Fifth edition Alnoor Bhimani Charles T. Horngren Srikant M. Datar Madhav V. Rajan Farah Ahamed


a at the time of incurrence, orb b



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a
at the time of incurrence, orb b

at the time the finished units to which the fixed overhead relates are sold. Variable costing uses (a) and absorption costing uses (b.


Bhimani, Horngren, Datar and Rajan, Management and Cost Accounting, 5
th
Edition, Instructor’s Manual
© Pearson Education Limited 2012
7.4
No. A company that does make a variable-cost/fixed-cost distinction is not forced to use any specific costing method. The example in the text of Chapter 7 makes a variable- cost/fixed-cost distinction. As illustrated, it can use variable costing, absorption costing or throughput costing. A company that does not make a variable-cost/fixed-cost distinction cannot use variable costing or throughput costing. However, it is not forced to adopt absorption costing. For internal reporting, it could, for example, classify all costs as costs of the period in which they are incurred.
7.5
Variable costing does not view fixed costs as unimportant or irrelevant, but it maintains that the distinction between behaviours of different costs is crucial for certain decisions. The planning and management of fixed costs is critical, irrespective of what stock- costing method is used.
7.6
Under absorption costing, heavy reductions of stock during the accounting period might combine with low production and a large production volume variance. This combination could result in lower operating profit even if the unit sales level rises.

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