Question 1. To guide cost allocation decisions, the cause-and-effect criterion
- may allocate corporate salaries to divisions based on profits
- is used less frequently than the other criteria
- is the primary criterion used inactivity-based costing
- is a difficult criterion on which to obtain agreement
Question 2. Which cost-allocation criterion is superior when making an economic decision?
- Fairness-or-equity criterion
- Ability-to-bear criterion
- Cause-and-effect criterion
- All of the above
Question 3. The MOST likely reason for NOT allocating corporate costs to divisions include that
- divisions receive no benefits from corporate costs
- these costs are not controllable by division managers
- these costs are incurred to support division activities, not corporate activities
- division resources are already used to attain corporate goals
Question 4. Identifying homogeneous cost pools
- requires judgment and should be reevaluated on a regular basis
- should include the input of management
- should include a cost-benefit analysis
- All of the above
Question 5. The Hassan Corporation has an electric mixer division and an electric lamp division. Of a $20,000,000 bond issuance, the electric mixer division used $14,000,000 and the electric lamp division used $6,000,000for expansion. Interest costs on the bond totaled $1,500,000 for the year. Which corporate costs should be allocated to divisions?
- Variable costs
- Fixed costs
- Neither fixed nor variable costs
- Both fixed and variable costs
Question 6. The stage of the capital budgeting process in which a firm obtains funding for the project is the
- obtain-information stage.
- implement the decision, evaluate performance, and learn stage.
- make-decisions-by-choosing-among-alternatives stage.
- make-predictions stage.
Question 7. Assume your goal in life is to retire with $1 million. How much would you need to save at the end of each year if investment rates average 9% and you have a 15-year work life?
- $41,286
- $37,853
- $25,554
- $34,059
Question 8. If the net present value for a project is zero or positive, this means that the
- project should be accepted
- project should not be accepted
- expected rate of return is below the required rate of return
- Both 1 and 3are correct
Question 9.An important advantage of the net-present-value method of capital budgeting over the internal rate-of-return method is
- the net present value method is expressed as a percentage
- the net present values of individual projects can be added to determine the effects of accepting a combination of projects
- there is no advantage
- Both 1and 2 are correct
Question 10. Upper Darby Park Department is considering a new capital investment. The following information is available on the investment. The cost of the machine will be $150,000. The annual cost savings if the new machine is acquired will be $40,000. The machine will have a five-year life, at which time the terminal disposal value is expected to be $20,000. Upper Darby Park Department is assuming no tax consequences. If Upper Darby Park Department has a required rate of return of 10%, which of the following is closest to the present value of the project?
- $1,632
- $150,000
- $14,060
- $12,418