Job Order Costing

Practice As You Learn

There are two main things you will be asked to do:

1) Record the activity of the manufacturing company
2) Determine if manufacturing overhead is over or under applied

When recording activity of the manufacturing company – determine the type of
cost that you must record and follow these rules:

1) direct material and direct labor – always debit WIP
2) indirect material and indirect labor – debited to Manufacturing O/H
3) actual manufacturing overhead expenses – always debit manufacturing overhead. This is a temporary expense account until it is moved to WIP in 4) below.
4) you must apply manufacturing overhead (which means add the cost to WIP) by using the predetermined overhead rate

    Predetermined overhead rate per activity
x Actual activity for this period
= Amount to apply

Apply means “add to WIP”, which means to debit WIP and move it out of manufacturing overhead expense with a credit.

5) Period expenses – debit the expense, credit payable or cash

6) Credit: raw materials when moved to production line, salaries payable or cash for wages, and salaries accounts payable or cash for all other

For manufacturing overhead (MOH)– follow these steps

1) Record actual manufacturing overhead expenses with a debit to MOH

2) Apply the estimated manufacturing overhead cost with a credit to MOH
         Predetermined O/H rate x actual activity = “amount applied”

3) Draw a “T” account and see how much the amounts are different

4) Make the manufacturing overhead account = 0 with a debit or credit
          Underapplied – the right (applied) is smaller than the left (actual)
          Overapplied – the right (applied) is larger than the left (actual)

 

Job Costing – Learn as you practice – Problem 1.

A. Record the transactions that the manufacturing company had during this period.
B. Calculate the cost per unit given the company produced 26,080 units during the period.

At the beginning of the period, the company estimated that manufacturing overhead would total $300,000 and the activity base would be a total of 50,000 direct labor hours

1. Purchased raw materials, $156,000
2. Moved raw materials to the production line (requisitioned), $98,000
3. Used indirect materials in production, $2,200
4. Paid workers on the production line, $195,000 for 16,260 hours worked
5. Paid the plant manager, supervisors, and quality inspectors, $46,000
6. Paid the rent on the manufacturing plant, $11,000
7. Paid general business insurance at corporate, $15,000
8. Paid executive salaries, $38,000
9. Paid other manufacturing overhead during the period, $39,000
10. Paid salespersons salary, $28,000
11. The company applied overhead
12. The company determined that the over or under applied overhead was not material.

Answer

1. Purchased raw materials, $156,000: Debit what you received.

Raw materials            $156,000

Accounts Payable/Cash            $156,000

 

2. Moved raw materials to the production line (requisitioned), $98,000

Direct costs are moved to the production line: always debit WIP

 

Work in Process            $98,000

Raw materials            $98,000

 

3. Used indirect materials in production, $2,200; indirect is manufacturing O/H

Manufacturing Overhead            $2,200

Raw materials (or supplies)            $2,200

 

4. Paid workers on the production line, $195,000 for 16,260 hours worked

Direct costs on the production line – always debit WIP

 

Work in Process            $195,000

           Cash                       $195,000

 

5. Paid the plant manager, supervisors, and quality inspectors, $46,000

Indirect labor is manufacturing overhead

 Manufacturing Overhead            $46,000

           Cash                                  $46,000

 

6. Paid the rent on the manufacturing plant, $11,000; manufacturing O/H

Manufacturing Overhead            $11,000

                      Cash                       $11,000

 

7. Paid general business insurance at corporate, $15,000; period expense

Insurance expense            $15,000

           Cash                       $15,000

 

8. Paid executive salaries, $38,000; period expense

Administrative Salary expense            $38,000

                                 Cash                       $38,000

 

9. Paid other manufacturing overhead during the period, $39,000

Manufacturing Overhead            $39,000

                      Cash                       $39,000

 

10. Paid salespersons salary, $28,000 – this is a period expense

Selling expense            $28,000

           Cash                       $28,000

 

11. The company applied overhead; calculate and use the predetermined overhead rate.

$300,000 / 50,000 hours = $6 per hour worked

Apply means to move manufacturing overhead to WIP

 

Work in Process                       $97,560

Manufacturing Overhead            $97,560

 

$6 per hour worked x 16,260 actual hours worked = $97,560

 

12. The company determined that the over or under applied overhead was not material.

For each time that you debited manufacturing overhead list the amount on the left (debit) side. You will only have one amount on the applied (credit) side. Balance the account

Manufacturing   Overhead

Actual           |        Applied
  $ 2,200       |      $97,560
$46,000        |
$11,000        |
$39,000        |
_____________|____________
$98,200        |       $97,560
_____________|____________
$640

under applied

 

To get the manufacturing overhead account to 0 and report the manufacturing overhead costs at actual cost instead of estimated.

Cost of Goods Sold                       $640

Manufacturing Overhead               $640

 

You must credit the manufacturing overhead account above to get the balance to be 0. You are adding more costs because you did not add enough costs to the cost of the product for manufacturing overhead when you applied the overhead cost. Actual costs were higher than originally applied.

 

B. To determine the cost per unit you must first total the cost of production. This will be the 3 product costs; all costs that you put into work in process.

 

Direct Materials                                        $ 98,000 (used)
Direct Labor                                              $195,000
Manufacturing O/H applied                   $ 97,560
Adjustment to manufacturing O/H       $ 640
Total cost of production                         $391,200

Total cost $391,200 / 26,080 units = $15 per unit

 

When you are getting a total cost for all products or jobs for the period you must also add or subtract the over under applied amount. You do not add the over or under applied amount when you are getting the cost of a particular job or batch because you do not know the amount specific to the job.

Job Costing – Learn as you practice – Problem 2.

The following information is related to a manufacturing company that applies
manufacturing overhead based on machine hours used.

Budgeted units produced 80,000
Actual Units produced 86,000
Budgeted total manufacturing overhead costs: $1,200,000
Actual total manufacturing overhead costs: $1,230,000
Budgeted total machine hours 24,000
Actual total machine hours 26,700

 

Do the following:

A. Prepare the journal entry to record the actual total manufacturing overhead costs.
B. Prepare the journal entry to apply manufacturing overhead costs to the product
C. Determine whether manufacturing overhead is over or under applied, and how much it is over or under applied.
D. The company manufactured units in batches of 100. For the following batch #6, record the following:

 

1. Direct labor hours worked on the job were 30 hours at $16 per hour.
2. Overhead applied to the job; 324 machine hours were used.
3. Direct material requisitioned for the job cost $2,400
4. Determine the total cost of the job. 

Answer

Answer: Job Costing – Learn as you practice – Problem 2.

A. Prepare the journal entry to record the actual total manufacturing overhead costs.

Manufacturing overhead              $1,230,000

                        Cash                        $1,230,000

 

B. Prepare the journal entry to apply total manufacturing overhead costs to the product

You must calculate the predetermined overhead rate – always use budgeted
(estimated) amounts

 

Total budgeted O/H $ / total activity

$1,200,000 / 24,000 machine hours = $50 per machine hour.

The activity used is machine hours because it says that manufacturing overhead is based on machine hours used.

Actual machine hours used             26,700
x rate per machine hour used        $50
Manufacturing O/H applied            $1,335,000

 

Work in Process                                     $1,335,000

Manufacturing Overhead                       $1,335,000

 

C. Determine whether manufacturing overhead is over or under applied, and by how much it is over or under applied.

Manufacturing    Overhead
Actual            |       Applied
$1,230,000    |       $1,335,000
                       |       $105,000 over applied
                       |   – you put too much cost into WIP

 

If asked to do, you would make Manufacturing O/H = 0 with the following entry:

 

Manufacturing overhead

Cost of Goods sold (or allocate to WIP, FG, CGS is material)

 

D. The company manufactured units in batches of 100. For the following batch #6, record the following:

1. Direct labor hours worked on the job were 30 hours at $16 per hour.

Work in Process- #6             $480

            Cash                           $480

 

2. Overhead applied to the job, 324 machine hours were used.

$50 per machine hour x 324 hours = 16,200
 

Work in Process- #6                         $16,200

Manufacturing Overhead               $16,200

 

3. Direct material requisitioned for the job cost $2,400

Work in Process- #6             $2,400

Raw Materials                        $2,400

 

4. Determine the total cost of the job.

Direct Material                $2,400
Direct Labor                     $480
Manufacturing O/H        $16,200
Total product costs        $19,080 / 100 units = $190.80 each

 

When determining the cost of a particular job you do not include the over or under applied manufacturing overhead because you do not know how much of this was due to this particular job.