Backflush Costing System and Activity Based Costing System With Solution

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BACKFLUSH COSTING SYSTEM

1-4. Naruto Corporation produces Valentine’s Day merchandise. It uses Just In Time production system which lead
to backflush costing system with three trigger points:

 Purchase of direct materials and incurring of conversion costs.


 Completion of good finished units of product.
 Sale of finished goods.
There are no beginning inventories of materials or finished goods and no beginning or ending work-in process
inventories. Naruto Corporation produced 36,600 finished units in July 2023 and sold 36,000 units. The following
data are for July 2023:
 Direct materials purchased3,200,000
 Direct materials used 3,050,000
 Conversion costs incurred 799,600
 Conversion costs allocated825,000
Required:
1. Prepare summary of journal entries for July (with disposing of under or overallocated conversion costs to
COGS.

Trigger 1 Record purchases of direct materials


Materials and In-process Inventory Control 3,200,000
Accounts Payable 3,200,000
Record conversion cost incurred
Conversion Cost Control 799,600
Various Accounts 799,600
Trigger 2 Record cost of good finished units completed
Finished Goods Control 3,875,000
Materials and In-process Inventory Control 3,050,000
Conversion Costs Allocated 825,000
Trigger 3 Record cost of finished goods sold
Cost of Goods Sold (36,000/36,600x3,875,000) 3,811,475.41
Finished Goods Control 3,811,475.41
Record underallocated or overallocated conversion costs
Conversion Costs Allocated 825,000
Cost of Goods Sold (825,000+799,600) 25,400
Conversion Cost Control 799,600

2. If there are only two trigger points: material purchase and sale of finished goods, prepare summary journal
entries for July.

Trigger 1 Record purchases of direct materials


Materials and In-process Inventory 3,200,000
Accounts Payable 3,200,000
Record conversion costs incurred
Conversion Costs Control 799,600
Various Accounts 799,600
Trigger 2 Record cost of good finished units completed
NO ENTRY
Trigger 3 Record cost of finished goods sold
Cost of Goods Sold 3,811,475.41
Materials and In-process Inventory 3,000,000
(36,000/36,600x3,050,000
Conversion Costs Allocated
(36,000/36,600x825,000) 811,475.4098
Total manufacturing cost= Direct Material used +
Conversion Costs Allocated= 3,875,000.

3. If there are only two trigger points: completion of finished good and sale of finished goods, prepare
summary journal entries for July.

Trigger 1 Record purchases of direct materials


NO ENTRY
Record conversion cost incurred
Conversion Costs Control 799,600
Various Accounts (such as Wages Payable 799,600
Control)

Trigger 2 Record cost of good finished units completed


Finished Goods Control 3,875,000
Accounts Payable Control 3,050,000
Conversion Costs Allocated 825,000
Trigger 3 Record cost of finished goods sold
Cost of Goods Sold (36,000/36,600x3,875,000) 3,811,475.41
Finished Goods Control
3,811,475.41

4. If there are only two trigger points: sale of finished goods, prepare summary journal entries for July.

Trigger 1 Record purchases of direct materials


NO ENTRY
Record conversion costs incurred
Conversion Costs Control 799,600
Various Accounts 799,600
Trigger 2 Record cost of good finished units completed
NO ENTRY
Trigger 3 Cost of Goods Sold 3,811,475.41
Accounts Payable (36,000/36,600x3,050,000) 3,000,000
Conversion Costs Allocated
(36,000/36,600x825,000) 811,475.4098

5. The Brian Manufacturing Company uses a raw and in process (RIP) inventory account and
expenses all conversion costs to the cost of goods sold account. At the end of each month, all inventories are
counted, their conversion cost components are estimated, and inventory account balances are adjusted
accordingly. Raw materials cost is back flushed from RIP to Finished Goods.

The following information is for the month of April:

Requirement: Compute the amount


6. The RMK Manufacturing Company produces only for customer order and most work is shipped within thirty-six
hours of the receipt of an order. JYD uses a raw and in process (RIP) inventory account and expenses all conversion
costs to the cost of goods sold account. Work is shipped immediately upon completion, so there is no finished goods
account. At the end of each month, inventory is counted, its conversion cost component is estimated, and the RIP
account balance is adjusted accordingly. Raw material cost is back flushed from RIP to Cost of goods sold. The
following information is for the month of May.

7. Entries in RIP and Finished Goods. The Lopez Manufacturing Company has a cycle time of 1.5 days, uses a Raw and
In Process (RIP) account, and charges all conversion costs to Cost of Goods Sold. At the end of each month, all inventories
are counted, their conversion cost components are estimated, and inventory account balances are adjusted. Raw material
cost is backflushed from RIP to Finished Goods. The following information is for May:

Beginning balance of RIP account, including $600 of conversion cost...............................$ 5,500


Beginning balance of finished goods account, including $2,000 of
conversion cost................................................................................................................……..6,000
Raw materials received on credit..........................................................................................173,000

Ending RIP inventory per physical count, including $850 conversion


cost estimate..............................................................................................................…………6,200

Ending finished goods inventory per physical count, including $1,550


conversion cost estimate............................................................................................…………4,900

Required: Prepare all the journal entries that involve the RIP account and/or the finished goods account.

SOLUTION:
Raw and In Process.................................................................................................... 173,000
Accounts Payable......................................................................................……173,000

Finished Goods............................................................................................................ 172,550


Raw and In Process....................................................................................…..172,550

To backflush material cost from RIP to Finished Goods. This is a postdeduction. The calculation is:

Material in May 1 RIP balance................................................................................. $ 4,900


Material received during May.................................................................................. 173,000
$ 177,900
Material in May 31 RIP, per physical count........................................................... ……5,350
Amount to be backflushed..................................................................................... $ 172,550

Cost of Goods Sold........................................................................................ 173,200


Finished Goods..................................................................................................... 173,200

To backflush material cost from Finished Goods to Cost of Goods Sold. This is a post deduction. The calculation is:

Material in May 1 finished goods............................................................................. $ 4,000


Material backflushed from RIP................................................................................ 172,550
$ 176,550
Material in May 31 finished goods, per physical count.......................................……..3,350
Amount to be backflushed.................................................................................… $ 173,200

Cost of Goods Sold...................................................................................................... 200


Raw and In Process.................................................................................................... 250
Finished Goods..................................................................................................... 450

Conversion cost in RIP is adjusted from $600 of May 1 to the $850 estimate at May 31. Conversion cost in Finished
Goods is adjusted from the $2,000 at May 1 to the $1,550 estimate at May 31.

8. Jane, owner of Jane Corporation, has provided the following information for transactions that
occurred during August. The Corporation uses a JIT costing system.

a. Raw materials were purchased at the cost of P950,000


b. All materials purchased were requisitioned for production.
c. Direct labor costs of P2,500,000 were incurred
d. Actual factory overhead costs amounted to P6,000,000
e. Applied conversion costs totaled P8,100,000. This included P2,500,000 of direct labor
f. All units were completed.

Compute the amount to be back flushed from RIP to Finished Goods.

Solution:
Raw materials purchased were requisitioned
For production P950,000

(No RIP beg and ending balance)

9. Using the same information in No. 2, compute the amount of Finished Goods after all transactions
have been completed.

Solution:
Amount to be back flushed from RIP to Finished Goods P950,000
Applied conversion costs to production 8,100,000
Amount of Finished Goods P9,050,000

10. Sweet N Sniff manufactures a product known as “Sweet Melody Lotion”. The transactions for the month of March 2020 were
as follows:

Purchase of raw materials P1,000,000


Labor/Wages incurred 300,000
Factory overhead incurred 400,000
Units completed 50,000 units
Units sold 49,900 units

There are no beginning inventories of raw materials, work in process and finished goods. The standard cost per unit of
output is P34.80 (P19.80 for raw materials and P15 for conversion costs, of which P6 is for labor cost.

Required: Prepare the journal entries if:


a. Using Traditional costing
b. Back flush costing using three trigger points (purchases, completion of goods and upon sale)
Solutions: a. Traditional Costing
1. Raw Materials P1,000,000
Accounts payable P1,000,000

2. Work in Process (50,000 X P19.80) 990,000


Raw Materials 990,000

3. . Work in Process 300,000


Accrued Wages 300,000

4. Factory Overhead 400,000


Various 400,000

5. Work In process (50,000 X P9) 450,000


FOH Applied 450,000

6. Finished Goods 1,740,000


Work in Process 1,740,000

7. COGS 1,736,520
Finished Goods (49,900 X P34.80) 1,736,520

8. FOH Applied 450,000


FOH 400,000
COGS 50,000
b. Back flush- Three Trigger Points
1. Raw in process (RIP) Inventory P1,000,000
Accounts Payable P1,000,000

2. Conversion Cost 700,000


Accrued Payroll 300,000
Various 400,000

3. Finished Goods 1,740,000


RIP Inventory 990,000
CC Applied (50,000 X P15) 750,000

4. COGS 1,736,520
Finished Goods 1,736,520

5. Overhead Applied CC 50,000


COGS 50,000

ACTIVITY BASED COSTING SYSTEM

11. The Shiffuden Corporation manufactures books and has the following budgeted data for 2023:

Estimated Estimated Driver


Overhead Totals In 2023
Set Ups 3,000,000 1,500 Set Ups
Supervision 1,000,000 40,000 Direct Labor Hours
Shipping 1,400,000 35,000

A. Calculate the overhead cost applied each overhead category.


Setups 3,000,000/1,500= 2,000 Per Set Up
Supervision 1,000,000/40,000= 25 Per Direct Labor Hour
Shipping 1,400,000/35,0000= 40 Per Order

B. Calculate the overhead applied for the following totals for 2023.

Actual Total Setups 1,450


Actual Total Direct Labor Hours 41,000
Actual Total Orders 30,300

Actual Total Setups 1,450 x 2,000 2,900,000


Actual Total Direct Labor Hours 41,000 x 25 1,025,000
Actual Total Orders 30,300 x 40 1,212,000
TOTAL 5,137,000

12. Romark Housecleaning provides housecleaning services to its clients. The company uses an activity-based
costing system for its overhead costs. The company has provided the following

data from its activity-based costing system.

The "Other" activity cost pool consists of the costs of idle capacity and organization-

sustaining costs. One particular client, the Lopez family, requested 31 jobs during the year that

required a total of 62 hours of housecleaning. For this service, the client was charged 1,620

Required:

a. Compute the activity rates (i.e., cost per unit of activity) for the activity cost pools.

Round off all calculations to the nearest whole cent.


b. Using the activity-based costing system, compute the customer margin for the

Lopez family. Round off all calculations to the nearest whole cent.

c. Assume the company decides instead to use a traditional costing system in which

ALL costs are allocated to customers based on cleaning hours. Compute the

margin for the Lopez family. Round off all calculations to the nearest whole

cent.
13. Tom would like to institute an activity-based costing system to price products. The company’s Purchasing
Department incurs costs of 550,000 per year and has six employees.

Purchasing has determined the three major activities that occur during the year.

During the year 50,000 phone calls were made in the department: 15,000 purchase orders

were issued; and 10,000 shipments were received. Product A required 200 phone calls,

150 receiving reports, and 50 purchase orders. Product B required 350 phone calls, 400

receiving reports, and 100 purchase orders.

a. Determine the amount of purchasing department cost that should be assigned to

each of these products.

b. Determine purchasing department cost per unit if 1,500 units of Product A and

3,000 units of Product B were manufactured during the year.

SOLUTION:

150,000/15,000 = 10 per purchase order

175,000/10,000 = 17.50 per receiving report

225,000/50,000 = 4.50 per phone call


14. The MeNyou Co produces three products, A, B and C, all made from the same material. Until now, it has used
traditional absorption costing to allocate overheads to its products. The company is now considering an activity-
based costing system in the hope that it will improve profitability, Information for the three products for the last year
is as follows:

Requirements:

a. Calculate the full cost per unit for products A. B and C under traditional absorption costing, using direct labor
hours as the basis for appointment.

b. Calculate the full cost per unit of each product using activity based costing.
15. Triple Limited makes three types of gold watch – the Diva (D), the Classic (C) and the Poser (P). A traditional product costing
system is used at present; although an activity based costing (ABC) system is being considered. Details of the three products for a
typical period are:

Hours per Unit Materials Production


Labor Hours Machine Hours Cost per Unit Units
Product D 1/2 1 1/2 20 750
Product C 1 1/2 1 12 1,250
Product P 1 3 25 7,000

Total production overheads are $654,500 and further analysis shows that the total production overheads can be divided as
follows:
%
Costs relating to set-ups 35
Costs relating to machinery 20
Costs relating to materials handling 15
Costs relating to inspection 30
Total production overhead 100
The following total activity volumes are associated with each product line for the period as a whole:
Number of set-ups Number of movements of materials Number of inspections
Product D. 75. 12 150
Product C 115 21 180
Product P 480 87 670
670 120 1,000

Direct labor costs $6 per hour and production overheads are absorbed on a machine hour basis. The overhead absorption rate for
the period is $28 per machine hour.

Required:
(a) Calculate the cost per unit for each product using traditional methods, absorbing overheads on the basis of machine hours.

(b) Calculate the cost per unit for each product using ABC principles (work to two decimal places).

SOLUTION:

(a. ) Traditional cost per unit

D C P
Material 20 12 25
Labor ($6/hour) 3 9 6
Direct costs 23 21 31
Production overhead
($28/machine hour) 42 28 84
Total production cost/unit 65 49 115

(b. ) ABC cost per unit

(i. ) Total overheads


These were given at $654,500
(ii. ) Total machine hours (needed as the driver for machining overhead)

Product Hours/unit Production units Total hours


D 1 1/2 750 1,125
C 1 1,250 1,250
P 3 7,000 21,000
Total machine hours 23,375

(iii. ) Analysis of total overheads and cost per unit of activity


Type of Overhead Driver % Total Overhead Level of driver activity Cost/driver
Set-ups No. of set-ups 35 229,075 670 341.90
Machining Machine hours 20 130,900 23,375 5.60
Materials handling Mats. Movements 15 98,175 120 818.13
Inspection No. of inspections 30 196,350 1,000 196.35
100 654,500

(iv. ) Total overheads by product and per unit


Product D Product C Product P Total
Overhead Activity Cost $ Activity Cost $ Activity Cost $ Activity Cost $
Set-ups 75 25,643 115 39,319 480 164,113 670 229,075
Machining 1,125 6,300 1,250 7,000 21,000 117,600 23,375 130,900
Material 12 9,817 21 17,181 87 71,177 120 98,175
Handling
Inspection 150 29,453 180 35,343 670 131,554 1,000 196,350
Total 77,213 98,843 484,444 654,500
overhead
cost
Units 750 1,250 7,000
produced
Cost per $ 94.95 $ 79.07 $ 69.21
unit

(v. ) Cost per unit


D C P
Direct costs (from (a)) 23.00 21.00 31.00
Overheads (from (iv)) 94.95 79.07 69.21
117.95 100.07 100.21

16. A company makes two products using the same type of materials and skilled workers. The following information is available.

Fixed costs relating to material handling amount to $100,000. The cost driver for these costs is the volume of material purchased.

General fixed costs, absorbed on this basis of labor nouns, amount $180,000

Requirement:

Using the Activity Based Costing, what is the total fixed overhead amount to be absorbed into each unit of product B to the
nearest whole amount?

SOLUTION:
Total material budget ((1,000 units x 10) + (2,000 units x 20)) = 50,000
Fixed costs related to material handling = $100,000
OAR = 2/$ of material
Product B = 2 x 20 = 40
Total labor budget ((1,000 units x 5) + (2,000 units x 20) = 45,000
General fixed costs = $180,000
OAR = $4/$ of labor
Product B = 4 x 20 = 80
Total fixed overhead cost per unit of Product B (40 + 80) = 120

17-20. A company manufactures conference tables and follows ABC to absorbs overhead. The company has chosen
the following cost pools and cost drivers for the production overhead:

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION:

o The company receives a special order of 20 conference tables that requires the following number of support
activities.

o Number of machines set ups: 60, number of production order: 25, number of machine hours:400, number of
parts to be repaired: 50

o Direct material Cost per unit-4000, direct wages per unit: 2500, Direct expense per unit-Rs1,000

Requirements:

1. Compute the overhead rate for each cost driver

2. How much production overhead would be charged to this order?

3. Compute the factory cost for this order.

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