ACC203 – Management Accounting 代写

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  • Unit:
    ACC203 – Management Accounting
    Weighting:  The assignment is worth 40% of the total unit weight.
    Instructions:
    1. Students are required to cover all stated requirements.
    2. Your answer must be both uploaded to Moodle in word file and handed over a
    printed copy.
    3. You need to support your answers with appropriate Harvard style references where
    necessary.
    4. Only include information in your appendixes that has been directly referred to in
    the body of your document.
    5. Include a title/cover page containing the subject title and code and the name,
    student id numbers.
    6. Please save the document as ACC203AT2_first name_Surename_Student Number
    Eg:ACC203AT2_John_Smith_20140000
    1
    Government contracts* 80000
    Commercial products 156000
    Marketing  1800
    Finance and Administration 2700
    Human Resources 500
    Maintenance  1 000
    Total  242000
    Question 1: Activity-based costing
    East Coast Marine Ltd (ECM) manufactures parts for small marine craft. Over the past decade, ECM’s management
    has met its goal of reducing its reliance on government contract work to 50 per cent of total sales. ECM is now
    equally reliant on commercial sales and government contracts.
    Traditionally, the costs of the Material Handling Department have been allocated to direct material as a percentage of
    direct material dollar value. This was adequate when the majority of the manufacturing was homogeneous and related
    to government contracts. Recently, however, government auditors have rejected some proposals, stating that ‘the
    amount of Material Handling Department costs allocated to these proposals is disproportionate to the total effort
    involved’.
    Eloise Smith, the newly hired cost accounting manager, was asked by the manager of ECM’s Government
    Contracts Unit, Paul Jones, to find a more equitable method of allocating the Material Handling Department costs
    to the user departments. Her review has revealed the following information:
    ■ The majority of the direct material purchases for government contracts are high-dollar, low-volume
    purchases, while commercial materials represent low- dollar, high-volume purchases.
    ■ Administrative departments such as Marketing, Finance and Administration, Human Resources and
    Maintenance also use the services of the Material Handling Department on a limited basis but have never
    been charged in the past for material handling costs.
    ■ One purchasing manager with a direct phone line is assigned exclusively to purchasing high-dollar, low-
    volume material for government contracts on an annual salary of $36 000. Employee on-costs are estimated
    to be 20 per cent of the annual salary. The annual costs of the dedicated phone line are $2800.
    ■ The components of the Material Handling Department’s budget for the coming year, as proposed by Lindley’s
    predecessor, follow.
    Payroll  $180000
    Employee on-costs 36000
    Telephone  38000
    Other utilities 22000
    Materials and supplies 6000
    Depreciation  6000
    Direct material budget:
    Government contracts 2006000
    Commercial products 874000
    Smith has estimated the number of purchase orders to be processed in the coming year as follows:
    *  Exclusive of high-dollar, low-volume materials.
    Smith has recommended to Jones that material handling costs should be allocated on a per purchase order basis.
    Jones realises that the company has been allocating to government contracts more material handling costs than can
    be justified. However, the implication of Smith’s analysis could be a decrease in his unit’s earnings and,
    consequently, a cut in his annual bonus. Jones told Smith to ‘adjust’ her numbers and modify her recommendation
    so that the results will be more favourable to the Government Contracts Unit.
    Being new in her position, Smith is not sure how to proceed. She feels ambivalent about Jones’ instructions and
    suspects his motivation may not be in the best interest of ECM. To complicate matters for Smith, the company’s
    new managing director has asked her to prepare a three-year forecast of the Government Contracts Unit’s results,
    and she believes that the newly recommended allocation method would provide the most accurate data. However,
    this would put her in direct opposition to Jones’ directives.
    Smith has assembled the following data to project the material handling costs over the next three years:
    ■ The number of purchase orders increases 5 per cent per year.
    ■ The ratio of government purchase orders to total purchase orders remains at 33 per cent.
    ■ Total direct material costs increase 2.5 per cent per year.
    ■ Material handling costs remain the same percentage of direct material costs.
    ■ Direct government costs (payroll, employee on-costs, and direct phone line) remain constant.
    ■ In addition, she has assumed that the cost of government material in the future will be 70 per cent of
    total material.
    Required:
    1  Calculate the material handling rate that would have been used by Eloise Smith’s predecessor at East
    Coast Marine.
    2  Calculate the revised material handling costs to be allocated on a per purchase order basis.
    3  Discuss why purchase orders might be a more reliable cost driver than the dollar amount of direct
    material.
    4  Calculate the difference due to the change to the new method of allocating material handling costs to
    government contracts.
    5  Prepare a forecast of the cumulative dollar impact over a three-year period (based on the coming year
    plus 2 more years) of Eloise Smith’s recommended change for allocating Material Handling Department
    costs to the Government Contracts Unit. Round all calculations to the nearest whole number.
    6  Referring to the standards of ethical conduct for accountants described in Chapter 1:
    (a)  Discuss why Eloise Smith has an ethical conflict.
    (b)  Identify several steps that Smith could take to resolve the ethical conflict.
    Question 2: Pricing & possible plant closure
    Handy Household Products Ltd is a multiproduct company with several manufacturing plants. The Fremantle plant
    manufactures and distributes two household cleaning and polishing compounds, standard and commercial, under
    the Clean & Bright label. The forecast operating results for the first six months of the current year, when 100000
    boxes of each compound are expected to be manufactured and sold, are presented in the following statement:
    Clean& Bright Compounds, Fremantle plant Forecast results of operations for the six-month period
    ending June 30 (in $'000s)
    Sales
    Standard
    $2000
    Commercial
    $3000
    Total
    $5000
    Cost of goods sold  1600  1900  3500
    Gross profit  $ 400  $1100  $1500
    Selling and administrative expenses:
    Variable  $ 400  $ 700  $1100
    Fixed* 240  §QQ
    Total selling and administrative expenses $ 640 $1060  $1700
    Profit (loss) before taxes $ (240)  $ 40
    =
    $ (200)
    *The fixed selling and administrative expenses are allocated between the two products on the basis of dollar sales volume.
    The standard compound sold for $20 a box and the commercial compound sold for $30 a box during the first six
    months of the year. The manufacturing costs are presented in the schedule below. Each product is manufactured
    on a separate production line. Annual normal manufacturing capacity is 200 000 boxes of each product. However.
    the plant is capable of producing 250 000 boxes of standard compound and 350000 boxes of commercial
    compound annually.
    Cost per box
    Standard Commercial
    Direct material  $7.00  $8.00
    Direct labour  4.00  4.00
    Variable manufacturing overhead  1.00  2.00
    Fixed manufacturing overhead  4.00  5.00
    Total manufacturing cost
    $16.00
    $19.00
    Variable selling and administrative costs
    $4.00
    $7.00
    The following schedule reflects the consensus of top management regarding the price-volume alternatives for the
    Clean & Bright products for the last six months of the current year. These are essentially the same alternatives
    management had during the first six months of the year.
    Standard compound  Commercialcompound
    Alternative prices
    (per box)
    Sales volume
    (in boxes)
    Alternative prices
    (per box)
    Sales volume
    (in boxes)
    $18  120000  $25  175000
    20  100000  27  140000
    21  90000  30  100000
    22  80000  32  55000
    23  50000  35  35000
    Handy Household Products' top management believe that the loss for the first six months reflects a tight profit
    margin caused by intense competition. Management also believe that many companies will leave this market by
    next year and profit should improve.
    Required:
    1.  What unit selling price should management select for each of the Clean & Bright compounds for the
    remaining six months of the year to maximise profit? Support your selection with appropriate calculations.
    2.  Independently of your answer to requirement 1, assume that the optimum alternatives for the last six
    months were as follows: a selling price of $23 and volume of 50 000 boxes for the standard compound, and
    a selling price of $35 and volume of 35 000 boxes for the commercial compound.
    (a)  Should management consider closing down the plant's operations until January 1 of the next year in order
    to minimise its losses? Support your answer with appropriate calculations.
    (b)  Identify and discuss the strategic factors that should be considered in deciding whether the Fremantle plant
    should be closed down during the last six months of the current year.
    Question 3: Budgeting
    Hawthorn Leisure Works (HLW) offers tennis courts and other physical fitness facilities to its members. The club
    has 2000 members. Revenue is derived from annual membership fees and hourly court fees. The annual
    membership fees are:
    Individual  $45
    Student  30
    Family  100
    Approximately half the members are 'family', and the remaining memberships are split equally between
    individuals and students. For the next two financial years, the hourly court fees are $8 and $12, depending on
    the season and the time of day (prime versus non-prime time). There are 10 courts at each club. The courts are
    available for 12 hours per day, from 9 am to 9 pm.
    The peak tennis season runs from October to April (181 days). During this period, court usage averages from 90
    to 100 per cent of capacity during prime time (5 to 9 pm) and from 50 to 60 per cent of capacity during the
    remaining hours (9 am to 4 pm). Daily court usage during the off-season averages from only 20 to 40 per cent of
    capacity, and is charged at $6 per hour. All of HLW's memberships expire at the end of September. A substantial
    amount of the cash receipts is collected during the early part of the tennis season due to the renewal of annual
    membership fees and heavy court usage. However, cash receipts are not as large in autumn and drop
    significantly in the winter months.
    For the start of the new financial year on 1 October, HLW is considering introducing a new membership and fee
    structure in an attempt to improve its cash flow planning. Under the new membership plan, only an annual
    membership fee would be charged, rather than a membership fee plus hourly court fees. There would be two
    classes of membership, with annual fees as follows:
    Individual  $300
    Family  500
    The annual fee would be collected in advance at the time the membership application was completed. Members
    would be allowed to use the tennis courts as often as they wished during the year under the new plan. All future
    memberships would be sold under these new terms. A special promotional campaign would be instituted to
    attract new members and to encourage current members to remain with the club. The annual fees for individual
    and family memberships would be reduced to $250 and $450 respectively if members pay for their yearly
    memberships in advance during the two-month promotional campaign.
    Hawthorn Leisure Works' management estimates that 70 per cent of the current members will continue with the
    club, and student members would convert to individual membership. The most active members (45 per cent of
    the current members) would pay the yearly fee in advance and receive the special fee reduction, while the
    remaining members who continued would renew memberships in October. Those members who would not rejoin
    are not considered active (that is, they play five times or less during the year). Management estimates that the
    loss of members would be offset fully by new members within six months of instituting the new plan. These new
    members would pay a proportional amount of the yearly fee on joining. Furthermore, many of the new members
    would be individuals who would play during non-prime time. Management estimates that adequate court time will
    be available for all members under the new plan.
    If the new membership plan is adopted, it would be instituted at the start of the new financial year (1 October),
    which is the start of the tennis season. The special promotional campaign would be conducted during August
    and September, prior to the start of the new financial year.
    Required:
    Your consulting firm has been hired to help HLW to evaluate its new fee structure. Write a letter to the club's
    managing director dealing with the following issues:
    1 Will HLW's new membership plan and fee structure improve its ability to plan its cash receipts? Explain your
    answer.
    2 Estimate the effect on sales revenue resulting from the planned change in fee structure for the next financial
    year, which starts 1 October and ends on 30 September. State any assumptions that you need to make.
    3 Hawthorn Leisure Works should evaluate the new membership plan and fee structure completely before it
    decides to adopt or reject it.
    (a) Identify the key factors that HLW should consider in its evaluation.
    (b) Explain what type of financial analyses HLW should prepare in order to make a complete evaluation.
    4 Explain how HLW's cash management practices may differ from the present if the new membership plan and
    fee structure are adopted.