41.A company produces heating elements that go through two operations, casting and assembling, before they are complete. Expected costs and activities for the two departments are shown below. Given...





41.A company produces heating elements that go through two operations, casting and assembling, before they are complete. Expected costs and activities for the two departments are shown below. Given this information, the departmental overhead rate for the assembling department based on direct labor hours is $5 per direct labor hour.



42.A company produces paint that goes through two operations, operation A and operation B, before it is complete. Expected costs and activities for the two departments are shown below. Given this information, the departmental overhead rate for Department B based on machine hours is $4 per machine hour.



43.A company produces computer chips that go through two operations, operation A1 and operation B2, before they are complete. Expected costs and activities for the two departments are shown below. Departmental overhead rates are based on machine hours in department A1 and direct labor hours in department B2. Therefore, the overhead rates for department A1 and department B2 are $3.62 per machine hour and $5.73 per direct labor hour, respectively.



44.A company produces garden benches that go through two operations, operation 1A1 and operation 2B2, before they are complete. Expected costs and activities for the two departments are shown below. Both departments have departmental overhead rates based on machine hours. Therefore, the overhead rates for department 1A1 and department 2B2 are the same.



45.A company produces surgical equipment that goes through threes processes, 1A1, 2B2, and 3C3, before they are complete. Expected costs and activities for the three departments are shown below. All departments have departmental overhead rates based on direct labor hours. Therefore, the overhead rate for each department is $5 per direct labor hour.



46.Activity-based costing involves four steps: (1) identify activities and the costs they cause, (2) group similar activities into cost pools, (3) determine an activity rate for each activity cost pool, and (4) allocate overhead costs to products using those activity rates.






47.The more activities tracked by activity-based costing, the more accurately overhead costs are assigned.






48.In activity-based costing, an activity can involve several related tasks.






49.Activities causing overhead cost in an organization are typically separated into four levels: (1) direct activities, (2) indirect activities, (3) batch level activities, and (4) facility level activities.






50.Machine setup costs are an example of a batch level activity.








May 15, 2022
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