Ohio Household Products Co. (OHPC) is a diversified household-cleaner processing company. The company's Mishawaka plant produces two products: an appliance cleaner and a general-purpose cleaner from a common set of chemical inputs (NPR). Each week 1,000,000 ounces of chemical input are processed at a cost of $200,000 into 750,000 ounces of appliance cleaner and 250,000 ounces of general-purpose cleaner. The appliance cleaner has no market value until it is converted into a polish with the trade name Shine Brite. The additional processing costs for this conversion amount to $300,000. Shine Brite sells at $15 per 25-ounce bottle. The general-purpose cleaner can be sold for $20 hper 20-ounce bottle. However, the general-purpose cleaner can be converted into two other products by adding 250,000 ounces of another compound (PST) to the 250,000 ounces of general-purpose cleaner. This joint process will yield 250,000 ounces each of premium cleaner (PC) and premium stain remover (PSR). The additional process- ing costs for this process amount to $140,000. Both premium products can be sold for $16 per 20-ounce bottle.
The company decided not to process the general-purpose cleaner into PC and PSR based on the following analysis.
|
|
|
|
Process Further
|
|
General-Purpose Cleaner
|
PremiumCleaner (PC)
|
|
Premium StainRemover (PSR)
|
Total
|
Production in ounces
|
250,000
|
250,000
|
|
250,000
|
|
Revenue
|
$250,000
|
$200,000
|
|
$200,000
|
$400,000
|
Costs:
NPR costs
|
50,000*
|
40,000
|
|
40,000
|
80,000**
|
PST costs
|
0
|
70,000
|
|
70,000
|
140,000
|
Total costs
|
50,000
|
110,000
|
|
110,000
|
220,000
|
Weekly gross profit
|
$200,000
|
$ 90,000
|
|
$ 90,000
|
$180,000
|
*If general-purpose cleaner is not processed further, it is allocated 1/4 of the $200,000 of NPR cost, which is equal to 1/4 of the total physical output.
**If general-purpose cleaner is processed further, total physical output is 1,250,000 ounces. PC and PSR combined account for 40% of the total output and are each allocated 20% of the NPR cost.
Instructions
(a) Determine if management made the correct decision to not process the general-purpose cleaner further by doing the following.
(1) Calculate the company's total weekly gross profit assuming the general-purpose cleaner is not processed further.
(2) Calculate the company's total weekly gross profit assuming the general-purpose cleaner is processed further.
(3) Compare the resulting net incomes and comment on management's decision.
(b) Using incremental analysis, determine if the general-purpose cleaner should be pro- cessed further.