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Cost Accounting 101 Practice Test: Inventory Costing and Capacity Analysis
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Inventory costing and capacity analysis can help companies determine how much profit they can make on inventory, how to reduce costs, and where to make changes.  Inventory control, also called stock control, is the process of ensuring the right amount of supply is available in an organization. Here are some basics of inventory costing and capacity analysis: ABC analysis: Helps identify items that significantly impact overall inventory cost. It also identifies different stock categories that require different management and controls. Storage costs: Refers to the cost of maintaining... Show more
Cost Accounting 101 Practice Test: Inventory Costing and Capacity Analysis
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25 Questions

1. Which of the following statements is FALSE?
2. Under absorption costing, if a manager's bonus is tied to operating income, then increasing inventory levels compared to last year would result in:
3. Under absorption costing, managers can increase operating income by holding less inventories at the end of the period.
4. Throughput costing is also referred to as super-variable costing.
5. Under variable costing, if a manager's bonus is tied to operating income, then increasing inventory levels compared to last year would result in:
6. An favorable production-volume variance occurs when:
7. ________ are subtracted from sales to calculate gross margin.
8. The effect of spreading fixed manufacturing costs over a shrinking master-budget capacity utilization amount results in:
9. Using master-budget capacity for pricing purposes can lead to a downward demand spiral.
10. When production quantity exceeds sales, throughput costing results in reporting lower operating income than variable costing.
11. In variable costing, all nonmanufacturing costs are subtracted from contribution margin.
12. Under absorption costing, managers can increase operating income by producing more inventory at the end of the accounting period.
13. The downward demand spiral for a company is the continuing reduction in the demand for its products that occurs when competitor prices are NOT met.
14. The contribution-margin format of the income statement:
15. The income under variable costing will always be the same as the income under absorption costing.
16. The only difference between variable and absorption costing is the expensing of:
17. Absorption costing is required by GAAP (Generally Accepted Accounting Principles) for external reporting.
18. Budgeted fixed manufacturing costs of a product using practical capacity:
19. When the unit level of inventory decreases during an accounting period, operating income is lower under variable costing than absorption costing.
20. Critics of absorption costing suggest to evaluate management on their ability to:
21. Under absorption costing, all variable manufacturing costs and all fixed manufacturing costs are included as inventoriable costs.
22. The contribution-margin format of the income statement distinguishes manufacturing costs from nonmanufacturing costs.
23. Using normal capacity for pricing decisions can lead to setting noncompetitive selling prices.
24. Throughput costing provides more incentive to produce for inventory than either variable costing or, especially, absorption costing.
25. Many companies have switched from absorption costing to variable costing for internal reporting: