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Cost Accounting 101 Practice Test: Inventory Management, Just-in-Time, and Simplified Costing Methods
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Inventory management is the process of ordering, storing, using, and selling a company's inventory. Just-in-time (JIT) is an inventory management method that involves receiving goods from suppliers only as they are needed.  Here are some inventory costing methods: First In, First Out (FIFO): Companies sell the inventory first that they bought first. Last In, First Out (LIFO): Companies sell the inventory first that they bought last. Weighted Average Cost (WAC) Specific Identification  JIT's main objective is to reduce inventory holding costs and increase inventory turnover. It requires... Show more
Cost Accounting 101 Practice Test: Inventory Management, Just-in-Time, and Simplified Costing Methods
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25 Questions

1. All inventory costs are available in financial accounting systems.
2. The costs that result from theft of inventory are:
3. The time from when an order is received by manufacturing until it becomes a finished good is referred to as:
4. Just-in-time purchasing is guided solely by the economic order quantity.
5. In a backflush-costing system, no record of work in process appears in the accounting records.
6. Retailers generally have a high percentage of net income to revenues.
7. A 'push-through' system, often described as a just-in-time system, emphasizes simplicity and close coordination among work centers.
8. The costs that result when features and characteristics of a product or service are NOT in conformance with the specifications are:
9. The annual relevant total costs are at a minimum when relevant:
10. A system that comprises a single database that collects data and feeds it into software applications supporting all of a company's business activities is known as a(n):
11. A grouping of all the different types of equipment used to make a given product is referred to as:
12. A push-through system that manufactures finished goods for inventory on the basis of demand forecasts is referred to as:
13. What are the major relevant costs in maintaining safety stock?
14. A financial benefit of a just-in-time system is that inventory carrying costs are reduced.
15. Backflush costing is a costing system that omits recording some or all of the journal entries relating to the stages from purchase of direct materials to the sales of finished goods.
16. The annual relevant carrying costs of inventory consists of the sum of the:
17. In a just-in-time system, suppliers are selected primarily on the basis of their ability to provide materials and products at the lowest possible price.
18. Which of the following industries would have the highest cost of goods sold percentage relative to sales?
19. Which of the following statements about the economic-order-quantity decision model is FALSE?
20. Quality costs include:
21. Safety stock is used as a buffer against unexpected increases in demand, uncertainty about lead time, and unavailability of stock from suppliers.
22. An Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) System comprises a single database that collects data and feeds it into software applications supporting all of a company's business activities.
23. All of the following are potential financial benefits of just-in-time EXCEPT:
24. The purchase-order lead time is the:
25. Inventory management is the planning, organizing, and controlling activities that focus on the flow of materials into, through, and from the organization.