CH 14
CH 14
CH 14
FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT
MULTIPLE CHOICE
1.
consciousness system.
understanding system.
avoidance system.
control system.
ANSWER:
2.
ANSWER:
EASY
qualitative measures
program budgeting
surrogate measures of output
all of the above
ANSWER:
4.
EASY
3.
EASY
Setting organizational goals and objectives and preparing a budget are aspects of control
a.
b.
c.
d.
during an event.
before an event.
after an event.
before, during, and after an event.
ANSWER:
EASY
151
152
5.
Chapter 15
Which of the following does not create a specific price level change?
a.
b.
c.
d.
ANSWER:
6.
EASY
ANSWER:
EASY
traditional budgets.
zero-base budgets.
variance targets.
engineered cost analyses.
ANSWER:
8.
As the economy becomes more and more depressed, a companys management decides to
slash spending on research and development. What is the likely effect of this action on net
income? Net income will be
a.
b.
c.
d.
7.
Financial Management
EASY
Minimizing period-by-period increases in unit variable costs and total fixed costs defines
efforts of cost
a.
b.
c.
d.
control.
avoidance.
containment.
reduction.
ANSWER:
EASY
Chapter 15
9.
Financial Management
Cost containment practices by a firm would not be effective for cost increases caused by
a.
b.
c.
d.
inflation.
a reduction in the quantity of an input purchased.
normal seasonality.
a reduction in the number of suppliers.
ANSWER:
10.
EASY
inflation/deflation
changes in quantities purchased
technological change
changes in supply chain costs
ANSWER:
MEDIUM
ANSWER:
12.
All of the following are explanations of cost changes. Which of these influences can be
substantially affected by cost containment measures?
a.
b.
c.
d.
11.
153
EASY
variable costs.
discretionary costs.
committed costs.
period costs.
ANSWER:
EASY
154
13.
Chapter 15
An effective control system functions before, during, and after an event. However, little
control is possible during the event for most
a.
b.
c.
d.
ANSWER:
14.
b.
c.
d.
EASY
ANSWER:
EASY
never be eliminated.
be eliminated in the short term and in the long term.
be eliminated in the long term but not in the short term.
be eliminated in the short term but not in the long term.
ANSWER:
16.
15.
Financial Management
EASY
ANSWER:
EASY
Chapter 15
17.
Financial Management
ANSWER:
18.
MEDIUM
program budgeting.
zero-base budgeting.
capital budgeting.
flexible budgeting.
ANSWER:
MEDIUM
ANSWER:
20.
If a discretionary cost can be treated like an engineered cost, cost control may be achieved
through the use of
a.
b.
c.
d.
19.
155
EASY
If a cost can be reduced to zero in the short run without significantly harming the
organization, the cost is a
a.
b.
c.
d.
variable cost.
committed cost.
discretionary cost.
product cost.
ANSWER:
EASY
156
21.
Chapter 15
ANSWER:
22.
MEDIUM
ANSWER:
EASY
ANSWER:
24.
23.
Financial Management
EASY
Which of the following is not a factor that directly affects the budget for a discretionary
cost?
a.
b.
c.
d.
ANSWER:
EASY
Chapter 15
25.
Financial Management
If an actual discretionary cost is exactly equal to the budgeted level of that cost, which of
the following statements is true?
a.
b.
c.
d.
ANSWER:
26.
MEDIUM
ANSWER:
MEDIUM
costs that management decides to incur in the current period to enable the
company to achieve objectives other than the filling of orders placed by customers.
costs that are likely to respond to the amount of attention devoted to them by a
specified manager.
costs that are governed mainly by past decisions that established the present levels
of operating and organizational capacity and that only change slowly in response to
small changes in capacity.
amortization of costs that were capitalized in previous periods.
ANSWER:
28.
27.
157
EASY
committed.
common.
discretionary.
joint.
ANSWER:
EASY
158
29.
Chapter 15
salaries of salespeople
advertising
maintenance
insurance
ANSWER:
30.
EASY
ANSWER:
EASY
If economic activity slows down, total costs could easily decline in which of the following
categories?
a.
b.
c.
d.
ANSWER:
32.
31.
Financial Management
EASY
Usually, with respect to a variable cost, optimal control is exerted when the cost
a.
b.
c.
d.
ANSWER:
EASY
Chapter 15
33.
Financial Management
Direct
yes
yes
yes
no
ANSWER:
34.
c.
d.
Committed
no
yes
no
yes
MEDIUM
incurring committed fixed costs is less risky than using discretionary costs.
managers are usually responsible for committed fixed costs but not for
discretionary fixed costs.
incurring discretionary fixed costs rather than committed fixed costs gives a
company more flexibility in controlling costs.
companies are using more discretionary fixed costs because labor is easier to
remove than technology.
ANSWER:
EASY
The distinction between avoidable and unavoidable costs is similar to the distinction
between
a.
b.
c.
d.
ANSWER:
36.
Discretionary
yes
no
no
no
35.
159
MEDIUM
appropriation.
allowance.
allocation.
committed fixed cost.
ANSWER:
EASY
1510
37.
Chapter 15
If a firm is successful in meeting its output goal for a period, the firm has been
a.
b.
c.
d.
efficient.
effective.
profitable.
exercising cost containment measures.
ANSWER:
38.
EASY
ANSWER:
EASY
effectiveness measure.
efficiency measure.
qualitative measure.
cost reduction measure.
ANSWER:
40.
39.
Financial Management
EASY
A small manufacturing company recently stated its sales goal for a period was $100,000.
At this level of activity, its budgeted expenses were $80,000. Its actual sales were
$100,000, but its actual expenses were $85,000. This company operated
a.
b.
c.
d.
ANSWER:
EASY
Chapter 15
41.
Financial Management
Master Corp. has a sales goal of $500,000 for the coming year. Based on this level of
activity, Master budgets its total expenses at $450,000. Actual sales are $480,000 and
actual costs are $460,000. Master Corp.s operations were
a.
b.
c.
d.
ANSWER:
42.
EASY
ANSWER:
EASY
A cost that is found to bear an observable and known relationship to a quantifiable activity
base is a(n)
a.
b.
c.
d.
discretionary cost.
product cost.
period cost.
engineered cost.
ANSWER:
44.
43.
1511
EASY
zero-base budgeting.
program budgeting.
standards.
cash budgeting.
ANSWER:
EASY
1512
45.
Chapter 15
A variance represents the difference between a budgeted and an actual cost. Thus, the
variance measures
a.
b.
c.
d.
ANSWER:
46.
EASY
Assume actual output exceeds the level of output in the original budget. You would expect
costs in which of the following categories to exceed the original budget?
a.
b.
c.
d.
ANSWER:
47.
Financial Management
EASY
An organization plans to produce and sell 50,000 units. It actually produces and sells
45,000 units. You would expect total costs to be below the planned level due to cost
a.
b.
c.
d.
consciousness.
control.
reductions.
behavior.
ANSWER:
EASY
Chapter 15
Financial Management
1513
The following information is provided for the IHM Co. for June 2001, and is to be used for
questions 4851.
Actual
1,800 units
8,900 DLHs @ $10.50 per DLH
Variable OH $6,400
Fixed OH $17,500
48.
$4,450 F
$4,450 U
$1,000 F
$1,000 U
ANSWER:
49.
$4,450 F
$4,450 U
$1,000 F
$1,000 U
ANSWER:
MEDIUM
$590 U
$590 F
$190 F
$190 U
ANSWER:
51.
MEDIUM
50.
MEDIUM
$590 U
$590 F
$190 F
$190 U
ANSWER:
MEDIUM
Standard
5 DLHs per unit @ $10.00 per DLH
VOH rate per DLH $ .75
FOH rate per DLH $1.90
Budgeted FOH $16,910
1514
Chapter 15
Financial Management
ANSWER:
53.
program
zero-base
capital
cash
ANSWER:
EASY
zero-base budgeting.
program budgeting.
capital budgeting.
cash budgeting.
ANSWER:
55.
EASY
54.
EASY
justify expenditures that are increases over the prior periods budgeted amount.
justify all expenditures, not just increases over last years amount.
maintain a full-year budget intact at all times.
maintain a budget with zero increases over the prior period.
ANSWER:
EASY
Chapter 15
56.
Financial Management
Zero-base budgeting differs from other budgeting techniques in several ways. Zero-base
budgeting
a.
b.
c.
d.
ANSWER:
57.
1515
EASY
ANSWER:
EASY
SHORT ANSWER/PROBLEMS
1.
2.
(Appendix) What kinds of organizations are more likely to use program budgeting?
ANSWER:
Program budgeting is more likely to be found in organizations that have
difficulty in defining their outputs. Such organizations are frequently not-for-profit or
governmental organizations.
MEDIUM
1516
3.
Chapter 15
Financial Management
What are the differences between committed fixed costs and discretionary fixed costs?
ANSWER:
Committed fixed costs are those costs that flow from the basic existence of
the organization. These are the direct costs of the organizations long-term investments
(such as plant and equipment) and the costs of essential personnel. These costs can only be
changed in the long run without significantly affecting the organization. Discretionary
fixed costs are all fixed costs that do not fit into the committed category. This includes the
costs of auxiliary service activities including activities that could be discontinued in the
short run without adversely affecting the long-run viability of the organization.
MEDIUM
4.
When can a discretionary fixed cost be subjected to control methods that are used for
engineered costs?
ANSWER:
When a discretionary cost is repetitive and can be related to some
fundamental activity measure (such as machine hours or units of output), it may be treated
like an engineered cost. With a repetitive cost that can be related to an activity
base, performance standards can be developed and flexible budget variances can be
computed and used as cost control tools.
MEDIUM
5.
6.
Chapter 15
7.
Financial Management
1517
8.
PJW has made the following information available for January 2001:
Actual
1,500 units produced
2,400 DLH used @ $10.25 per DLH
Standards
2 DLH per unit @ $10
Assume that PJW hires part-time employees for production of these units.
Compute the price and efficiency variances.
ANSWER:
2,400 $10.25
2,400 $10.00
Price variance
$24,600
24,000
$ 600 U
2,400 $10.00
(1,500 2) $10.00
Efficiency variance
$24,000
30,000
$ 6,000 F
MEDIUM
9.
Standards
1518
Chapter 15
Financial Management
Assume that SAF hires full-time employees who are paid a total of $6,500 per month.
Compute the spending and volume variances.
ANSWER:
$6,750
6,500
$ 250 U
$6,500
8,000
$1,500 F
MEDIUM
10.
GSWS provided the following information for 2001 relative to the times and costs to
prepare a simple last will and testament:
Standards
2 DLH @ $50 per DLH
Actual
500 simple wills were prepared during the year
1,100 DLHs utilized during the year @ $52 per DLH
MEDIUM
1,100 $52
1,100 $50
Price variance
$57,200
55,000
$ 2,200 U
1,100 $50
(500 2) $50
Efficiency variance
$55,000
50,000
$ 5,000 U
Chapter 15
Financial Management
1519
$3 per unit
$2 per unit
$30,000 per period
$40,000 per period
For this question only, assume that Big Corp. actually produced and sold 18,000 bats. Big
Corp.s operations for the period would (on an overall basis) be regarded as efficient if
total costs were below what amount?
ANSWER:
First, remember how fixed and variable costs change when volume
changes. Fixed costs remain constant in total and variable costs remain constant on a perunit basis. To be regarded as efficient, the companys costs would need to be at or below
the flexible budget for 18,000 units. The flexible budget for all costs would be:
[18,000 ($3 + $2)] + $30,000 + $40,000 = $90,000 + $70,000 = $160,000
MEDIUM
12.
For this question only, assume Big Corp. actually produced and sold 19,000 bats. At this
level of operation, Big Corp.s total costs were $170,000. Evaluate Big Corp.s success in
terms of effectiveness and efficiency.
ANSWER:
Big Corp. was not entirely effective in reaching its goal because its
objective was to produce and sell 20,000 bats. It only produced and sold 19,000. Its
operations would still be regarded as efficient if it contained costs below the flexible
budget for 19,000 units, which would be:
[19,000 ($3 + $2)] + $30,000 + $40,000 = $95,000 + $70,000 = $165,000.
Since its actual costs were $170,000, the company was neither effective nor efficient in
achieving its operating objectives.
MEDIUM
1520
13.
Chapter 15
Financial Management
Note that the budget for discretionary fixed costs is $40,000. If actual discretionary fixed
costs were $50,000, could cost control have still been effective? Explain.
ANSWER:
Yes, cost control could have been effective. Company managers may have
deliberately and consciously overspent on certain items because of opportunities or
challenges that emerged during the period. For example, advertising expenses may have
been increased because new competitors entered the baseball bat market, or research and
development expenditures may have been boosted because of the discovery of a new metal
alloy that could revolutionize the baseball bat market. Another explanation would be that
cost control was effective, but costs increased dramatically for uncontrollable
reasons (severe inflation).
MEDIUM