Using the attached case study below, take the role of the production manager and prepare a report for the board that either recommends the proposed changes or does not recommend the changes. Support...

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Using the attached case study below, take the role of the production manager and prepare a report for the board that either recommends the proposed changes or does not recommend the changes. Support your position with details from the case and also from information from the text or other outside references.Write your initial response in 300–500 words. Your response should be thorough and address all components of the discussion question in detail, include citations of all sources, where needed, according to the APA Style, and demonstrate accurate spelling, grammar, and punctuation.



  • Cost of Quality

  • Total Quality Management (TQM)

  • Statistical Process Control (SPC)

  • Six Sigma

  • Relevant Costs

  • Sunk Costs

  • Cost Volume Profit (CVP)






Case study question: Swift Airlines Swift Airlines has a daily return flight from London to Nice. The aircraft for the flight has a capacity of 120 passengers. Swift sells its tickets at a range of prices. Its business plan works on the basis of the following mix of ticket prices for each day’s flight:












































Business



30 @ £300



£9,000



Economy regular



40 @ £200



£8,000



Advance purchase



20 @ £120



£2,400



7-day-purchase



20 @ £65



£1,300



Stand-by



10 @ £30



£300



Revenue



120



£21,000











Swift’s head office accounting department has calculated its costs as follows:










Cost per passenger (to cover additional fuel, insurance, baggage handling etc.) assuming full load £25 per passenger






Flight costs (to cover aircraft lease, flight and cabin crew costs, airport and landing charges etc.) £3,000 (120 @ £25) £7,500 per flight






Route costs (to cover the support needed for each destination) £2,000 (based on ½ of the daily cost of £4,000 (balance charged to return flight)) Business overhead £3,000 (allocation of head office overhead)










Total £15,500










This results in a budgeted profit of £5,500 per flight, assuming that all seats are sold at the budgeted price. The head office accountant for European routes has advised the route manager for Nice that while the Nice–London inbound leg is breaking even, losses are being made on the London–Nice outbound leg. If profits cannot be generated, the route may need to be closed, with the aircraft and crew being assigned to another route. The route manager for Nice has extracted recent sales figures, a typical flight having the following sales mix:

















































% of tickets sold Business



60



18 @ £300



£5,400



Economy regular



70



28 @ £200



£5,600



Advance purchase



80



16 @ £120



£1,920



7-day purchase



75



15 @ £65



£975



Stand-by



100



10 @ £30



£300



Revenue



87



£14,195











The route manager has calculated a loss on each outbound flight of £1,305. She believes that there is a market for 48-hour ticket purchases if a new fare of £40 was introduced, as this would be £5 less than the price charged by a competitor for the same ticket. She estimates that she could sell 15 seats per flight on this basis. This would not affect either the 7-day purchase, which is used by business travelers, or stand-by fares, which are usually oversubscribed. The additional revenue of £600 (15 @ £40) would cover almost half the loss. The route manager has prepared a report for her manager asking that the new fare be approved and allowing her three months to prove that the new tickets could be sold. Comment on the route manager’s proposal. Case studies provide the reader with the opportunity to interpret and analyze financial information produced by an accountant for use by non-accounting managers in decision-making. There is a suggested answer for the case in Part IV, although the nature of case studies is that there is rarely a single correct answer, as different approaches to the problem can highlight different aspects of the case and a range of possible approaches are possible.









Answered Same DayDec 26, 2021

Answer To: Using the attached case study below, take the role of the production manager and prepare a report...

Robert answered on Dec 26 2021
123 Votes
REPORT TO THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS
The company budgets its business plan by considering 100% capacity utilizat
ion of its capacity
of 120 passengers. But in most of the categories, the capacity utilization is lesser resulting in
revenue of 14195 per flight instead of 21000 per flight. The cost has been determined at 15500
per flight by the accounting department. Hence it seems that the company makes loss of 1305
instead of profit budgeted at 5500 per flight. The claim however is not correct as per principles
of relevant costing. The costs of 15500 includes many costs which are not relevant. The example
of sunk cost included therein is 3000 represented by allocated overheads of the head office. The
total of this cost will not change whether the flight runs or not. In strategic decision making, such
sunk costs should not be considered. Hence the flights are still profitable in real sense even if
they are earning 14195.
There was a proposal by the route manager to introduce a new fare of 40 which will sell 15 more
seats. This proposal must be accepted as it will provide...
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