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Before prorating the manufacturing overhead costs at the end of 2020, the Cost of Goods Sold and Finished Goods Inventory accounts had applied overhead costs of $59,400 and $39,000 in them, respectively. There was no Work-in-Process at the beginning or end of 2020. During the year, manufacturing overhead costs of $93,000 were actually incurred. The balance in the Applied Manufacturing Overhead was $98,400 at the end of 2020. If the under- or overapplied overhead is prorated between Cost of Goods Sold and the inventory accounts, what will be the Cost of Goods Sold balance after the proration

a.$913.
b.$1,228.
c.$2,637.
d.$955

User Tughi
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2 Answers

4 votes

Answer:

$2140.24 (There is no answer in Options Provided)

Step-by-step explanation:

The explanation is attached

Before prorating the manufacturing overhead costs at the end of 2020, the Cost of-example-1
User SmokeyShakers
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3.6k points
7 votes

Answer:

the Cost of Goods Sold balance after the proration is $56,140 (none of the suggested solutions)

Step-by-step explanation:

Step 1 Consider whether there was an Over or Under Application of Overheads.

Applied Manufacturing Overhead $98,400 > Actual Manufacturing Overhead $93,000

Overheads were thus Over-Applied by $5,400

Step 2 Allocate the Over- Application of Overheads to Closing Inventory in proportion to their weightings

Item Total Weight % Allocation

Cost of Goods Sold $59,400 60.37% 3,260

Finished Goods Inventory accounts $39,000 39.63% 2,140

Total $98,400 100.00% 5,400

Balances after allocation :

Cost of Goods Sold = $59,400 - $3,260 = $56,140

User Shafreeck Sea
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