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Aholt Company Makes 40,000 Units Per Year of a Part

question 90

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Aholt Company makes 40,000 units per year of a part that it uses in the products it manufactures. The unit product cost of this part is computed as follows:

 Direct Materials $11.30 Direct Labour $22.70 Variable Manufacturing Overhead $1.20 Fixed Manufactiong Overhead $24.70 Unit Product Cost $59.90\begin{array}{|l|r|}\hline \text { Direct Materials } & \$ 11.30 \\\hline \text { Direct Labour } & \$ 22.70 \\\hline \text { Variable Manufacturing Overhead } & \$ 1.20 \\\hline \text { Fixed Manufactiong Overhead } & \$ 24.70 \\\hline \text { Unit Product Cost } & \$ 59.90\\\hline \end{array} An outside supplier has offered to sell the company all the parts that Aholt needs for $46.20 a unit. If the company accepts this offer, the facilities now being used to make the part could be used to make more units of a product that is in high demand. The additional contribution margin on this other product would be $264,000 per year.

If the part were purchased from the outside supplier, all direct labour cost of the part would be avoided. However, $21.90 of the fixed manufacturing overhead cost being applied to the part would continue, even if the part were purchased from the outside supplier. This fixed manufacturing overhead cost would be applied to the company's remaining products.

-What is the maximum amount the company should be willing to pay an outside supplier per unit for the part if the supplier commits to supplying all 40,000 units required each year?


Definitions:

LIFO

Last In, First Out, an inventory valuation method where the most recently produced or acquired items are sold or used first.

Profits

The financial gain that is realized when the amount of revenue gained from a business activity exceeds the expenses, costs, and taxes needed to sustain the activity.

LIFO Liquidation

The process of liquidating older inventory that has been valued under the Last-In, First-Out (LIFO) accounting method, which can have tax and profit implications.

Tax Ramifications

The potential consequences and effects that specific tax laws and policies can have on an individual's or company's financial situation.

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