A | B |
Another name for Cost Accounting is: | Manufacturing Accounting |
Another name for Product Costs is: | Manufacturing Costs |
Expenses of that accounting year are: | Period Costs |
The "Cost of Goods Sold Expense" account is a: | Period Cost on that period's Income Statement |
Insurance Expense on the factory building would be | Factory Overhead, a part of Product Costs. |
Insurance on the sales people's autos would be | A Period Cost, not a product cost ever. |
This cost accounting system is used for mass production items: | Process, or Process Cost |
This cost accounting system is used for customized, or individualized production work: | Job Order |
The 3 Product Costs categories are: | Direct Materials, Direct Labor, and Factory Overhead |
Manufacturing Overhead is just another name for: | Factory Overhead |
The 3 Manufacturing Cost categories are: | Direct Materials, Direct Labor, and Factory Overhead |
The cost of oils and lubricants used for the factory machinery are classified as: | Factory Overhead, and more specifically Indirect Materials Costs; also a Product Cost. |
The cost of factory supervisors would be classifed as: | Factory Overhead, and more specifically Indirect Labor Costs; also a Product Cost. |
The cost of electricity used at the Nike factory would be classified as: | Factory Overhead, and more specifically Other Indirect Facrory Costs; also a Product Cost. |
The cost of electricity used at the Nike corporate headquarters would be classified as: | A period cost, and more specifically part of that year's "General and Administrative Expenses." |
The cost of electricity used at the Nike owned retail store would be classified as: | A period cost, and more specifically part of that year's "Selling Expenses." |
Any cost that is a cost of running the factory is also a: | "Product Cost," which is the same thing as "Manufacturing Cost." |
Equivalent Units of Production are calculated for: | Conversion Costs, and Direct Materials. |
Another name for Processing Costs is: | Conversion Costs. |
Only Manufacturers have a need and use for this type of accounting: | Manufacturing Accounting, also called Cost Accounting. |
"Cost Flow" simply means: | through what manufacturing account records the product costs go through. |
All Product Costs will flow through: | Work In Process, Finished Goods, and Cost of Goods Sold expense. |
Only indirect costs of making the product ever go through this manufacturing account. | Factory Overhead |
Hopefully all Manufacturing Costs (Product Cost that is) will become Period Costs. This only happens when: | The Finihsed Goods are actually sold, and their costs recorded into Cost of Goods Sold expense. |
In which category of accounts (i.e., asset, liability, capital, revenue, or expense) does Materials Inventory belong? | Asset |
In which category of accounts (i.e., asset, liability, capital, revenue, or expense) does Work In Process belong? | Asset |
In which category of accounts (i.e., asset, liability, capital, revenue, or expense) does Finished Goods belong? | Asset |
In which category of accounts (i.e., asset, liability, capital, revenue, or expense) does Cost of Goods Sold belong? | Expense |
Another commonly used name for the Work In Progress account is: | Work In Process |
If a factory manufactured all week, but sold nothing all week, how much product cost would turn into a period cost that week? | Zero. None. |