The statement given is true
Since output unit levels means individual units and batch level
means group of units.
Output unit-level costs are the costs of the activities performed on each individual unit whereas batch-level...
(a)Colour printing materialsselect a classification of activity costs Batch- or unit-levelBatch- or-product-levelFacility-levelProduct-level(b)Photocopy paperselect a classification of activity costs Unit-levelFacility-levelBatch- or unit-levelBatch- or-product-levelBatch-levelProduct-level(c)Depreciation of machinery (assume units-of-activity depreciation)select a classification of activity costs ...
Roberta, Inc., manufactures elliptical machines for several
well-known companies. The machines differ significantly in their
complexity and their manufacturing batch sizes. The following costs
were incurred in 2017:
Requirement 1. Classify each of the preceding
costs as output unit-level, batch-level, product-sustaining, or
facility-sustaining. Explain each answer (answer options
are in bold on the cost-type row pick one).
Cost Item
Cost Type
a. Indirect manufacturing labor costs such as
supervision that supports direct manufacturing labor,
$935,000
(Batch Level, Facility-sustaining, Output unit-level,...
For each of the following activities, indicate the appropriate category (unit, batch, product, or facility level) and suggest a possible cost driver for each pool: Factory utilities Machine setups Research and development for a product Sanding rough edges of the product Packaging the product Developing new packaging Maintenance on equipment Assembling the products parts Materials handling costs Quality control testing
give example of cost drives and activities for each level (unit, batch, product and facility) of ice cream manufacture. be specific i.e purchasing is not specific , purchasing cream is specific
Classify each of the following activities as unit level (U),
batch level (B), product level (P), or facility level (F) for a
manufacturer of organic juices.
1. Cutting fruit 2. Developing new types of juice 3. Blending fruit into juice 4. Receiving fruit shipments 5. Cleaning blending machines 6. Reducing water usage
Describe unit-level, batch-level, product-level, and organizational sustaining–level activities and how they differ. Give two or three examples of activities at each level.
Classify each of the following costs as either unit-level, batch-level, product-level, or facility-level. a. Engineering costs for new product b. Order processing c. Depreciation on factory d. Direct labor
Identify each of the following activities as unit level (U), batch level (B), product level (P), or facility level (F) to indicate the way each is incurred with respect to production. [Select] 1 Organizing production [Select] v 2 Calibrating machines Select] 3 Printing checks [Select) v 4 Cleaning workplace Select] 5 Providing electricity Select) 6 Assembling components [Select) 7 Cutting parts [ Select] 8 Sampling product quality [Select) ✓ 9 Receiving shipments [ Select ] 10 Providing personnel support
The following procedure performed at the United States mint is NOT a batch level activity: Select one: a. Movement of manufactured coins to finishing stations b. Inspecting the first units produced to verify proper set-up c. Setting up machinery for the stamping process d. Stamping each individual coin
amherst metal works
ABC systems commonly use a cost hierarchy with four levels to identify cost-allocation bases that are cost drivers of the activity cost pools: (1) Output unit-level costs: the costs of activity performed on each individual unit of a product or service. (2) Batch-level costs: the costs of activities related to a group of units of a product or service. (3) Product-sustaining costs (service-sustaining costs): the costs of activities undertaken to support individual products or services, regardless of...