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- March 1, 2016 at 10:50 am #302789
Q2a b c – December 2009
Big Cheese Chairs (BCC) manufactures and sells executive leather chairs. They are considering a new design of massaging chair to launch into the competitive market in which they operate.
They have carried out an investigation in the market and using a target costing system have targeted a competitive selling price of $120 for the chair. BCC wants a margin on selling price of 20% (ignoring any overheads).
The frame and massage mechanism will be bought in for $51 per chair and BCC will upholster it in leather and assemble it ready for despatch.
Leather costs $10 per metre and two metres are needed for a complete chair although 20% of all leather is wasted in the upholstery process.
The upholstery and assembly process will be subject to a learning effect as the workers
get used to the new design. BCC estimates that the first chair will take two hours to prepare but this will be subject to a learning rate (LR) of 95%. The learning improvement will stop once 128 chairs have been made and the time for the 128th chair will be the time for all subsequent chairs. The cost of labour is $15 per hour.
The learning formula is shown on the formula sheet and at the 95% learning rate the value of b is –0·074000581.
Required:
(a) Calculate the average cost for the first 128 chairs made and identify any cost gap that may be present at that stage.
(8 marks)
(b) Assuming that a cost gap for the chair exists suggest four ways in which it could be closed.
(6 marks)
The production manager denies any claims that a cost gap exists and has stated that the cost of the 128th chair will be low enough to yield the required margin.
(c) Calculate the cost of the 128th chair made and state whether the target cost is being achieved on the 128th chair.
(6 marks)I understand how to make the problem, the only thing I don’t understand is how they compute the meters for the waste of the material.
Shouldn’t it be 2m*1.2 to get 2.4 meters, as the waste is 20%? I don’t understand how they did 2*100/80 .
Thank you,
AlexandraMarch 1, 2016 at 12:13 pm #302807There is no need to type out full questions – it is a past exam question and so I have it!!
For every 100 meters of material that they purchase, they will waste 20 meters and therefore have 80 meters available for production.
Putting it the other way round, for every 80 meters that they need for production, they will need to purchase 100 meters.
So they need to purchase 100/80 times the amount needed.March 1, 2016 at 12:36 pm #302817Thank you sir!
March 1, 2016 at 7:37 pm #302917You are welcome 🙂
July 30, 2021 at 11:28 am #629854Sir for the qustion target costing big cheese what should we do with the % learning rate? What is the relevance behind it…i quiet not understand it
July 30, 2021 at 2:19 pm #629864The learning rate is relevant for the cost of labour, not for the cost of materials (which is what the original post was asking).
I assume that you do have the answer to this question and so have seen the relevance of the learning rate (and have watched my free lectures which explain how to deal with a question like this).
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