The Port Pirie plant of Lewis Manufacturing Limited produces waffle irons for
domestic use. These waffle irons sell for $50.00 each. The plant uses a standard cost system for production costing and control purposes. The standard product costs assigned to a waffle iron appears in the image.
The Port Pirie plant’s planned production and budgeted sales for the coming year was 45,000 waffle irons. The basis for the standard variable overhead rate and the standard fixed overhead rate was planned annual production expressed in standard direct labour hours (i.e. 36,000 direct labour hours in total).
During the year, the Port Pirie plant experienced the following actual production
activity.
i. Production of waffle irons totalled 50,000 units. All of these waffle irons sold at
a price of $50 each.
ii. The Port Pirie plant purchased a total of 130,000 kilogram of raw materials at a
cost of $3.70 per kilogram during the year.
iii. There were 25,000 kilograms of raw materials in beginning inventory carried at
a cost of $4.00 per kilogram. There was no ending inventory of raw materials.
iv. The plant used 41,000 direct labour hours at a total cost of $533,000.
v. Actual fixed overhead totalled $95,000.
vi. Actual variable overhead totalled $250,000.
Required
(a) Present the sales and cost volume variances in a tabular format.
(b) Present the flexible budget variances in a tabular format.
(c) Compute the raw materials price and usage variances.
(d) Compute the direct labour price and usage variances.
(e) Compute the variable overhead price and usage variances. Explain the
relationship between the variable overhead price and usage variances and the
direct labour price and usage variances. Comment on the usefulness of the
variable overhead price and usage variances.
(f) Compute the fixed overhead spending and volume variances. Interpret the fixed overhead spending and volume variances.
Assume the purchasing agent for the Port Pirie plant purchased a lower-quality
raw material from a new supplier. Would you recommend that the Port Pirie
plant continue to use this cheaper raw material? If so, what standards would
need revision to reflect the decision to continue with the cheaper/lower-quality
raw material? The quality of the finished waffle irons remains unaffected even
if the Port Pirie plant uses the new supplier.