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SOLUTIONS MANUAL FOR ACCOUNTING FOR DECISION MAKING AND CONTROL, 10TH EDITION BY ZIMMERMAN QUESTIONS AND FULLY CORRECT ANSWERS

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SOLUTIONS MANUAL FOR ACCOUNTING FOR DECISION MAKING AND CONTROL, 10TH EDITION BY ZIMMERMAN QUESTIONS AND FULLY CORRECT ANSWERS

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Accounting For Decision Making And Control
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Accounting for Decision Making and Control











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Institution
Accounting for Decision Making and Control
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Accounting for Decision Making and Control

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SOLUTIONS MANUAL FOR ACCOUNTING FOR DECISION
MAKING AND CONTROL, 10TH EDITION BY ZIMMERMAN
QUESTIONS AND FULLY CORRECT ANSWERS




Managerial Accounting Practice Questions and Answers & ANSWERS

Based on Topics from Accounting for Decision Making and Control

l

Question 1

What are the three primary functions of management accounting?

Answer: The three primary functions are:

1. Decision Making - Providing relevant information for management
decisions
2. Planning - Assisting in budgeting and forecasting
3. Control - Monitoring performance and implementing corrective actions

Question 2

Explain the difference between financial accounting and management
accounting.

Answer:

• Financial Accounting: External reporting, follows GAAP, historical
data, standardized formats
• Management Accounting: Internal reporting, flexible formats, future-
oriented, decision-focused

Question 3

ABC Company is considering whether to make or buy a component. What type
of costs should management focus on?

,Answer: Management should focus on relevant costs - costs that differ
between alternatives and occur in the future. Sunk costs and allocated overhead
that don't change should be ignored.

Chapter 2: Cost Concepts and Behavior

Question 4

Classify the following costs as fixed, variable, or mixed: a) Monthly rent:
$5,000 b) Direct materials: $3 per unit c) Electricity: $500 base + $0.10 per
machine hour

Answer: a) Fixed cost - remains constant regardless of activity level b)
Variable cost - changes proportionally with units produced c) Mixed cost - has
both fixed ($500) and variable ($0.10/hour) components

Question 5

High-Low Method Problem: Month | Machine Hours | Total Cost Jan | 1,000 |
$8,000 Feb | 1,500 | $10,000 Calculate the variable cost per machine hour and
fixed cost.

Answer: Variable cost per hour = ($10,000 - $8,000) ÷ (1,500 - 1,000) = $4 per
hour Fixed cost = $8,000 - (1,000 × $4) = $4,000 Cost equation: Total Cost =
$4,000 + $4 × Machine Hours

Question 6

What is the difference between direct and indirect costs?

Answer:

• Direct costs: Can be easily traced to a specific cost object (e.g., direct
materials, direct labor)
• Indirect costs: Cannot be easily traced and must be allocated (e.g.,
factory overhead, utilities)

Chapter 3: Activity-Based Costing (ABC)

Question 7

Traditional costing allocates overhead based on direct labor hours. Why might
ABC provide better cost information?

Answer: ABC provides better cost information because it:

, • Uses multiple cost drivers that better reflect actual resource consumption
• Identifies activities that cause costs to be incurred
• Provides more accurate product costs, especially for complex products
• Helps identify non-value-added activities

Question 8

ABC Implementation Problem: Activity | Cost Pool | Cost Driver | Total Cost |
Total Driver Units Setup | $50,000 | # of setups | $50,000 | 100 setups
Inspection| $30,000 | # of inspections| $30,000 | 600 inspections

Product A requires 20 setups and 150 inspections. Calculate overhead allocated
to Product A.

Answer: Setup rate = $50,000 ÷ 100 = $500 per setup Inspection rate = $30,000
÷ 600 = $50 per inspection Product A allocation = (20 × $500) + (150 × $50) =
$10,000 + $7,500 = $17,500

Chapter 4: Job Costing

Question 9

Job #123 has the following costs:

• Direct materials: $2,500
• Direct labor: $1,800 (60 hours at $30/hour)
• Overhead is applied at $25 per direct labor hour Calculate total job cost.

Answer: Direct materials: $2,500 Direct labor: $1,800 Applied overhead: 60
hours × $25 = $1,500 Total job cost: $5,800

Question 10

What happens when actual overhead differs from applied overhead?

Answer:

• Underapplied overhead: Actual > Applied (debit to COGS)
• Overapplied overhead: Applied > Actual (credit to COGS) At year-end,
the difference is typically closed to Cost of Goods Sold.

Chapter 5: Process Costing

Question 11

, Department A had 10,000 units in process (60% complete) at month-end. Direct
materials are added at the beginning of the process. Calculate equivalent units
for materials and conversion costs.

Answer:

• Materials: 10,000 equivalent units (added at beginning, so 100%
complete)
• Conversion costs: 10,000 × 60% = 6,000 equivalent units

Question 12

FIFO vs. Weighted Average Process Costing - what's the key difference?

Answer:

• FIFO: Separates beginning inventory costs from current period costs
• Weighted Average: Combines beginning inventory costs with current
period costs FIFO provides more current cost information but is more
complex to calculate.

Chapter 6: Budgeting

Question 13

Sales Budget Problem: Quarter 1: 1,000 units at $50 each Quarter 2: 1,200 units
at $52 each Prepare the sales budget.

Answer: Sales Budget Quarter 1: 1,000 × $50 = $50,000 Quarter 2: 1,200 ×
$52 = $62,400 Total: $112,400

Question 14

Production Budget Problem: Budgeted sales: 5,000 units Desired ending
inventory: 500 units Beginning inventory: 300 units Calculate required
production.

Answer: Required production = Sales + Ending inventory - Beginning
inventory Required production = 5,000 + 500 - 300 = 5,200 units

Question 15

What are the benefits of participatory budgeting?

Answer: Benefits include:

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