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ordan Electronics currently produces the shipping containers it uses to deliver the electronics products it sells. The monthly cost of producing 9,200 containers follows. Unit-level materials $ 5,800 Unit-level labor 6,400 Unit-level overhead 3,900 Product-level costs* 9,600 Allocated facility-level costs 26,600 *One-third of these costs can be avoided by purchasing the containers. Russo Container Company has offered to sell comparable containers to Jordan for $2.80 each. Required Calculate the total relevant cost. Should Jordan continue to make the containers

User MajAfy
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2 Answers

6 votes

Final answer:

Jordan Electronics should continue to make the containers, as the total relevant cost of making them ($19,300) is less than buying them from Russo Container Company ($25,760).

Step-by-step explanation:

To calculate the total relevant cost for Jordan Electronics to decide whether to make or buy the shipping containers, we need to consider only the costs that will change based on the decision. The costs provided are as follows:

Unit-level materials: $5,800

Unit-level labor: $6,400

Unit-level overhead: $3,900

Product-level costs: $9,600 (only one-third is avoidable if buying, so the relevant portion is $3,200)

Allocated facility-level costs: $26,600 (non-relevant as they are likely fixed and allocated broadly across the company's products)

If Jordan Electronics buys the containers from Russo Container Company at $2.80 each for 9,200 containers, the total cost would be 9,200 containers × $2.80 = $25,760. Therefore, the relevant cost of buying is $25,760.

Now, let's calculate the relevant cost of making the containers:

Unit-level materials: $5,800

Unit-level labor: $6,400

Unit-level overhead: $3,900

Relevant product-level costs: $3,200

The total relevant cost of making the containers is $5,800 + $6,400 + $3,900 + $3,200 = $19,300. Since the cost of making ($19,300) is less than buying ($25,760), Jordan Electronics should continue to produce the containers in-house.

User Gtzilla
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5.1k points
1 vote

Answer:

1. $19,300

2. Yes

Step-by-step explanation:

1. The computation of relevant cost is shown below:-

= Unit-level materials + Unit-level labor + Unit-level overhead + Product level cost

= $5,800 + $6,400 + $3,900 + $3,200

= $19,300

Working note:-

Product level cost = $9,600 ÷ 3

= $3,200

2. Yes, Therefore Production is lower than buying cost, hence it is better to continue production.

Purchase price = 9,200 × $2.80

= $25,760

User Ferdous Ahamed
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4.6k points