Chap 026
Chap 026
Chap 026
CHAPTER 26
SHORT-RUN ALTERNATIVE CHOICE DECISIONS
Changes from the Twelfth Edition
All changes to Chapter 26 were minor.
Approach
Despite the introduction of the concept of contribution margin in Chapter 16, students often have
difficulty making the transition from the full cost accounting structure in Chapters 17-21 to the
differential accounting approach described here. Even after the first case study to jar their previous
ways of thinking about costs, at least one or two more cases are needed before students become
comfortable with the differential approach.
In this chapter, the principal pedagogical difficulties seem to relate to (1) distinguishing between
differential costs and full costs, particularly allocated costs, and (2) sunk costs. Several of the examples
are intended to explain the difference between differential costs and full costs, and it may be desirable to
go through these calculations. Illustration 26-3 is designed to explain the irrelevance of sunk costs and is
probably worth detailed attention. Several of the questions focus on these matters also.
Some believe that it is not necessary to describe each of the types of alternative choice problems in detail,
as is done in the latter part of the chapter, because the same approach applies to all of them. Others prefer
to treat each type separately because students may in fact have difficulty in relating the general approach
to specific situations. The only specific type of problem that introduces new substantive material is
Economic Order Quantity; the instructor can announce that this section be omitted if he or she wishes, for
it is not required for any subsequent chapter, and it is usually a difficult topic (although the technique is
widely used).
The just one fallacy section ties this chapter both to the expanded coverage of step-function costs in
Chapter 16 and activity-based costing in Chapter 18. We hope this section corrects what we view as the
overselling of short-term contribution analysis in business schools over the past 25 years.
The automobile example is a situation with which almost all students are familiar, and thus provides a
good setting for a review of the differential cost concepts. A student may be asked to suggest other
problems that might arise in connection with the use of an automobile (such as loaning it to a friend on a
cost-sharing basis, loaning it on a full-cost reimbursement basis), and another student may then be asked
to suggest how each such problem should be tackled.
Cases
(Note: Case 16-1, Hospital Supply, Inc., can be used here if not previously assigned.)
Import Distributors, Inc. requires the identification of differential costs as a basis for deciding
discontinuance of a department.
Former Carpet Company involves a pricing decision where cost-volume relationships are key to
identifying the differential costs.
Precision Worldwide, Inc. is a relevant cost case. It necessitates the use of the concepts of sunk cost,
opportunity cost, and contribution analysis.
26-1
Baldwin Bicycle Company deals with analysis of the profitability to a company of a major potential
customer account; the decision has strategic implications.
Problems
Problem 26-1: Dover Rubber Company
The Dover Rubber Company is faced with having to choose between two alternatives, which can be
evaluated as follows:
26-2
Depreciation................................................................................................................................................................
$3,600
Power..........................................................................................................................................................................
400
Rent.............................................................................................................................................................................
1,000
Heat and light..............................................................................................................................................................
100
$5,100
26-3
b. On the basis of the data on the question, it would pay Jackson to accept the order:
New sales....................................................................................................................................................................................
$80,000
Less: Standard sales....................................................................................................................................................................
25,000
Net increased sales......................................................................................................................................................................
$55,000
Differential costs [from a (1) ].....................................................................................................................................................
49,100
Cash advantage to special units...................................................................................................................................................
$ 5,900
Other factors must be considered such as the long-term consequences of failing to satisfy standard parts
customers, the reliability of the cost estimates, and the importance of this valued customer.
Problem 26-4: Taylor Electronics, Inc.
Variable costs:
Direct materials
Direct labor
Variable manufacturing
Overhead
Variable selling expenses
Total variable costs
$2.05
3.60
2.70
($2.30 - .25)
.90
$9.25
Any price above $9.25 will provide a contribution that will cover a portion of Taylors fixed expenses.
Problem 26-5 Tran Company
Objective function:
Constraints:
Maximize P = 4Y + 5Z (Contrib.)
1.0Y + 0.8Z
0.5Y + 2.0Z
Z
Y0
20
26-4
Thus Tran Company should manufacture at point q (i.e., 80 units of Model Y and 200 units of Model Z,
as this maximizes contribution). Note that the Department B capacity is not a binding constraint, as the
optimal solution (in fact, any feasible solution) leaves excess capacity in B. Thus the company might
want to consider expanding Department A, or purchasing similar services from an outside contractor in
order to utilize all available capacity in Department B.
26-5
Cases
Even if the instructor does not plan to teach Chapter 27, if students have been exposed to discounting and
net present value, cases from Chapter 27 can be used with the present chapter. In my experience, most
finance courses emphasize discounting mechanics, but require of students very little cost analysis; and the
real challenge in capital budgeting is cost (and revenue) identification, not discounting mechanics.
Chapter 27s cases address this challenge.
Note on Use of Cases
The following notes relate not only to the cases in Chapter 26, but also to those in Chapter 27.
1. In executive development programs, instructors sometimes find it to be good strategy to give students
part of the figure-work solution at the time the case is assigned. Adults are often reluctant to go
through all the calculations involved in some of the cases. These partial solutions can usually be
given orally with little difficulty, and figures in the commentary for the case can be used for this
purpose. It is usually desirable to require the students to do some calculations, however.
2. Figures in the commentaries are often shown in unrounded form. This is done because it helps to
show the derivation of the figures. As a practical matter, when the problem is discussed in class,
rounded figures should be used. In fact, when students put forth figures with more significant digits
than their accuracy warrants, it may he desirable to explain to them the notion of significant digits.
This serves to emphasize the inevitable roughness and inaccuracy of the figures involved in these
problems, which is a matter that is very easy to overlook.
3. There is a tendency for the class to concentrate on the financial aspects of a case so that not enough
time remains to discuss the nonfinancial aspects. This makes it difficult to arrive at a balanced
decision on the issue. It is therefore sometimes necessary to cut off discussion of the numbers in order
to avoid giving the impression that issues of the type discussed here can be decided solely or
primarily on the basis of quantifiable informative.
This teaching note was prepared by Professor James S. Reece. Copyright by James S. Reece.
26-6
Although some later differential cost cases have quantitative outcomes that seem quite conclusive
irrespective of possible qualitative arguments, in this case the decision is not so clear-cut, and probably
rests primarily on the students assumptions regarding the degree of interdependence of sales among the
three IDI lines, and the amount of seasonality in wholesaler television revenues.
Comments on Questions
Exhibit A shows what might have happened to revenues and costs had the television department not been
operated in the first quarter of 1994. The exhibit incorporates the following assumptions, each of which
can be discussed in class:
1. All gross margin will be lost, because it is assumed that cost of goods sold was completely variable
(and hence differential) with sales revenues. At least initially, it is assumed that sales in the other two
departments will not be affected.
Exhibit A
Impact of Discontinuing Television Department
Forgone gross margin.........................................................................................................................................................
$(189,930)
Cost savings:......................................................................................................................................................................
Personnel expenses........................................................................................................................................................
$10,140
Department managers office........................................................................................................................................
12,393
Inventory taxes and insurance.......................................................................................................................................
37,274
Delivery costs................................................................................................................................................................
32,248
Sales commissions.........................................................................................................................................................
80,621
Interest costs..................................................................................................................................................................
23,708
Total savings.............................................................................................................................................................
196,384
Impact on operating profit..................................................................................................................................................
$ 6,454
2. Even though warehouse personnel serve all three departments, since the television line is one-third of
total sales, it is assumed that about the same ratio of total labor (i.e., the full amount now allocated to
the television line) can be saved if this line is discontinued.
3. If the department is discontinued, all of the department managers office costs can be saved. Students
may argue for assuming only part is saved; this is valid, but I suggest to them that rather than worry
too much about the exact amount, we make the extreme assumption that all of the cost is saved. If the
quantitative analysis turns out not to favor one alternative overwhelmingly, then we can reexamine
this and other assumptions to see if different reasonable assumptions cause the numbers to favor the
opposite alternative.
4. No rent will be saved, because of the noncancellable lease. It is conceivable, but not likely, that IDI
might sublease some space freed up if the television line were dropped; if so, the forgone sublease
revenue is an opportunity cost of retaining the television line.
5. With no television inventory, the inventory taxes and insurance should be saved.
6. Since the entire warehouse probably has to be heated and lighted regardless of its degree of
utilization, few, if any utilities will be saved.
26-7
7.
8. Delivery cost savings are highly debatable. If retailers expect deliveries at certain intervals, IDI might
have to make as many delivery runs as before, but with less-full trucks. In the short run, then, many
of these costs may be nondifferential. In the longer run, however, if a company loses one-third of its
volume, it should be able to redeploy its delivery resources in a way that requires only about twothirds of the former resources. Again, I prefer to make the extremely favorable assumption that all
$32,248 can be saved; if with this assumption keeping the department looks advisable, it would be
even more advisable if only a portion of the $32,248 can be saved.
9. Sales commissions should be differential, even though each salesperson now sells all three lines. If a
salesperson has a minimum guarantee, and if that amount would be higher than his or her
commissions excluding television sales, then in the short run not all of the commission expense will
be differential; but if this is the case, in the medium term IDI should be able to reduce the number of
salespersons so that everyones commission again is above the guaranteed minimum.
10. Given that there was a separate expense category, department managers office, it is doubtful that
many of IDIs other administrative costs would be saved. Exhibit A assumes no savings.
11. Note 7 to Exhibit 1 of the case states that only one-third of the imputed finance charge on inventory
was out-of-pocket interest cost. Since this department presumably accounted for about one-third of
total inventories, if all of the interest cost referred to in Note 7 is related to inventory financing, then
all of IDIs out-of-pocket inventory interest costs could probably be saved if television inventories
were eliminated. This is tricky to handle in class because:
a. Students who havent caught on yet to the differential cost concept will claim the full $23,708 as
savings, but for the wrong reason (i.e., theyll assume all the expenses in Exhibit 1 can be saved).
b. Students with some insight into the differential concept will say $7,903 (one-third of $23,708)
will be saved; but this implicitly assumes that IDI would use only one-third of the funds from
liquidating the television inventory to repay inventory-related debt and would use the other twothirds for some other purpose. Generally, students who claim $7,903 savings dont recognize that
they have made this implicit assumption.
c. The best students will say $23,708 will be saved, because the funds from liquidating the
television inventory should be adequate to repay all the inventory-related debt. With this
assumption, IDI would have been about $6,500 better off in the first quarter of 1994, without the
television line. But recall that this result includes favorable assumptions about all department
managers office costs and delivery costs being differential.
Nevertheless, based on Exhibit A and the related assumptions, the decision is not very clear-cut.
At this point, students often point out the following: (1) the assumption that dropping one of three
lines will have no unfavorable impact on the other two is questionable; and (2) with many
television sales at the holiday season, the first quarter of the year is probably the lowest for IDI.
Both of these points strengthen the argument for retaining the television department.
Case 26-2: Forner Carpet Company*
Note: This case is unchanged from the Twelfth Edition.
This teaching note was prepared by Professor James S. Reece. Copyright by James S. Reece.
26-8
Approach
If used as the first case on differential cost, I let the students grope around with the cost data here, until
they discover for themselves the differential costs that are needed in the analysis. Usually, someone will
quickly conclude that the price should be $4.75 since at all volumes shown in Exhibit 2 the indicated cost
is higher than $3.95. After some discussion, I end up with the figures shown below on the board.
I ask the students to define the nature of the problem here: we want to know the differential revenues
between the two price-volume combinations and the differential costs. In this case, the differential costs
are the variable costs, because we are considering costs at two nonzero volumes. I emphasize that we are
not interested in variable costs per se, but in differential costs. (In the Hanson case, which involves
dropping a product, some of the fixed costs may also be differential.)
We then examine Exhibit 2, line by line. Students have no trouble identifying raw materials cost as
variable, because the amount per unit is constant. But many say that materials spoilage, direct labor, and
department direct overhead are semivariable, because they dont remain constant per unit. I then ask them
what graphs of unit cost versus volume look like for variable, semivariable, and fixed costs (see
Illustration 16-3); and then ask what graphs of materials spoilage, direct labor, and department direct
overhead in Exhibit 2 look like. They then realize that the graphs are ideal models, and that the
spoilage, labor, and department direct fit closest with the variable cost model (i.e., unit cost vs. volume is
a horizontal line).
Department indirect overhead costs are demonstrably fixed. At each volume, the unit cost times the
volume equals $62,000. Moreover, a commonsense reading of the footnote in Exhibit 2 should cause one
to believe that these costs are fixed (supervision, depreciation, heat, and light).
General overhead costs throw the students. On a per-unit basis, they appear to be variable; but this is
solely because they are charged at a rate of 30 percent of direct labor, which is a variable cost. (Its
always discouraging to me that so many students forget all about overhead absorption rates as soon as we
leave Chapter 20.) Again, given the items that are included in departmental overhead costs, the only
remaining factory costs that can be included in general overhead are such things as the plant managers
salary, taxes on the factory building, and so on: i.e., costs (or at least costs that would not be differential
for a volume swing of 75,000 yards on a product that in total constitutes only about 3 percent of company
sales).
Once they understand general overhead, students see quite readily that selling and administrative costs are
also an allocation based on an average costing rate (45 percent of factory cost). Since the sales force sells
the entire line, and they are on a salary (not commission) basis, it is not likely that there would be a
significant change in selling costs for a change in volume that represents such a small percentage of total
company activity.
Comments on Questions
Question 1
26-9
I do not think that the companys need for capital funds has a great bearing on the pricing decision. The
course of action that generates the largest differential cash flow would seem to be best, whether or not the
company has a great need for funds. In fact, that may be exactly the thinking of Forner competitors, who
are said to be in poor financial condition, they may be generating more cash flow at the $3.95 per price
than they were at $4.75. Of course, if this were not a mature product (as it seems, in fact, to be) an
argument could be made for cutting priceseven at a sacrifice in total cash flowin the short run in
order to establish a larger market share for the longer run.
Question 2
Approach I:
Difference
Unit contribution........................................................................................................................................................................
$ 2.646
$ 1.884
* Volume....................................................................................................................................................................................
*75,000
*150,000
=Total contribution.....................................................................................................................................................................
$198,450
$282,600
+ $84,150
Approach II:
Revenues....................................................................................................................................................................................
$356,250
$592,500
$236,250
- Variable costs...........................................................................................................................................................................
157,800
309,900
- 152,100
= Total contribution....................................................................................................................................................................
$198,450
$282,600
+ $84,150
I prefer the second approach because it is easier for students to begin by calculating differential revenues.
We can then say, before any cost calculations are performed, that if the differential costs of producing
another 75,000 yards (150,000 - 75,000) are less than $236,250, we know Forner will be better off
financially if the price is lowered to $3.95. Also, whichever approach is used, I stress that it is not
differential contribution in which we are interested in general, but differential cash flow (or differential
income, which is usually equivalent). It just happens in this case that maximizing contribution will
maximize cash flow, because the fixed costs are nondifferential (i.e., it is unlikely that this volume
change in just one product with relatively low sales will enable reduction of any step-function costs over
this six-month period).
Question 3
This question asks the student to calculate the volume at $4.75 at which Forner will be indifferent
(relative to the cash flow criterion) between the $4.75 price and the expected sales at a price of $3.95.
Unit Contribution @ $4.75 * Volume = Contribution @ $3.95
$2.646X = $282,600
or
819,590 750,000
=.093 more than estimated
750,000
26-10
This can be compared with the expected market share of at least 11.9% (75,000/630,000) at the $4.75
price. Assuming competitors raise their prices back to $4.75, it can also be compared with the share
Forner has gotten in the past when all companies charged the same price (35 percent).
Question 4
A more thorough analysis would include (1) information on different total industry volumes at different
industry price structures (instead of assuming a constant volume of 630,000 sq. yds.); (2) probabilities of
competitors price decisions given an announced price by Forner; and (3) probabilistic estimates of
Forners market share at various industry price structures. I display this approach with a decision tree
shown on the next page.
This makes it clear that in question 2 we calculated only two of a multitude of possible endpoint values.
Question 5
Analysis of Exhibit 1 reveals that market share has been 35 percent in every period for which all
companies charged the same price. Assuming (admittedly, somewhat unrealisticallythough not totally
so for a derived-demand product) that industry sales would have been the same had Forner charged $3.95
in 1993; we have the following (approximate) pro forma contributions:
1993 - 1: 450,000 * .35 = 157,500 * $1.8841 =
1993 - 2: 562,500 * .35 = 196,875 * $1.8612 =
$296,730
366,384
$663,114
$362,340
303,638
$665,978
This suggests that the decision was a good one for 19931 and for 1993 as a whole but was not a good
one for 19932 (when market share dropped significantly).
Decision
This is a good case, in part because either decision can be defended. I take a vote, which always results in
most students choosing the $3.95 price. I then argue for $4.75 on the assumption that if Forner holds out
the price umbrella one more time, the competition will finally climb under it, in part because their costs
should be higher than Forners. (The case says Forner is more efficient, andsince Forner is the marketshare-leaderlearning curve theory supports this.) The calculation for question 3 shows that with all
competitors at the higher price, Forner would need its share to recover only to 17.0 percent (not the
historical 35 percent when all competitors charge the same price as Forner) to be as well off as they
expect to be if they drop their price to $3.95; and if their share recovers to 35 percent, they are obviously
far better off. This argument is based heavily on the implied inelasticity of the total market for this
product; i.e., the industry as a whole, and each company in it, can make higher profits at a higher price,
and at lower prices every companys share will restabilize at its traditional level if everyone charges the
lower price.
26-11
26-12
This note was prepared by Professor William J. Bruns, Jr. and Professor M. Edgar Barrett. Coypright 1997
President and Fellows of Harvard College. Harvard Business School teaching note 5-197-108.
*
This teaching note was prepared by Professor James S. Reece. Copyright by James S. Reece.
26-13
Revenue.............................................................................................................................................................................
$
92.29
Variable costs:
Materials........................................................................................................................................................................
$39.80
Labor.............................................................................................................................................................................
19.60
Overhead ($24.50 * 40%)..............................................................................................................................................
9.80
69.20
Unit contribution................................................................................................................................................................
$
23.09
Times annual volume.........................................................................................................................................................
*25,000
Total contribution..........................................................................................................................................................
$577,250.00
2. Lost contribution from regular bikes:
=
=
=
=
=
$ 38,142
9,265
7,958
55,365
38,925
25,957
$120,247
Some students will subtract for reduced assets associated with lost sales, which is more thorough than the
analysis above. Also, occasionally a student suggests that added materials would be financed by
additional interest-free accounts payable. Thirty days payables would be $83,000; 45 days would be
$125,000, or $14,375 avoided financing costs at an annual rate of 11.5 percent, making total holding costs
$105,872.
5. Summary (assuming only variable costs are differential):
26-14
6.
Revenue.................................................................................................................................................................
$ 92.29
Costs......................................................................................................................................................................
83.90
Unit margin...........................................................................................................................................................
$ 8.39
Times annual volume............................................................................................................................................
*25,000
Total profit............................................................................................................................................................
$209,750
2. Lost profit from regular bikes:
=
=
=
=
=
$ 38,142
10,515
9,649
58,306
47,194
25,957
$131,457
(or $117,082)
26-15
Thus, when the analysis is based on full costs it appears that (at best) the deal would have little impact on
profit. This, then, leaves us with the question of which analysis is right. From the data gathered by Ms.
Leister, one cannot say with any certainty. This is a potentially long-term volume increase of about 22
percent, which, when added to base sales of 97,000 units (100,000 is about 75 percent of capacity, we are
told), pushes Baldwin to about 92 percent of capacity. Thus, if Baldwins regular sales increased above
current expectations, or if Hi-Valu needed more than 25,000 bikes a year, Baldwin might well find itself
incurring incremental costs in excess of variable costs (for adding overtime or a second shift, for
example). Conversely, if Baldwin turned down this deal, and volume held at about 100,000 bikes a year,
in the longer term Baldwin might reduce some of its current fixed (i.e., step-function) costs by
gradually reducing capacity from the present level of about 133,000 to closer to 100,000. Also, if we
think about the problem as one of analyzing customer profitability, the case for full costs becomes
stronger, since a companys customers must collectively provide revenues in excess of total costs.
Thus, the best we can do is make some conditional statements, based on assumptions about the degree to
which a 22 percent volume increase would increase costs. If one believes the increase would be well less
than the $324,000 added contribution calculated above, then the indication is that Baldwin should accept
Hi-Valus proposal. (Presently, production overhead at normal volume is $1.47 million per year;
$324,000 is 22 percent of this amount.) Of course, discussionand related sensitivity analysisshould
be entertained concerning other assumptions in the analysis: added Hi-Valu volume, additional sales
losses if current dealers drop Baldwins line, and so on.
Students should end the class recognizing that an initial analysis, based on a quick compilation of data, is
conclusive in some cases (e.g., it was in question 1 of Hanson Manufacturing Company), and is therefore
worthwhile, since the added cost of unnecessary data refinement is avoided. They should also realize that
sometimes, as here, the initial analysis is inconclusive, and more detailed information on cost behavior
must be gathered before a definite conclusion can be reached. The main thing, of course, is that they
clearly see which assumptions validity must be researched, and that they henceforth will be sensitive to
the matter of incremental current asset holding costs. From the perspective of a longer-term analysis of
customer profitability (as opposed to viewing this strictly as a shorter term incremental volume question),
I feel the Hi-Valu account is of dubious attractiveness, unless a higher unit price can be negotiated.
Addendum to Commentary: Strategic Analysis
In the Spring 1988 issue of the Sloan Management Review, Professors John K. Shank and Vijay
Govindarajan wrote a strategic analysis of this case, entitled Making Strategy Explicit in Cost Analysis:
A Case Study. This article looks at the issue not only in terms of cost analysis, but also in terms of the
decision as an important shift in corporate strategy (especially marketing strategy). Instructors wishing to
take this tack are urged to read this article, and to use the Baldwin case for two sessions. I have
successfully used the case this way in management development programs, giving teams the assignment
to analyze the case, having them make a brief presentation to the whole class of their recommendations,
and then leading the class through the strategic analysis following all of their presentations.
In brief, the approach is as follows: At present, Baldwin is a marginal operation: its $255,000 net income,
represented only a 2.3 percent return on sales, a 3.2 percent return on assets, and an 8.2 percent return on
equity. Asset turnover is only 1.34 times, owing to 46 days receivables (not bad) and 125 days inventory
(alarming, given bicycle sales are seasonal and this is the calendar year-end figure). Thus, especially
assuming that only the variable costs would be differential, the $324,000 added pretax profit on about
$1.967 million differential sales ($92.29 * 25,000 - $113.38 * 3,000) seems very appealing. The
debt/capitalization ratio is 33 percent, which may raise a question whether the firm has the debt capacity
to finance the $610,000 additional assets (net of $125,000 additional payables) needed for the
newbusiness. Nevertheless, the opportunity seems attractive.
26-16
But what market niche will the Challenger bikes fill? It can be argued that they fit in a new niche between
Baldwins present mid-price, mid-quality bicycles and low-price, low-qua1ity onesi.e., Challenger
would be mid-quality but low-price. Assuming typical discount house versus bicycle shop margins, and
allowing for freight costs, Hi-Valu might retail the Challenger bike for about $130, whereas the bicycle
shop would be likely to charge $180 or more for the similar Baldwin-brand bicycle. Although the bicycle
shop would provide some additional services for its price (free assembly and post-purchase adjustments),
there is a real risk that the impact on Baldwins traditional salesand thus on its traditional retailers
would be far greater than the estimated 3,000 units. (Suppose for example, that Consumer Reports tested
bicycles and said that the Challenger was essentially similar to the higher priced Baldwin.) As some
clothing companies have discovered, they run a risk of full-price merchandisers dropping their line if
similar (or identical) merchandise is distributed through discounters.
A worst-case scenario goes something like this. Assuming that all of Baldwins other expenses in 1988
were fixed ($2.354 million), and including the $1.47 million fixed production costs, the current breakeven
volume is about 87,000 bikes, or two-thirds of capacity (assuming a unit contribution of $44). If Baldwin
lost substantially all of its traditional outlets (remember, this is a worst-case analysis), the unit
contribution would drop to about $23 and the breakeven volume would be 166,000 bikes, which is 34,000
over one-shift capacity. (Thus, the breakeven would be even higher, since fixed costs would go up with a
second shift added.) Clearly, with its current cost structure, Baldwin would be hard pressed to survive if it
were selling solely to discounters.
Thus, this is not just a simple differential business decisionit is a strategic choice with potentially
disastrous consequences. On the other hand, maybe the days of Baldwin-quality-level bicycle sales
through other-than-discount retailers are limited, and Baldwin needs to figure out how to make the best of
this opportunity to make what will eventually become a necessary shift. In either event, its clear that
Baldwin needs to get its house in order as regards costs and inventory controls.
26-17