Part IV Seymour Chemical Company makes a variety of cosmetic products, one of which is a skin cream designed to reduce the signs of aging. Seymour produces a relatively small amount (14,000 units) of the cream and is considering the purchase of the product from an outside supplier for $5.70 each. If Seymour purchases from the outside supplier, it would continue to sell and distribute the cream under its own brand name. Seymour’s accountant constructed the following profitability analysis. |
Revenue (14,000 units × $14.0) |
196,000 |
Unit-level materials costs (14,000 units × $1.70) |
(23,800 |
Unit-level labor costs (14,000 units × $.60) |
(8,400 |
Unit-level overhead costs (14,000 × $.40) |
(5,600 |
Unit-level selling expenses (14,000 × $.20) |
(2,800 |
Contribution margin |
155,400 |
Skin cream production supervisor’s salary |
(57,000 |
Allocated portion of facility-level costs |
(13,900 |
Product-level advertising cost |
(46,000 |
Contribution to companywide income |
38,500 |
Required: |
Calculate the total avoidable costs. |
b-1. |
Calculate the total avoidable cost per unit. |
b-2. |
Should Seymour continue to make the product or buy it from the supplier? |
c-1. |
Suppose that Seymour is able to increase sales by 10,000 units (sales will increase to 24,000 units). Calculate the total avoidable costs. |
c-2. |
At this level of production, should Seymour make or buy the cream? |