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Answers to Questions CMA Part 1

Answers to Questions
1 b – Current liabilities are those liabilities that will be settled within one year or during the operating cycle
if it is longer than one year. Long-term debt that matures within one year and will be retired through the
use of current assets is a current liability.
2 d – A statement of financial position (balance sheet) cannot provide a basis for determining profitability
and assessing past performance for a specific period. An income statement is required for that.
3 a – The income statement reports the results of operations for a period of time.
4 d – Comprehensive income includes the results of all transactions except for those that are carried out
with owners, such as investments by owners and the sale of new shares and distribution of dividends. It
includes all changes in equity (net assets, or total assets less total liabilities) of an entity during a period
from transactions and other events and circumstances other than those resulting from investments by
owners and distributions to owners.
5 d – Dividends paid to company shareholders are shown on the statement of cash flows as cash flows
from financing activities.
6 d – The correct order of presentation in the statement of cash flows is: (1) cash flows from operating
activities, (2) cash flows from investing activities, and (3) cash flows from financing activities. That is the
order of presentation whether the direct or the indirect method is being used to report net cash flow from
operating activities.
7 c – Net cash flow from operating activities is:
Net income $ 920,000
Plus: Depreciation expense 110,000
Plus: Increase in accounts payable 45,000
Minus: Increase in accounts receivable (73,000)
Plus: Increase in deferred income tax liability 16,000
Net cash provided by operating activities $1,018,000
8 a – The direct method of calculating net cash provided by operating activities presents the major classes
of operating cash receipts such as receipts from customers less the major classes of operating cash dis-
bursements such as cash paid for merchandise. This presentation is different from the indirect method of
presentation because the indirect method begins with net income and adjusts net income to (1) include net
changes in operating cash that do not appear on the income statement and (2) to remove noncash items
that are included in the income statement.
9 b – The indirect method of calculating and reporting a company’s net cash flow from operating activities
on its statement of cash flows is the method most commonly used.
10 d – The cash received from the sale of the stock was $150,000, and that is the amount that should be
shown for the transaction in the cash flows from investing activities section of James’ statement of cash
flows.
11 d – The transaction should be disclosed in the statement of cash flows as a noncash financing activity
and a noncash investing activity. When real estate is purchased with borrowed funds, the borrower/buyer
signs the mortgage documents and the payment for the real estate is sent by the lender directly to the
seller of the real estate. The cash is never recorded in the borrower’s accounts. Thus, the company acquired
land, an investing activity, without any cash payment; and it became liable for a mortgage, a financing
activity, without receiving any cash. Since the company did not pay or receive any cash, the two activities
will not be included in the line items on the statement of cash flows. However, they must be disclosed in
the statement of cash flows as noncash financing and investing activities.
12 c – Cash provided by operating activities is:
Net income $ 456,900
+ Depreciation 45,600
+ Decrease in accounts receivable 11,560
− Decrease in accounts payable (2,155)
− Increase in inventory (7,620)
Net cash provided by operating activities $504,285

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CMA Part 1 Answers to Questions

13 a – Net cash flow from operating activities is:


Net income $ 2,000,000
Minus: Increase in accounts receivable (300,000)
Plus: Decrease in inventory 100,000
Plus: Increase in accounts payable 200,000
Plus: Depreciation expense 400,000
Minus: Gain on the sale of available-for-sale debt securities (700,000)
Net cash provided by operating activities $1,700,000
14 c – Cash and cash equivalents include all cash items and short-term investments with a maturity of 3
months or less when acquired. In this question the cash in the checking account ($50,000) is cash, the
balance in the money market account ($100,000) is a cash equivalent, and the Treasury bond purchased
on November 15, 20X0 with a maturity date of January 31, 20X1 ($300,000) is also a cash equivalent, for
a total of $450,000. The Treasury bill purchased November 1, 20X0 with a maturity date of February 28,
20X1 is a short-term investment, but it is not a cash equivalent, because when it was purchased by Senger,
it was scheduled to mature in four months. Cash equivalents are defined as very short-term, highly liquid
investments that mature in three months or less from the date acquired by the company.
15 d – The Treasury bond with a maturity date of January 31, 20X1 was a highly liquid investment with a
maturity of three months or less when it was purchased on November 15, 20X0, and therefore, it is a cash
equivalent. The purchase (and sale) of a cash equivalent is not reflected on the statement of cash flows as
either a cash inflow or a cash outflow. However, its balance will be included in the ending balance of cash,
cash equivalents, and restricted cash on the statement of cash flows.
16 d – All of the securities except treasury bonds are examples of cash equivalents. Treasury bonds are
long-term U.S. government securities, so unless one was purchased less than three months before its
maturity date, a treasury bond does not qualify as a cash equivalent.
17 b – In order to determine the credit loss expense for the period using the percentage of receivables
method, the first thing to do is calculate the required ending balance in the allowance account. Using the
aging schedule for the calculation of the ending balance in the allowance account requires making four
calculations, one for each of the different “ages” of receivables. By multiplying the amount in each category
by the percentage estimated to be expected credit losses and summing the results, the required ending
balance in the allowance account is calculated as follows: ($730,000 × 0.01) + ($40,000 × 0.06) +
($18,000 × 0.09) + ($72,000 × 0.25) = $29,320. $29,320 is the amount that should be in the allowance
account at the end of the year as a credit balance. Since the account presently has a debit balance of
$14,000, a credit of $43,320 ($29,320 + $14,000) will be needed in order to change the balance from a
debit balance of $14,000 to a credit balance of $29,320. The corresponding debit will be to credit loss
expense.
18 d – Writing off an account when the allowance method is used has no effect on either the income
statement or on current assets. The journal entry to write off the account is a credit to accounts receivable
and a debit to the allowance account, so the net effect on net accounts receivable and on total current
assets is zero. Furthermore, the writeoff does not affect any income statement account at all. An income
statement account (credit loss expense) is debited when the allowance is booked, not when an account is
written off.
19 a, Percentage of Sales method: Ending balance in the allowance account ($1,550), credit loss
expense $1,800. Credit loss expense is calculated as $60,000 credit sales × 0.03 = $1,800. The ending
balance in the allowance account after the credit loss expense for the year is recorded is calculated as
($750) credit balance + 1,000 written off + ($1,800) credit loss expense = ($1,550) credit balance.
b, Percentage of Receivables method: Ending balance in the allowance account ($840), credit
loss expense $1,090. Ending accounts receivable before the credit loss expense for the year is recorded
is $14,000, calculated as follows: $10,000 beginning A/R balance + $60,000 credit sales − $55,000 collec-
tions on credit sales − $1,000 written off = $14,000 ending A/R balance.
Since 6% of ending accounts receivable are deemed credit losses, the ending balance in the allowance
account needs to be $14,000 × 0.06, which equals ($840), a credit balance. The balance in the allowance
account before the credit loss expense for the year is recorded is ($750) credit balance + $1,000 written
off = $250, a debit balance. The balance in the allowance account needs to be a credit balance of ($840).
Therefore, the credit to the allowance account needs to be a credit of $250 + $840, or $1,090. The credit
loss expense is the other side of the entry, or a debit to credit loss expense of $1,090.
Using the allowance for credit losses on receivables T-account to calculate both the required ending balance
in the allowance account (and the ending balance after recording the credit loss expense) and credit loss
expense:

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Answers to Questions CMA Part 1

Allowance for Credit Losses - Percentage of Receivables (credits in parentheses)

(1) Beginning balance: (750)


(2) Amount actually written off as credit losses for (3) Collection of previously written-off credit
the year: 1,000 losses: 0

(4) Amount to be charged as credit loss expense


for the period (residual figure): (750) + 1,000
= ending debit balance of 250 in allowance
account before adjustment for credit loss ex-
pense. To change a debit balance of 250 to a
credit balance of (840), a credit is needed in
the amount of (1,090).
(5) Ending balance calculated using ending A/R:
Ending A/R (calculated above) 14,000 × 0.06
= (840)

20 a – A lot of unnecessary information is given in this problem. Davis Corporation uses the percentage of
sales method to determine credit loss expense. Therefore, the entry to record credit loss expense is simply
the percentage of current sales determined to be appropriate for credit loss expense, and that is 3%. Credit
sales during the year totaled $10,000,000, and 3% of $10,000,000 is $300,000.
21 a – When the last-in, first-out inventory cost flow assumption is being used, the most recently-pur-
chased inventory items will be assumed to be the first ones sold. Thus, the most recently incurred costs
will be allocated to cost of goods sold while the earliest costs are allocated to ending inventory.
22 c – In a period of rising prices, the last-in, first-out cost flow assumption usually provides the best
matching of expenses against revenues because the cost allocated to sold units is the most recently incurred
cost for each item of inventory.
23 c – If more inventory is purchased at the end of the year when prices are rising and the last-in, first-
out inventory cost flow assumption is being used, the cost of the sales that take place at year-end will be
increased because the most recently purchased inventory items will have the highest cost, and those are
the items assumed to have been sold when LIFO is being used. The increase in cost of sales will result in a
decrease in net income.
24 b – In periods of rising costs, the last-in, first-out cost flow assumption will result in higher cost of sales
because the cost of the most recently purchased inventory items, at the current higher price, will be used
as the cost of the goods sold.
25 b – The first-in, first-out method will yield the same ending inventory value and cost of goods sold
whether a perpetual or a periodic system is used because under FIFO, the oldest unit is the unit sold.
Regardless of whether the company determines the oldest unit at the end of the period or after each sale,
the oldest unit is always the oldest unit.
26 d – Net income next year will be understated because net income this year will be overstated. Income
this year will be overstated because cost of goods sold this year will be understated.
The formula for cost of goods sold is:
Beginning inventory
+ Purchases
= Cost of goods available for sale
− Ending inventory
= Cost of goods sold
If ending inventory is overstated at the end of this year, cost of goods sold will be understated for this year
and this year’s net income will be overstated. Because ending inventory is overstated at the end of this
year, beginning inventory for next year will also be overstated. As a result, cost of goods sold will be
overstated next year, and so net income next year will be understated. However, retained earnings will not
be understated next year because the error is a self-correcting error.

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CMA Part 1 Answers to Questions

27 b – Because of the way cost of goods sold is calculated (see answer to previous question), if ending
inventory is overstated, cost of goods sold will be understated. If cost of goods sold is understated, net
income will be overstated.
28 $0 and $1,000 – To determine whether a fixed asset has been impaired, compare the book value with
the undiscounted sum of expected future cash flows from the asset. In question a) the future cash flows of
$5,000 are greater than the book value of the asset ($4,500), so the asset is not impaired and no impair-
ment loss needs to be recognized. In question b), however, the asset is impaired since the future cash
flows of $3,000 are less than the $4,500 book value. In this case the asset needs to be written down from
its book value ($4,500) to its fair value ($3,500), for a $1,000 impairment loss.
29 d – The assurance warranty expense is the total value of the sales multiplied by the estimated future
assurance warranty costs: $3,000,000 × 4% = $120,000.
30 b – Deferred tax liability represents the accumulated difference between the income tax expense re-
ported on the firm’s books and the income tax actually paid.
31 c – On the declaration date of January 31, Reese will record a gain on the 1,000 shares of Alpha stock
of $25 per share, or $25,000, increasing the carrying value of the asset by the same amount. Also on
January 31, Reese will record a debit to retained earnings for the fair value of the stock to be distributed
($100 per share × 1,000 shares, or $100,000) and a credit for the same amount to property dividends
payable. Thus, the amount charged to retained earnings as a result of this property dividend declaration
will be $100,000.
32 b – On December 1, the date of the property dividend’s declaration, Noble will record a gain of $50,000,
increasing the asset account for the equity investment by the same amount. Also on December 1, Noble
will record a debit to retained earnings for the fair value of the stock to be distributed ($150,000) and a
credit for the same amount to property dividends payable. Even though the fair value of the Multon stock
had increased by December 31, the balance in the property dividends payable account is not adjusted to
the Multon stock’s fair value as of December 31. Thus, the balance shown on Noble’s statement of financial
position at December 31 as property dividends payable will be $150,000.
33 a – When a stock dividend is declared but not immediately distributed, the future stock dividend is not
recorded as a dividend payable but rather as “common shares – issuable as a dividend,” an account in the
equity section of the balance sheet. Therefore, when the dividend is declared, no liability is recorded.
34 c – The first step is to find how much cash in dividends were declared for the year, then use that to find
how much in cash dividends were actually paid during the year.
The retained earnings account began the year with a balance of $100,000 and ended the year with a balance
of $125,000. Net income for the year increased retained earnings by $40,000 to a balance of $140,000.
The stock dividend in the amount of $8,000 was almost certainly a small stock dividend, so the full $8,000
was debited to retained earnings, reducing retained earnings to $132,000. The only other transaction(s)
that would have affected retained earnings would have been the declaration of cash dividends, which reduce
retained earnings. Thus, dividends declared must have been $7,000 ($132,000 − $125,000 ending bal-
ance).
The question says that dividends payable decreased by $5,000 during the year. That means that $5,000 in
dividends declared during the previous year were paid during the current year and that the full $7,000 of
dividends declared during the current year were also paid during the current year (that is, no dividends
were payable at year end). Therefore, the total cash dividends paid during the year were $5,000 declared
during the previous year + $7,000 declared during the current year, which equals $12,000.
T-accounts:
Retained Earnings Dividends Payable

Dr Cr Dr Cr

Beginning balance 100,000 Beginning balance 5,000

Net income 40,000 Cash dividend paid 5,000

Stock dividend declared 8,000 Cash dividend declared 7,000

Cash dividend declared 7,000 Cash dividend paid 7,000

Ending balance 125,000 Ending balance 0

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Answers to Questions CMA Part 1

35 d – Note that the question asks for the amount of revenue that will be reported in 20X3, not the
amount of gross profit. Total revenue on the contract was $100,000. At the end of 20X2, construction was
37.5% complete ($30,000 ÷ [$30,000 + $50,000]), so the revenue recognized for 20X2 was $37,500. At
the end of 20X3, construction was completed because the estimated cost to complete as of the end of 20X3
was zero. Therefore, the $62,500 remaining revenue on the contract—$100,000 minus the $37,500 rec-
ognized in 20X2—will be recognized in 20X3.
36 c – This question and the following two use the formula for the recognition of revenue and gross profit
over time. The formula is:
Estimated Gross Profit
× Percentage Satisfied
= Total Gross Profit to be Recognized to Date
− Profit Previously Recognized
= Gross Profit to Recognize This Period
In 20X0, $400,000 of costs had been incurred of an estimated $1,200,000 in total costs. Therefore, the
performance obligation is 1/3 satisfied, so 1/3 of the estimated gross profit of $300,000 ($1,500,000 −
$1,200,000) is to be recognized to date, or $100,000. Since 20X0 is the first year of the project, no revenue
or gross profit has yet been recognized. Therefore, Carefree should recognize gross profit of $100,000 for
20X0.
37 a – In 20X1, the performance obligation is 6/13 ($600,000 ÷ $1,300,000) satisfied. At this point, the
total amount of gross profit that should be recognized to date on the contract is $92,308: ([$1,500,000 −
$1,300,000] × 6/13). However, $100,000 of gross profit was recognized in 20X0. So, using the last part of
the formula, the $100,000 that was recognized in 20X0 is subtracted from the total amount of profit that
should be recognized to date, and the result is a loss for 20X1. $92,308 − $100,000 = $(7,692). This loss
for 20X1 is not a loss on the whole contract, at least not yet, but rather the de-recognition of some of the
gross profit that had been over recognized in the prior period.
38 a – In 20X2, something happened to the project and it went from an estimated gross profit to an
estimated loss of $50,000 ($1,500,000 − $1,550,000). The formula can still be used, but remember that
losses are always 100% recognized. Therefore, a total loss of $50,000 needs to have been recognized on
the project by the end of 20X2. However, the company already recognized $92,308 of gross profit to date,
so in order to change that to a loss of $50,000, it must recognize a $142,308 loss in 20X2 ($50,000 +
$92,308).
39 b – As of the end of Year 2, estimated gross profit on the contract was $180,000 ($700,000 contract
price minus [$390,000 cumulative costs incurred to date + $130,000 estimated cost to complete]). The
project was 75% satisfied ($390,000 ÷ [$390,000 + $130,000]). Therefore, the total gross profit that
should be recognized to date through Year 2 is 75% of $180,000, or $135,000. $65,000 in gross profit was
recognized in Year 1, so the amount of gross profit to be recognized in Year 2 is $135,000 − $65,000, or
$70,000.
40 d – Planning does not enable selection of personnel for open positions.
41 b – The statement that formal plans can act as a constraint on the decision-making freedom of managers
and supervisors is a true statement. However, that is a justification for not making the plan too formal. It
is not a justification for formalizing phases of the planning process. If plans are too formal, they prevent
managers from pursuing new opportunities or making necessary decisions as a result of changes in the
environment from what was planned.
42 b – Strategic plans are long-term, and therefore strategic analysis does not include the product mix for
the current year. The target production mix and schedule to be maintained during the year is a short-term
planning matter.
43 b – The objectives of the company must be determined before anything else can be set.
44 c – Evaluation of environmental issues that could affect the company’s profitability is not included in a
company’s internal analysis process because this type of analysis is not internal, but rather a factor that
uncovers external opportunities and threats.
45 d – Contingency planning is preparation for “what if” events that are typically external and unpredicta-
ble. It produces alternatives that will prepare the organization to respond nimbly if required. This scenario
planning is particularly important for companies that can be impacted by new technologies, changing gov-
ernment regulations or entry of competitors into the marketplace. Even though contingency planning can
be expensive because it involves developing multiple plans or alternatives, it often leads to greater savings
than the cost of the planning should unforeseen events occur.

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CMA Part 1 Answers to Questions

46 c – The contribution per machine hour for product A is $95 ÷ 4, or $23.75. The contribution per machine
hour for product B is $55 ÷ 2.5, or $22. Assuming customer demand is adequate to permit the company
to sell all the product A it can manufacture, the company should produce product A because its contribution
per machine hour required for the production is higher than that of product B.
47 d − The support of top management is critical to gain the support of lower-level managers, and the
support of lower-level managers is critical in order to gain the support of the affected employees. Without
this support from above, the budget effort will be wasted because personnel will not take the process
seriously.
48 b – Production doubles 3 times (from 1 to 2, from 2 to 4, and from 4 to 8). With the cumulative average-
time learning model, the estimated total number of direct labor hours required to produce a total of eight
units is 100 × (2 × 0.70) × (2 × 0.70) × (2 × 0.70) = 274.4 hours.
49 d – With the cumulative average time learning model, whenever the total quantity of units produced
doubles, the cumulative average time per unit required for all the units produced is X% of the cumulative
average time per unit required at the previous production-doubling level, where X% represents the learning
rate.
This question gives labor costs instead of labor time; however, since the question also asks for total labor
cost, the costs can be used in the same way as time would be used. The question says that the average
labor cost for the first batch is $120 per unit and the cumulative average labor cost after the second batch
(the first doubling) is $72 per unit. Using this information, the learning rate is calculated at 60% (72 ÷ 120
= 0.60). If the average cost per unit for the first two batches is $72, then the average cost per unit for all
four batches (after the fourth batch – the second doubling) is $72 × 0.6, or $43.20. Since each batch
contains 100 units, 4 batches contain a total of 400 units. If the average cost per unit is $43.20, the total
cost for 400 units (4 batches) is $43.20 × 400, or $17,280.
50 c – The expected value is a weighted average of the possible values, with the probabilities as the
weights. Thus, the expected percent defective is (0.02 × 0.30) + (0.03 × 0.50) + (0.04 × 0.20) = 0.0290
or 2.90%.
51 a − At all times, the budget covers a set number of months, quarters, or years into the future. When a
rolling budget is used, the month or quarter just completed is dropped from the budget and a new month
or quarter’s budget is added on to the end of the budget. At the same time, the other periods in the budget
can be revised to reflect any new information that has become available. Thus, the budget is continuously
being updated and always covers the same amount of time in the future. A rolling budget is also called a
continuous budget.
52 d – Activity-based budgeting enables better identification of resource needs, enables linking of costs to
outputs, and enables identification of budgetary slack. While it may reduce some planning uncertainty,
reduction of planning uncertainty is not guaranteed; therefore, d is the best answer.
53 c – Top management must be involved in the budgeting process and its involvement includes using the
budget as a means to communicate company goals.
54 b – If top management sets the budget levels without any input from others in the company, those
charged with fulfilling the budgeted goals will not support the budget as their own.
55 d – The forecasted cash balance at the end of the second quarter is
Beginning cash balance $ 36,000
+ Cash collections 2nd Quarter 1,300,000
− Decrease in A/P (25,000)
− 2nd Quarter costs & expenses (1,200,000)
+ Depreciation included in costs & expenses 60,000
− Cash purchase of equipment (50,000)
+ Cash received from sale of asset ($35,000 + $5,000) 40,000
− Repayment of notes payable (66,000)
= Ending cash balance $ 95,000
56 d – Selling and administrative budgets should be detailed enough to be useful, including an explanation
of the underlying assumptions. These assumptions should be documented so that if they are changed it will
be easier to adjust the affected budget figures.
57 b – The sales budget is the first budget that needs to be set because the production budget and all the
other budgets for the company are derived from the sales budget.
58 a – A sales forecast for a full year does not need to take into consideration seasonal sales volume
fluctuations in the same way as a monthly sales forecast would.

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Answers to Questions CMA Part 1

59 d – This question says, “In the budgeting and planning process . . . which one of the following should
be completed first?” The strategic plan must be in place before any budgeting activities can occur. There-
fore, even though the sales budget is the first budget that needs to be completed, in the budgeting and
planning process the strategic plan comes before the sales budget.
60 b − The cash budget draws upon information from all the other budgets given as answer choices.
Therefore, it should be prepared after those other budgets have been prepared.
61 a − The individual budgets that make up the operating and financial budgets are compiled into a budg-
eted income statement, balance sheet, and statement of cash flows, which is the master budget.
62 b – The flexible budget amount for a single product is the standard cost per unit multiplied by the actual
production volume. The budget calls for 144,000 units at a cost of $180,000, so the standard cost per unit
is $1.25 ($180,000 ÷ 144,000). Actual production was 10,800 units, so the flexible budget amount is
$13,500 (10,800 units × $1.25 per unit).
63 c – In order to solve this problem, determine the total fixed costs and the variable costs per unit. The
total fixed costs are $200,000 ($100,000 each of manufacturing and selling costs). The variable costs in
the 100,000-unit budget total $450,000, so the standard variable cost is $4.50 per unit ($450,000 ÷
100,000 units). Therefore, to produce 110,000 units the company will incur $495,000 in variable costs
($4.50 × 110,000 units) and $200,000 in fixed costs for total costs of $695,000.
64 c – Much of the information given in this question is not needed to determine the correct answer. The
shipping cost function is provided as well as the total pounds actually shipped (12,300 pounds) to use in
the function. Putting this information into the formula results in: $16,000 + ($0.50 × 12,300) = $22,150.
65 b – The flexible budget amount is the budgeted contribution margin per unit multiplied by the actual
sales volume, minus the budgeted fixed costs. Note that fixed costs in the flexible budget are the same as
fixed costs in the static budget because fixed costs do not change with changes in activity as long as the
activity remains within the relevant range. The budgeted contribution margin at a sales volume of 180,000
units is $975,000 ÷ 150,000 × 180,000 = $1,170,000. $1,170,000 minus $250,000 fixed overhead and
minus $500,000 fixed selling and administrative expenses equals flexible budget net income for the month
of $420,000.
66 c – This question asks for the budgeted amount of direct material that needs to be purchased during
the third quarter. Purchases made during the third quarter need to cover the amount required for production
during the third quarter and the amount of direct materials inventory necessary to begin the fourth quarter
with the required amount of 30% of the fourth quarter’s usage requirement. The calculation of Purchases
must also consider the amount of direct materials on hand at the beginning of the third quarter.
The basic inventory formula is: Beginning Inventory + Purchases − Usage = Ending Inventory. With three
of the four amounts, the fourth can always be determined. For this question, Purchases is the unknown to
solve for. Information for the other three amounts can be derived from the information given in the ques-
tion.
The beginning inventory for the third quarter is 30% of the third quarter’s usage requirement. The third
quarter’s usage requirement is 34,000 × 3, or 102,000 units of direct materials. Thus, the beginning in-
ventory of direct material for the third quarter is 102,000 × 0.30, or 30,600.
Third quarter usage, as calculated above, is 102,000 units of direct material.
The ending inventory for the third quarter is the same as the beginning inventory for the fourth quarter.
The beginning inventory for the fourth quarter needs to be 30% of the usage requirement for the fourth
quarter. Planned production for the fourth quarter is 48,000 units, so materials requirements for those will
be 48,000 × 3, or 144,000 units of direct materials. Thus, the beginning inventory for the fourth quarter
needs to be 144,000 × 0.30, or 43,200 units, and this is the ending inventory for the third quarter.
With three of the four amounts for the inventory formula, Purchases for the third quarter can be calculated.
Beginning Inventory + Purchases − Usage = Ending Inventory
Let P stand for Purchases. The equation is:
30,600 + P − 102,000 = 43,200.
P = 114,600.
67 c – The inventory formula in units, which can be used for either finished goods or direct materials
inventory, is:
Beginning Inventory + Units Produced or Purchased − Units Sold or Used = Ending Inventory

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CMA Part 1 Answers to Questions

With three of these amounts, the fourth amount can be calculated. To answer this question, it is necessary
to calculate what the production needs to be during July, August, and September in order to end the month
of September with the required number of units in ending finished goods inventory.
Beginning finished goods inventory is 150,000 units. The number of units that will be sold during the three-
month period and the ending inventory level need to be calculated, and then Beginning Inventory, Units
Sold, and Ending Inventory can be used to calculate Units Produced.
The required ending inventory on September 30 needs to be 80% of the next month’s estimated sales, so
October’s budgeted sales are needed. If July’s budgeted sales are 200,000 units and the company expects
a growth rate in sales of 5% per month, October’s budgeted sales will be 200,000 × 1.05 × 1.05 × 1.05,
or 231,525. Therefore, the September 30 ending finished goods inventory needs to be 231,525 × 0.80, or
185,220 units.
Sales during July, August, and September are budgeted as follows:
July budgeted sales are 200,000 units.
August budgeted sales are 200,000 × 1.05, or 210,000 units.
September budgeted sales are 210,000 × 1.05, or 220,500 units.
Therefore, the total number of units budgeted to be sold during July, August, and September is 200,000 +
210,000 + 220,500, or 630,500.
Now Berol Company’s production requirement in units of finished product for the three-month period ending
September 30 can be calculated, as follows:
Beginning Inventory + Units Produced − Units Sold = Ending Inventory
Let X stand for Units Produced. The equation is:
150,000 + X − 630,500 = 185,220
X = 665,720 units that must be produced during July, August, and September.
68 c – The question says to assume that July, August, and September production will be 600,000 units.
Each unit requires 4 pounds of direct materials, so to produce 600,000 units, 2,400,000 pounds (600,000
× 4) of direct materials will be needed.
Beginning direct materials inventory is 800,000 pounds.
Ending direct materials inventory needs to be 25% of the direct materials used during the three-month
period of July through September, or 2,400,000 pounds × 0.25, which is 600,000 pounds.
Beginning Inventory + Units Purchased − Units Used in Production = Ending Inventory
Let X stand for Units Purchased. The equation is:
800,000 + X − 2,400,000 = 600,000
X = 2,200,000 pounds of direct materials to be purchased.
However, the question does not ask for the number of pounds to be purchased; rather, it asks for the
estimated cost to purchase direct materials. The estimated cost to purchase 2,200,000 pounds of direct
materials at $1.20 per pound = $2,640,000.
69 b – This is a very long question with only a few important pieces of information. In January, the pro-
duction will be equal to 1.5 times the expected sales in February. Expected February sales are 36,000;
therefore, in January the company will produce 54,000 units (36,000 × 1.5).
70 b – In February the production will be equal to 50% of March sales. March sales are expected to be
33,000, so February’s production will be 16,500 units. The variable cost per unit is $7 ($3.50 + $1 + $2 +
$0.50), so total variable costs will be 16,500 × $7, or $115,500. Adding this figure to the $12,000 of fixed
costs produces a total production cost of $127,500.
71 c – The basic inventory formula for any purpose is:
Beginning Inventory + Additions to Inventory − Inventory Used = Ending Inventory.
Beginning inventory needs to be 40% of the amount Rokat expects to sell during August, or 40% of 2,500,
which is 1,000 units. Ending inventory needs to be 40% of the amount Rokat expects to sell during Sep-
tember, or 40% of 2,100, which is 840. The company expects to sell 2,500 units during August.
Letting P stand for Units Produced (additions to inventory), the formula is:
1,000 + P − 2,500 = 840
P = 2,340

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Answers to Questions CMA Part 1

2,340 tables will need to be produced during August.


72 b – Four table legs are required for each table produced. The basic inventory formula is:
Beginning Inventory + Additions to Inventory − Inventory Used = Ending Inventory.
August production is 1,600 tables, and 1,600 multiplied by 4 legs per table equals 6,400 table legs that will
be needed for August production.
August beginning inventory is 4,200 legs.
August ending inventory is 60% of the amount required for September production. September production
is 1,800 tables, and the number of table legs needed for September production will be 1,800 × 4, or 7,200
legs. Thus, August ending inventory will be 60% of 7,200, or 4,320 legs.
Letting P stand for legs purchased, the formula is:
4,200 + P − 6,400 = 4,320
P = 6,520
6,520 table legs will need to be purchased during August.
73 a – This mathematical calculation can be performed in several ways. One method is as follows: 1,800
units will be produced and each table requires 20 minutes of labor, so 36,000 minutes (1,800 × 20) will be
required. 36,000 minutes divided by 60 minutes in an hour equals 600 direct labor hours required. Each
employee works 160 hours a month (40 hours × 4 weeks), so 3.75 employees will be needed 600 ÷ 160).
74 d – The first thing to do is determine the number of bicycles and tricycles to be produced because the
total production determines how much of component A19 is needed, since 2 units of A19 are used in each
bicycle and each tricycle. Use the basic inventory formula for finished goods to determine how many bicycles
and tricycles will be produced. Then the basic inventory formula can be used for direct materials to find the
number of units of A19 that will need to be purchased.
The basic inventory formula for any purpose is:
Beginning Inventory + Additions to Inventory − Inventory Used = Ending Inventory
For direct materials inventory, “Additions to Inventory” means Purchases and “Inventory Used” means
amount used in production.
Begin with finished goods inventory. Tricycles and bicycles both use 2 units of A19, so their A19 require-
ments do not need to be calculated separately. Beginning inventory of tricycles is 800 and beginning
inventory of bicycles is 2,150, for a total of 2,950. Sales of tricycles are 96,000 and sales of bicycles are
130,000 for a total of 226,000. Ending inventory of tricycles is 1,000 and ending inventory of bicycles is
900, for a total of 1,900.
Beginning Inventory + Number of Units Produced − Sales = Ending Inventory
2,950 + Number of Units Produced − 226,000 = 1,900
Number of Cycles (tricycles and bicycles) Produced = 224,950
Use the basic inventory formula for direct materials in order to calculate the number of units of A19 needed
to be purchased.
Beginning inventory of A19 is 3,500. Each cycle requires 2 units of A19. Therefore, the number of units of
A19 needed for production will be 449,900 (224,950 × 2). Ending inventory of A19 is 2,000.
Beginning Inventory + Purchases − Amount Used in Production = Ending Inventory
3,500 + Purchases − 449,900 = 2,000
Purchases = 448,400
The unit cost of A19 is $1.20. Therefore, the budgeted dollar value of purchases of A19 is 448,400 × $1.20,
or $538,080.
Note: If the number of units of A19 needed per finished unit had been different for tricycles and bicycles,
it would have been necessary to calculate each product’s production requirements separately and then
multiply the production of each product by the number of A19s required for that product. Then the total
number of A19s needed for production of both products would have been the number needed for tricycles
plus the number needed for bicycles.
75 b – The economic order quantity is the most economical amount to order each time an order is placed
to minimize ordering costs and holding costs. The economic order quantity for B12 is 70,000 units. If
Wellfleet always orders 70,000 units of B12, the number of times the company should place an order for
B12s will be the total number of B12s needed for production divided by 70,000.

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CMA Part 1 Answers to Questions

The planned production of bicycles is 128,750 units and the planned production of tricycles is 96,200 units,
calculated as follows, using the basic inventory formula:
Bicycles: Beginning Inventory 2,150 + Units Produced – Units Sold 130,000 = Ending Inventory 900
Units Produced = 128,750
Tricycles: Beginning Inventory 800 + Units Produced – Units Sold 96,000 = Ending Inventory 1,000
Units Produced = 96,200
Each bicycle requires four B12s, while each tricycle requires one B12. Therefore, the total number of B12s
required for production is (128,750 × 4) + (96,200 × 1) = 611,200. The beginning inventory of B12s is
1,200 and the ending inventory is 1,800. The basic inventory formula can now be used to determine the
number of B12s to be purchased:
Beginning Inventory + Units Purchased − Units Used in Production = Ending Inventory
Let P stand for Units Purchased. The equation is:
1,200 + P − 611,200 = 1,800
P = 611,800
Since 611,800 units of B12 need to be purchased, divide 611,800 by the order size of 70,000 to find the
number of times Wellfleet will purchase B12s: 611,800 ÷ 70,000 = 8.74. Therefore, 9 orders will need to
be placed in order to receive the required amount of B12. The company will have a few extra units, since
the division does not work out evenly. But if the company were to order only 8 times, it would not have
enough B12s to complete all of its planned production for the year.
76 c – To calculate collections expected during the third calendar quarter, analyze each month in the
quarter to determine the amount of that month’s sales to be collected and the amount of the previous
month’s sales to be collected. The company collects 50% of the credit sales in the month of the sale and
45% in the following month. Therefore, the collections during the third quarter are:
50% of current 45% of previous
month’s sales month’s sales Total
July $70,000 $54,000 $ 124,000
August 80,000 63,000 143,000
September 75,000 72,000 147,000
$414,000

77 b – This question is similar to the previous question, except for a small and critical difference. In the
previous question, 50% of the sales were collected in the month of the sale, 45% in the month after, and
5% were never collected. In this question, 5% are never collected, and 60% of the amount to be collected
is collected in the month of the sale and 40% of the amount to be collected is collected in the month after
the sale. Notice the difference: in this question it is not 60% of the total credit sales that will be collected
during the month of sale but rather 60% of the total credit sales that will be collected that will be
collected during the month of sale. It is essential to recognize which percentage of which quantity is being
collected. Therefore, in December Noskey will collect 40% of 95% of the November credit sales. November
credit sales were $240,000. Of this amount, 95% or $228,000 will be collected. Of this amount, 40% will
be collected in December, or $91,200.
78 c – The budgeted cash receipts in January will include the cash collected from December and January
credit sales as well as the cash sales from January. January cash sales were $60,000. Collections from
December sales will be $136,800 ($360,000 × 0.95 × 0.4), and collections from January credit sales will
be $102,600 ($180,000 × 0.95 × 0.6). In total, $299,400 will be collected in January ($60,000 + $136,800
+ $102,600).
79 c – Since the question states that Raymar intends to maintain a minimum balance of $100,000 at the
end of each month by either borrowing for deficits below the minimum balance or investing excess cash,
assume that the company’s balance of cash at the end of March is $100,000. Thus, the beginning balance
for April is also $100,000. The ending balance for April, before any borrowing or investing, will be the
beginning balance adjusted by the month’s activity.
To determine the month’s activity, determine the cash collections for April: 50% of April sales and 50% of
March sales (or $25,000 + $20,000 = $45,000) will be collected in April.

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Next, determine the disbursements for April: 75% of April A/P and 25% of March A/P (or $30,000 + $7,500
= $37,500) will be paid on accounts payable in April. Other disbursements are paid in the month they occur,
and for April they are: $70,000 for payroll plus $30,000 of other disbursements, totaling $100,000 in
disbursements other than accounts payable.
Total cash receipts are $45,000 and total cash disbursements are $137,500. Subtracting the amount of
cash outflows from cash inflows results in a $92,500 net cash deficit in the month’s activity. Therefore, the
ending cash balance before any borrowing is $100,000 − $92,500, or $7,500.
The company needs to increase that amount to at least $100,000. Since borrowings for cash deficits must
be made in $10,000 increments, the company needs to borrow $100,000 to cover the $92,500 cash deficit
and bring the ending cash balance from $7,500 to its required minimum of $100,000. The ending cash
balance will actually be $107,500 after $100,000 is borrowed, but the extra $7,500 in the cash account is
unavoidable because of the $10,000 incremental borrowing requirement.
80 d – In the previous question, the April ending cash balance was forecasted to be $107,500, funded by
$100,000 of borrowing.
Therefore, the company will need to pay $1,000 of interest in May ($100,000 × [12% ÷ 12]) for the funds
borrowed during April.
Next, determine the cash inflows and outflows for May.
Cash collections in May are 50% of the April and May sales: (50% × $50,000) + (50% × $100,000) =
$75,000.
Accounts payable paid in May are 75% of May’s A/P and 25% of April A/P: ($40,000 × 75%) + $40,000 ×
25%) = $40,000.
Other disbursements total $61,000 ($50,000 for payroll + $10,000 in other disbursements + $1,000 in
interest for the funds borrowed during April).
Subtracting the total disbursements from the collections in May results in a $26,000 negative cash flow:
$75,000 − $40,000 − $61,000 = ($26,000).
At the beginning of the month, the company had a cash balance of $107,500. $107,500 minus the $26,000
negative net cash flow during May results in a May ending cash balance before any borrowing of $81,500.
However, the company needs to end the month with a cash balance of $100,000; therefore, it is $18,500
short. Since borrowings for cash deficits must be made in $10,000 increments, the company must borrow
$20,000 to cover the $18,500 cash deficit for May and end the month with at least $100,000 in cash. It
will thus end the month of May with $101,500 in cash: $107,500 − $26,000 + $20,000 = $101,500.
81 c – Top management would not be likely to be involved in setting budget standards for production
because setting budget standards is an activity best done by those more directly involved with budget-
related matters.
82 d – Standard costing systems are often and best used together with a flexible budget. By using standard
costs, the firm can prepare the flexible budgets that enable better analysis at the end of the period.
83 d – The actual sales volume of the product will not impact the materials efficiency variance. The mate-
rials efficiency variance, also called the direct materials quantity variance, is a manufacturing input variance
that measures the difference in cost between the actual material used in production at the standard price
and the standard usage allowed for the level of actual output at the standard price. It is not affected by the
amount of the finished good that is sold.
84 b – The total standard cost allowed for the actual output is $60,000. Two units of raw material are
allowed for each unit produced and the company produced 12,000 units. Therefore, the standard quantity
allowed for the actual output is 12,000 × 2, or 24,000 units. The standard price for one unit of material is
$60,000 ÷ 24,000 units of direct materials, or $2.50 per unit of direct materials.
85 d – For this question, use the materials quantity variance formula and solve for AQ. The variance formula
is (AQ − SQ) × SP. SQ can be calculated because the company produced 12,000 units, and two units of
raw materials are required for each unit of output. Therefore, the standard quantity for the actual output
is 24,000 units. The standard price per unit of raw material can also be calculated because the standard
cost allowed for the actual output is $60,000. Since the standard quantity for the actual output is 24,000
units, the standard price per unit of raw materials is $60,000 ÷ 24,000, or $2.50. The quantity variance is
given as $2,500 unfavorable. Therefore, the formula is:
(AQ − 24,000) × $2.50 = $2,500.
Solving for AQ:
2.5AQ − 60,000 = 2,500
2.5AQ = 62,500

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CMA Part 1 Answers to Questions

AQ = 25,000 units
86 c – The formula for calculating the materials price variance is (AP − SP) × AQ. The actual price for raw
materials is $105,000 ÷ 35,000 units in inventory, or $3.00 per unit. The standard price is $2.50 per unit
of raw materials ($60,000 standard cost for material allowed for the output ÷ [12,000 units actually pro-
duced × 2 units of materials per unit produced]). The Actual Quantity in the formula is the actual quantity
of the raw materials that were used in producing the 12,000 finished units. It is not the actual quantity of
product produced, nor is it the standard quantity of materials for the actual quantity produced.
To calculate the price variance, the number of units of raw material actually used in production is needed,
but the question does not provide that number. However, the question states that there is an unfavorable
quantity variance of 2,500. Therefore, to determine the number of units of materials actually used, use the
quantity variance formula and solve for AQ.
The quantity variance formula is (AQ − SQ) × SP. Since the question indicates that the materials standard
is 2 units of raw materials for each unit produced, the standard quantity of materials for 12,000 units is
24,000 units. The actual quantity is not yet known. The standard price is $2.50 per unit of raw material
($60,000 standard cost for material allowed for the output ÷ [12,000 units actually produced × 2 units of
materials per unit produced]). The quantity variance is 2,500 Unfavorable. The formula is:
(AQ − 24,000) × $2.50 = $2,500
Solving for AQ:
2.5AQ − 60,000 = 2,500
2.5AQ = 62,500
AQ = 25,000
Next, input the actual quantity of materials used into the materials price variance formula and calculate the
materials price variance, (AP − SP) × AQ:
($3.00 − $2.50) × 25,000 = $12,500 Unfavorable
87 b – The price variance formula is (AP – SP) × AQ. Entering the figures from the question into the
formula, results in ($0.75 − $0.72) × 4,100 = $123 Unfavorable. (Remember for the price variance to
use the number of units used in production, unless the problem asks for the purchase price variance.)
88 d – To solve for the direct materials usage variance, use the following formula: (AQ – SQ) × SP. The
AQ is the actual quantity of the direct materials used, and the SQ is the standard quantity of direct materials
allowed for the actual output. The standard price is $3.60 per pound and the standard quantity required to
produce the actual quantity of output is 110,000 (22,000 units × 5 pounds per unit). The actual quantity
used is 108,000; therefore, the formula is (108,000 – 110,000) × $3.60 = $(7,200) Favorable.
89 a – To solve for the direct labor rate variance, use the following formula: (AP – SP) × AQ. The actual
quantity of labor hours is 28,000 and the standard rate is $12.00 per hour. The actual rate is calculated by
dividing the actual cost ($327,600, which is 90% of the total labor cost of $364,000) by the actual hours
worked (28,000). The result is an actual labor rate of $11.70 per hour. Inputting these numbers into the
formula results in ($11.70 − $12.00) × 28,000 = $(8,400) Favorable.
90 b – To solve for the direct labor usage (efficiency) variance, use the following formula: (AQ – SQ) × SP.
The AQ is the actual number of direct labor hours used, and the SQ is the standard number of direct labor
hours allowed for the actual output. The standard price is $12.00 and the actual number of direct labor
hours worked is 28,000. The number of direct labor hours allowed for the actual level of output is 27,500
(22,000 units × 1.25 hours per unit). Putting these numbers into the formula results in (28,000 – 27,500)
× $12 = $6,000 Unfavorable.
91 b – If the company has an unfavorable materials usage variance, then more materials were used in
production than should have been used. An unfavorable materials usage variance may be caused by inferior
materials that created the need to discard the unusable materials and start over. Thus, an unfavorable
variance in materials usage may in turn cause more labor hours to be used in order to handle and process
the additional materials. Therefore, the unfavorable materials usage variance may also cause an unfavor-
able direct labor efficiency variance.
92 d – The materials mix variance equals the actual total quantity used multiplied by the difference between
the weighted average standard price for the actual mix per unit of direct materials, which in this question
is kilogram (waspAM) and the weighted average standard price for the standard mix per kilogram
(waspSM). The weighted average total standard price for the actual mix is (21,000 × $0.75) + (14,000 ×
$0.90) = $28,350, and the weighted average standard price per kilogram for the actual mix is $0.81
($28,350 ÷ 35,000 kg). The weighted average standard price for the standard mix is $0.80 per kilogram
($240 standard total cost per batch ÷ 300 standard total kg per batch). The mix variance is ($0.81 − $0.80)
x 35,000 = $350 Unfavorable.

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Answers to Questions CMA Part 1

93 b – The materials yield variance equals the weighted average standard price for the standard mix per
unit multiplied by the difference between the actual total quantity used and the standard total quantity for
the actual output achieved. The weighted average standard price for the standard mix is $0.80 per kg ($240
standard total cost per batch ÷ 300 standard total kg per batch). The actual total quantity used is 35,000.
The standard total quantity for the actual output achieved is 300 kg per batch × 110 batches = 33,000 kg.
Therefore, the yield variance is (35,000 – 33,000) x $0.80 = $1,600 Unfavorable.
94 b – The variable overhead efficiency variance is essentially a quantity variance, and it determines the
amount of the total variance caused by a different usage of the allocation base than was expected. The
allocation base used in this question is direct labor hours.
The variable overhead efficiency variance is closely related to efficiency or inefficiency in the use of whatever
allocation base is used to apply the variable overhead. For example, if variable overhead is applied on the
basis of direct labor hours, the variable overhead efficiency variance will be unfavorable when the direct
labor efficiency variance is unfavorable and vice versa.
The variable overhead efficiency variance is:
Budgeted VOH based on actual usage – Variable OH applied to production
Or: (AQ – SQ) × SP
Where: AQ is the actual quantity of the variable overhead allocation base (direct labor hours or direct
machine hours) used for the actual output,
SQ is the standard quantity of the variable overhead allocation base allowed for the actual output,
and
SP is the standard variable overhead application rate.
The direct labor efficiency variance is:
(AQ – SQ) × SP
Where: AQ is the actual direct labor hours used,
SQ is the standard direct labor hours allowed for the actual output, and
SP is the standard direct labor rate.
When variable overhead is applied on the basis of direct labor hours, “AQ” and “SQ” are the same amounts
in both the variable overhead efficiency variance and the direct labor efficiency variance. Thus, when
variable overhead is applied on the basis of direct labor hours and the direct labor efficiency
variance is unfavorable, the variable overhead efficiency variance will also be unfavorable and
vice versa.
95 a − The production-volume variance (or the volume variance) is the flexible/static budgeted fixed over-
head minus the amount of fixed overhead applied. The flexible/static budget fixed overhead amount is
given as $400,000.
The predetermined application rate for fixed overhead is $400,000 ÷ 10,000 DLH, or $40 per DLH.
With standard costing, overhead is applied to production on the basis of the amount of the application base
that is allowed for the actual output. The amount of DLH allowed for the actual output is given as 9,900
hours.
Therefore, the amount of fixed overhead applied to production is $40 per DLH multiplied by the 9,900 DLH
allowed for the actual output, or $396,000.
The Volume Variance is $400,000 − $396,000, which equals $4,000. Since the amount is positive, the
variance is unfavorable. It is unfavorable because it means the facilities were not used to the extent
planned.
96 b – The total fixed overhead variance is the difference between the actual total fixed overhead cost
incurred and the applied fixed overhead. That difference is also the amount of the under-applied or over-
applied fixed overhead costs.
97 c – The fixed overhead volume variance results from a difference between actual and budgeted produc-
tion. Unlike other variances, the fixed overhead production-volume variance (or the volume variance) does
not relate to an expenditure problem in which either too much is paid or too much is used. Therefore, the
fixed overhead volume variance is the least significant variance for cost control.
98 b – Two standard direct labor hours are allowed for each unit. Since Franklin Glass Works produced
198,000 units, 396,000 standard total direct labor hours are allowed for the actual production (198,000 ×
2).

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CMA Part 1 Answers to Questions

99 a – The VOH efficiency variance can be calculated as Budgeted VOH Based on Inputs Actually Used –
VOH Applied to Production.
Budgeted VOH based on inputs actually used = VOH allocation rate × DLH actually used.
The VOH allocation rate is budgeted variable overhead divided by the DLH allowed for the budgeted number
of units. The total budgeted overhead is $900,000 and the fixed overhead is $3 per unit. Since 200,000
units are budgeted for production, the budgeted fixed overhead is $600,000 (200,000 × $3). Therefore,
the budgeted variable overhead is $300,000 ($900,000 − $600,000). Since 200,000 units were budgeted
and 2 direct labor hours are allowed per unit, 400,000 direct labor hours were allowed for the budgeted
production. The variable overhead allocation rate is thus $300,000 ÷ 400,000 hours, which equals $0.75
of variable overhead allocated per direct labor hour.
VOH based on inputs actually used = $0.75 VOH allocation rate × 440,000 DLH actually used = $330,000.
VOH applied to production = $0.75 VOH allocation rate × (198,000 actual production × 2 DLH allowed per
unit) = $297,000.
The VOH efficiency variance = $330,000 − $297,000 = $33,000 Unfavorable.
The VOH efficiency variance can also be calculated using the following equation: (AQ – SQ) × SP, where
AQ is the actual quantity of the direct labor hours used, SQ is the standard quantity of direct labor hours
allowed for the actual output, and SP is the standard variable overhead application rate.
The actual number of direct labor hours is 440,000 and the standard number of direct labor hours allowed
for the actual production is 396,000 (198,000 units actually produced multiplied by 2 direct labor hours
allowed per unit produced). The standard VOH application rate was calculated above as $0.75 per DLH
allowed for the actual output. Therefore, the formula is: (440,000 − 396,000) × $0.75, which equals
$33,000 Unfavorable.
100 c – The Variable Overhead Spending Variance can be calculated as Actual VOH Incurred – Budgeted
VOH Based on Inputs Actually Used.
Actual VOH incurred is given as $352,000.
VOH based on inputs actually used (calculated in the answer explanation to the previous question) = $0.75
VOH allocation rate × 440,000 DLH actually used = $330,000.
The VOH spending variance = $352,000 − $330,000 = $22,000 Unfavorable.
The VOH spending variance can also be calculated using the following equation: (AP – SP) × AQ, where AP
is the actual variable overhead cost per direct labor hour, SP is the standard variable overhead allocation
rate per direct labor hour, and AQ is the actual quantity of direct labor hours used for the actual output.
The SP, the variable overhead allocation rate per direct labor hour, is $0.75 (calculated in the previous
question).
The AP is calculated as the actual variable overhead ÷ actual direct labor hours used. The actual variable
overhead is $352,000 and 440,000 direct labor hours were actually used. Thus, the AP is $352,000 ÷
440,000 = $0.80 per direct labor hour.
Therefore, the formula is: ($0.80 − $0.75) × 440,000, which equals $22,000 Unfavorable.
101 b – The fixed overhead spending variance is actual fixed overhead incurred – budgeted fixed overhead.
The actual fixed overhead is given as $575,000. The budgeted fixed overhead, as calculated in the answer
explanation to the previous question, is $3 × 200,000, or $600,000. Therefore, the fixed overhead spending
variance is $575,000 − $600,000 = $(25,000) Favorable.
102 c – The amount of fixed overhead applied is calculated as the application rate ($3 per unit as given in
the question) multiplied by the number of units actually produced (198,000). Fixed overhead applied is
$594,000.
103 a – The fixed overhead volume variance is calculated as the budgeted fixed overhead minus the applied
fixed overhead, and a positive amount is unfavorable because it means production volume was lower than
planned. The budgeted fixed overhead is $600,000 (calculated for a previous question) and the applied
amount is $594,000 (also calculated for a previous question), so the fixed overhead volume variance is
$600,000 − $594,000 = $6,000 Unfavorable.
104 d – Clear Plus manufactures a single product. For a single-product firm, flexible budget amounts can
be calculated for variable revenue and variable cost lines by dividing the static budget variable amount by
the static budget number of units to be sold to get the budgeted amount per unit, and then multiplying that
figure by the actual number of units sold. In the static (master) budget, the contribution per unit is $4 per
unit ($40,000 ÷ 10,000 units). Therefore, since Clear Plus actually sold 12,000 units, the contribution
margin at a sales level of 12,000 units would be expected to be $48,000 ($4 × 12,000 units), and that is

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Answers to Questions CMA Part 1

the flexible budget amount for the contribution margin. Next, subtract budgeted fixed costs of $30,000.
Fixed costs are the same in the flexible budget as in the static budget, since they do not change with
changes in activity. The result is the flexible budget operating income of $18,000 at a sales level of 12,000
units.
105 c – The sales volume variance for operating income is the same as the sales volume variance for the
contribution margin line and is calculated as (AQ – SQ) × SP, where SP is the standard (or budgeted)
contribution margin per unit. The sales volume variance for operating income can also be calculated by
subtracting the Static Budget Operating Income from the Flexible Budget Operating Income.
Using the formula (AQ – SQ) × SP to calculate the sales volume variance for the contribution margin line,
the actual quantity is 12,000 and the standard quantity is 10,000. The standard contribution margin per
unit (SP) is $4 ($40,000 ÷ 10,000 units). The sales volume variance is $8,000 Favorable: (12,000 – 10,000)
× $4 = $8,000. $8,000 Favorable is also the sales volume variance for operating income. The sales volume
variance for the contribution margin and the sales volume variance for operating income are the same since
the sales volume variance for fixed costs is zero.
The sales volume variance for operating income can also be calculated by subtracting the static budget
operating income of $10,000 from the flexible budget operating income of $18,000, as calculated in the
previous question: $18,000 − $10,000 = $8,000 Favorable.
106 c – The stand-alone cost allocation method determines the weights for cost allocation by considering
each user of the cost as a separate entity. When the stand-alone method is used, total common costs are
distributed among the operating units based on each unit’s proportion of the entire organization, using an
appropriate basis.
107 d – In evaluating segment performance and the segment manager’s performance, it is important to
distinguish between the performance of the manager and the performance of the segment the manager
manages. Costs that are traceable to a segment but controlled by someone other than the segment man-
ager are used in evaluating the performance of the segment, but they should not be used in evaluating the
performance of the segment manager.
108 a – Contribution margin is calculated as sales revenue minus the variable costs for the units sold. The
sales price is $100 per unit and the variable costs total $72 per unit: DM $30; DL $20; other variable
manufacturing costs $10; Variable selling costs $12. Thus, contribution is $28 per unit ($100 − $72). 900
units were sold, for a contribution margin of $25,200.
109 a – The basic issue of transfer prices is simply how much should one unit of a company charge another
unit of the same company for its goods or services. The goal in setting a transfer price is that the method
used will stimulate both the buying and selling department managers to do what will provide the greatest
benefit to the company as a whole, rather than to act in their own interest. When there is an external
market for the product, market price is almost always the best transfer price to use. Thus, market price is
at the maximum of the natural range. When the company has idle capacity, the variable cost approach to
determining the transfer price also works well. Since the Fabricating Division has enough capacity to fulfill
the demand of the Assembling Division without any over-time, the variable cost approach is also acceptable
and is at the minimum of the natural range.
110 a – There are two important points to note in this question. One, the Fabrication Division has excess
capacity that is adequate to manufacture all of the 4,500 units of UT-371 that the Electronic Assembly
wants to purchase. And two, the question asks for the minimum price, not the best price. "Minimum"
means the very lowest price that the Fabrication Division must receive to avoid having a loss on the internal
sale.
The Fabrication Division will not have any variable selling and distribution costs on the internal order, and
its total fixed manufacturing cost will be the same whether it accepts the internal order or not. Since the
Fabrication Division has enough excess capacity to produce the order without having to give up any external
orders, there will be no opportunity cost. Therefore, the very lowest price that the Fabrication Division must
receive is its variable manufacturing cost of $21. The Fabrication Division will break even if the price it
receives for the internal order from the Electronic Assembly Division is equal to its variable manufacturing
cost.
111 c – A transfer price is not a price charged by the company to external customers, so this is an incorrect
description of transfer pricing. A transfer price is the price charged by one unit of the company to another
unit of the same company for the services or goods produced by the first unit and "sold" to the second unit.
112 d – The ROI for a division is calculated as its operating income divided by its assets. The division’s
operating income is calculated as sales minus expenses, or $4,000,000 net sales − $3,525,000 COGS −

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CMA Part 1 Answers to Questions

$75,000 general and administrative expenses = $400,000. Assets are $2,400,000. The ROI is $400,000 ÷
$2,400,000, or 16.67%.
113 c – Return on investment is operating income divided by assets. North’s ROI is $1,000 ÷ $2,500 or
0.40; East’s ROI is $5,000 ÷ $15,000 or 0.333; South’s ROI is $4,000 ÷ $8,000 or 0.50; and West’s ROI
is $7,500 ÷ $25,000 or 0.30. South’s return on investment is the highest of the four.
114 b – To solve this problem, set up a basic ROI using any numbers. For example, use operating income
of $100,000 ($500,000 sales revenue − $400 expenses) ÷ assets of $400,000 = ROI of 0.25. Then go
through the answer choices, changing the amounts as outlined in each answer choice to find the answer
choice that results in an increased ROI, as follows:
Answer a: Sales revenue and expenses both increase by $50,000 (thus operating income remains the
same) while total assets increase by the same amount. ($550,000 sales revenue − $450,000 expenses) ÷
assets of $450,000 will result in a decreased ROI (to 0.222 from the current 0.25) because the numerator
remains the same while the denominator increases.
Answer b: Sales revenue remains the same ($500,000) while expenses are reduced by the same amount
by which total assets increase. Using a decrease in expenses of $50,000 and an increase in assets of
$50,000, ROI increases: ($500,000 sales – $350,000 expenses) ÷ $450,000 assets = ROI of 0.333, an
increase from the current 0.25.
There is no need to go further, because answer b fulfills the requirement of increasing ROI and thus is the
correct answer. However, for illustration purposes, here are examples of the other two answer choices:
Answer c: Sales revenue decreases by $25,000 and expenses increase by $25,000: ($475,000 sales reve-
nue – $425,000 expenses) ÷ $400,000 assets (unchanged) = ROI of 0.125, a decrease from the current
0.25.
Answer d: Sales and expenses increase by the same percentage that total assets increase: Using 10%
increases, sales revenue increases to $550,000 ($500,000 × 1.10); expenses increase to $440,000
($400,000 × 1.10); and assets increase to $440,000 ($400,000 × 1.10). ROI is unchanged at ($550,000
− $440,000) ÷ $440,000, or 0.25.
115 c – The required rate of return used in calculating Residual Income is an interest rate assigned by
management. It is the rate of return that management desires. It is not a cash interest charge but rather
it is an interest charge that is assigned for the purpose of analysis. The required rate of return may be the
company’s weighted average cost of capital, or it may be another rate.
116 b – Because residual income focuses on an absolute amount of return, use of RI for performance
evaluation will prevent the manager of a division with a high current return on investment from rejecting
an investment that would be profitable in terms of increasing shareholder wealth but simply has a lower
rate of return on investment than the division’s current ROI.
117 d – Residual income is the excess of income over the target level of income, which is assets of the
business unit multiplied by the required rate of return. The required rate of return is 10% of the business
unit’s assets ($200,000), or $20,000. Since the division’s operating income is $50,000, the division has
residual income of $30,000 ($50,000 − $20,000).
118 a – If the expected rate of return on a new investment is greater than the required rate of return
(usually the cost of capital), residual income will increase, even if the expected return on the new invest-
ment is lower than the current return on investment.
119 c – Any of the accounting policies for inventory listed has the potential to reduce comparability of ROI
between two similar divisions. However, the accounting policy difference that would reduce comparability
the most is a difference in cost flow assumptions used. ROI is the income of the business unit divided by
the assets of the business unit. The inventory cost flow assumption used affects both the income of the
business unit and the assets of the business unit. Assuming increasing costs, the use of LIFO will increase
cost of goods sold, thereby decreasing net income while also decreasing total assets, because the units on
hand in inventory will be costed at lower prices. The use of FIFO will decrease cost of goods sold, thereby
increasing net income while also increasing total assets, because the units on hand in inventory will be
costed at higher prices. The two ROIs would not be comparable because the bases on which they would be
calculated would be different.
120 c – Customer returns, manufacturing throughput time, and training hours are all non-financial meas-
urements that could be used in a balanced scorecard. Return on investment is a financial measurement,
and number of manufacturing plants is not a meaningful metric.
121 a – To calculate the customer-level operating profit per unit sold for each customer, consider only
relevant revenues and costs. Relevant revenues and costs are those revenues and costs that would cease

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Answers to Questions CMA Part 1

to exist if a customer were no longer making purchases. Once the customer-level operating profit is calcu-
lated, dividing each customer’s operating profit by the number of units sold to that customer results in the
operating profit per unit sold for each customer. Relevant revenues and costs are: sales, cost of goods sold,
delivery cost and order taking cost. Those revenues and costs would go away if the customer were no
longer a customer. Administration, depreciation and utilities costs would continue. Thus, the customer-level
operating profit per unit sold for each of the four customers is as follows:

Customer A Customer B Customer C Customer D


Sales $100,000 $150,000 $200,000 $250,000
Cost of goods sold 50,000 60,000 70,000 75,000
Delivery cost 10,000 25,000 30,000 50,000
Order taking 15,000 20,000 25,000 30,000
Customer-level operating profit $ 25,000 $ 45,000 $75,000 $ 95,000
Divided by number of units sold 10,000 20,000 35,000 50,000
Equals customer-level operating
profit per unit sold $2.50 $2.25 $2.14 $1.90
The customer with the highest customer-level operating profit per unit sold is Customer A.

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