items requiring the most direct labor.
Questions 8 and 9 are based on the following information. A manufacturer at the end of its fiscal year recorded the
data below:
Prime cost P800,000
Variable manufacturing overhead 100,000
Fixed manufacturing overhead 160,000
Variable selling and other expenses 80,000
Fixed selling and other expenses 40,000
8. If the manufacturer uses variable costing, the inventoriable costs for the fiscal year are
a. P800,000
b. P900,000
c. P980,000
d. P1,060,000
Questions 10 and 11 are based on the following information. Osawa, Inc. planned and actually manufactured 200,000
units of its single product, its first year of operations. Variable manufacturing costs were P30 per unit of product. Planned
and actual fixed manufacturing costs were P600,000, and selling and administrative costs totaled P400,000. Osawa
sold 120,000 units of product at a selling price of P40 per unit.
11. Osawa’s operating income for the year using variable costing is
a. P200,000
b. P440,000
c. P800,000
d. P600,000
Questions 12 and 13 are based on the following information. The following is taken from Valenz Company's records for
the current fiscal year ended November 30:
12. If Valenz Company uses variable costing, the inventoriable costs for the fiscal year are
a. P400,000
b. P450,000
c. P490,000
d. P530,000
Questions 14 through 20 are based on the following information. Valyn Corporation employs an absorption costing
system for internal reporting purposes; however, the company is considering using variable costing. Data regarding
Valyn's planned and actual operations for .the calendar year are presented below.
Planned Actual
Activity Activity
Beginning finished goods
Inventory in units 35,000 35,000
Sales in units 140,000 125,000
Production in units 140,000 130,000
The planned per-unit cost figures shown in the next schedule were based on the estimated production and sale of
140,000 units for the year. Valyn uses a predetermined manufacturing overhead rate for applying manufacturing
overhead to its product; thus, a combined manufacturing overhead rate of P9.00 per unit was employed for absorption
costing purposes. Any over- or underapplied manufacturing overhead is closed to the cost of goods sold account at the
end of the reporting year.
14. The value of Valyn Corporation’s actual ending finished goods inventory on the absorption costing basis was
a. P 900,000
b. P 1,200,000
c. P1,220,000
d. P1,350,000
15. The value of Valyn Corporation’s actual ending finished goods inventory on the variable costing basis was
a. P1,400,000
b. P1,125,000
c. P1,000,000
d. P 750,000
17. Valyn Corporation's total fixed costs expensed this year on the absorption costing basis were
a. P2,095,000
b. P2,120,000
c. P2,055,000
d. P2,030,000
18. Refer to the information preceding question 14. Valyn Corporation's actual manufacturing contribution
margin for the year calculated on the variable costing basis was
a. P4,375,000
b. P4,935,000
c. P4,910,000
d. P5,625,000
19. Refer to the information preceding question 14. The total variable cost expensed currently by Valyn
Corporation on the variable costing basis was
a. P4,375,000
b. P4,500,000
c. P4,325,000
d. P4,550,000
20. Refer to the information preceding question 14. The difference between Valyn Corporation’s operating
income calculated on the absorption costing basis and calculated on the variable costing basis was
a. P65,000
b. P25,000
c. P40,000
d. P90,000
21. The principal disadvantage of using the physical quantity method of allocating joint costs is that
a. Costs assigned to inventories may have no relationship to value.
b. Physical quantities may be difficult to measure.
c. Additional processing costs affect the allocation base.
d. Joint costs, by definition, should not be separated on a unit basis.
22. Lankip Company produces two main products and by-product out of a joint process. The ratio of
output quantities to input quantities of direct material used in the joint process remains
consistent from month to month. Lankip has employed the physical- volume method to allocate
joint production costs to the two main products. The net realizable value of the by-product is used
to reduce the joint production costs before the joint costs are allocated to the main products.
Data regarding Lankip's operations for the en rent month are presented in the chart below. During
the month, Lankip incurred joint production costs of $2,520,000. The main products are not
marketable at the split-off point and, thus, have to be processed further.
First Second
Main Main
Product Product By-product
Monthly output in pounds 90,000 150,000 60,000
Selling price per pound $30 $14 $2
Separable process costs $540,000 $660,000
The amount of joint production cost that Lankip would allocate to the Second Main Product by
using the physical-volume method to allocate joint production costs would be
a. $1,200,000
b. $1,260,000
c. $1,500,000
d. $1,575,000
Questions 23 through 25 are based on the following information. Travis Petroleum is a small company
that acquires crude oil and manufactures it into three intermediate products, differing only in grade.
The products are Grade One, Grade Two and Grade Three. No beginning inventories of finished goods
or work-in-process existed on November 1. The production costs for November were as follows
(assume separable costs were negligible):
23. The portion of the joint production costs assigned to Grade Two based upon physical output is
(rounded to the nearest thousand dollars)
a. $3,273,000
b. $3,375,000
c. $1,636,000
d. $3,512,000
24. The portion of the joint production costs assigned to Grade One based upon the relative sales
values of output is (rounded to the nearest thousand dollars)
a. $3,512,000
b. $3,293,000
c. $1,636,000
d. $4,091,000
25. Based on the relative sales values of output, cost of the ending inventory of Grade Two is
a. $3,512,000
b. $1,756,000
c. $1,636,000
d. $3,376,000
Your word is the lamp to guide my feet. It is the light to my path. Psalms 119:105