20180731103842D5760 GNBCY PP Chap14 Differential Analysis The Key To Decision Making With Cover Page
20180731103842D5760 GNBCY PP Chap14 Differential Analysis The Key To Decision Making With Cover Page
20180731103842D5760 GNBCY PP Chap14 Differential Analysis The Key To Decision Making With Cover Page
Differential Analysis:
The Key to Decision Making
Chapter 14
2
1
Smoother flow of
parts and materials
Better quality
control
Realize profits
Direct materials $ 9
Direct labor 5
Variable overhead 1
Depreciation of special equip. 3
Supervisor's salary 2
General factory overhead 10
Unit product cost $ 30
Prepare an analysis
showing whether a special
order should be accepted.
The machine or
process that is
limiting overall output
is called the
bottleneck – it is the
constraint.
Product 1 Product 2
a. 1 unit 0.5 unit
b. 1 unit 2.0 units
c. 2 units 1.0 unit
d. 2 units 0.5 unit
Product 1 Product 2
a. 1 unit 0.5 unit
b. 1 unit 2.0 units
c. 2 units 1.0 unit
d. 2 units 0.5 unit
Product 1 Product 2
Production and sales (units) 1,300 2,200
Contribution margin per unit $ 24 $ 15
Total contribution margin $ 31,200 $ 33,000
These methods and ideas are all consistent with the Theory
of Constraints, which was introduced in Chapter 1.
Prepare an analysis
showing whether joint
products should be sold at
the split-off point or
processed further.
Common
Joint Final
Production Gasoline
Input Sale
Process
Separate Final
Chemicals
Processing
Sale
Split-Off Separate
Point Product
Costs
© 2015 McGraw-Hill Education Garrison, Noreen, Brewer, Cheng & Yuen 82
The Pitfalls of Allocation
Joint costs are traditionally
allocated among different
products at the split-off point.
A typical approach is to allocate
joint costs according to the
relative sales value of the end
products.
Although allocation is needed for
some purposes such as balance
sheet inventory valuation,
allocations of this kind are very
dangerous for decision making.
© 2015 McGraw-Hill Education Garrison, Noreen, Brewer, Cheng & Yuen 83
Sell or Process Further
Joint costs are irrelevant in decisions regarding
what to do with a product from the split-off point
forward. Therefore, these costs should not be
allocated to end products for decision-making
purposes.