Allocation and proration of overhead. Tamden, Inc., prints custom marketing materials. The business was started January 1, 2010. The company uses a normal-costing system. It has two direct cost pools, materials and labor and one indirect cost pool, overhead. Overhead is charged to printing jobs on the basis of direct labor cost. The following information is available for 2010
Budgeted direct labor costs |
$150,000 |
Budgeted overhead costs |
$180,000 |
Cost of actual material used |
$126,500 |
Actual direct labor costs |
$148,750 |
Actual overhead costs |
$176,000 |
Tamden, Inc., has no finished goods inventories because all printing jobs are transferred to cost of goods sold when completed.
1. Compute the overhead allocation rate.
2. Calculate the balance in ending work in process and cost of goods sold before any adjustments for under- or overallocated overhead.
3. Calculate under- or overallocated overhead.
4. Calculate the ending balances in work in process and cost of goods sold if the under- or overallocated overhead amount is as follows:
|
Direct materials |
Direct labor |
Job 11 |
$3,620 |
$4,500 |
Job 12 |
$6,830 |
$7,250 |
a. Written off to cost of goods sold
b. Prorated using the ending balance (before proration) in cost of goods sold and work-in-process control accounts
5. Which of the methods in requirement 4 would you choose? Explain.