Home > General Studies (Hindi) > Quizzes > Cost Accounting 101 Practice Test: Cost Allocation - Joint Products and Byproducts
Cost Accounting 101 Practice Test: Cost Allocation - Joint Products and Byproducts
Fast practice, instant feedback. Timer auto-submits when time’s up.
Avg score: 63% Most missed: “Joint costs are NOT allocated to individual products for the preparation of tax …”
Cost allocation is the process of assigning costs to activities, projects, people, or other cost objects. The goal is to fairly spread costs across departments, calculate profitability, and derive transfer prices.  Joint and by-product costing are methods for allocating costs to different products that are produced from the same process or materials. They are often used in industries that deal with natural resources, such as oil, gas, mining, or agriculture.  In cost accounting, joint products are two or more products that are produced simultaneously from a common input or process.... Show more
Cost Accounting 101 Practice Test: Cost Allocation - Joint Products and Byproducts
Time left 00:00
25 Questions

1. Outputs with a negative sales value are:
2. In joint costing:
3. Which of the following is a DISADVANTAGE of the physical-measure method of allocating joint costs?
4. Which of the following statements is true in regard to the cause-and-effect relationship between allocated joint costs and individual products?
5. Byproducts and main products are differentiated by the:
6. The only allowable method of joint cost allocation is specified by FASB.
7. The constant gross-margin percentage NRV method makes the simplifying assumption of treating the joint products as though they comprise a single product.
8. A business which enters into a contract to purchase a product (or products) and will compensate the manufacturer under a cost reimbursement formula, should take an active part in the determination of how joint costs are allocated because:
9. The constant gross-margin percentage NRV method allocates joint costs to joint products produced during the accounting period in such a way that each individual product achieves an identical gross-margin percentage.
10. Proper costs allocation for inventory costing and cost-of-goods-sold computations are important because:
11. Which cost allocation method should NOT be used to eliminate the conflict between decision making and performance evaluation?
12. The sales-value at splitoff method of joint cost allocation involves computation of the relative amounts of the sales value of the amount of each joint product sold during the period.
13. The constant gross-margin percentage NRV method of joint cost allocation:
14. All of the following methods may be used to allocate joint costs EXCEPT the:
15. The production method of accounting for byproducts recognizes byproducts in the financial statements at the time when production is completed.
16. The benefits-received criteria for allocating joint costs indicate market-based measures are preferred because:
17. The sales value at splitoff method:
18. Products with a relatively low sales value are known as:
19. The net realizable value method is generally used for products or services that are processed and after splitoff additional value is added to the product and a selling price can be determined.
20. Joint costs are incurred beyond the splitoff point and are assignable to individual products.
21. Joint costs are the costs of a production process that yields multiple products simultaneously.
22. Which of the following is a reason to allocate joint costs?
23. The constant gross-margin percentage method differs from market-based joint-cost allocation method (sales value at splitoff and estimated net realizable value) since no account is taken of profits earned before or after the splitoff point when allocating joint costs.
24. The sales value at splitoff method is an example of allocating costs using physical measures.
25. What type of cost is the result of an event that results in more than one product or service simultaneously?