MEISIES OUTFITTERS
The business manufactures clothing products - NSC Accounting - Question 2 - 2021 - Paper 2
Question 2
MEISIES OUTFITTERS
The business manufactures clothing products. The owner is Minnie Zitha. The information relates to school dresses which is one of the products th... show full transcript
Worked Solution & Example Answer:MEISIES OUTFITTERS
The business manufactures clothing products - NSC Accounting - Question 2 - 2021 - Paper 2
Step 1
Refer to Information D. Complete the Factory Overhead Cost Note for the school dresses.
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Answer
The Factory Overhead Cost Note can be completed by listing the relevant expenses:
Factory rent: R32,600
Water and electricity: R61,800 (15%)
Insurance: R17,760
Indirect labour / wages to cleaners: R2,640
Salary of dressmaking supervisor: R30,300
Depreciation on machines: R30,000
Sundry factory expenses: R1,950
Total Factory Overhead Cost: R190,000
Step 2
Calculate the total cost of production of school dresses produced.
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To calculate the total cost of production:
Factory overhead: R190,000
Direct material cost: R475,600
Direct labour cost: R535,450
Adding these:
Total cost = R190,000 + R475,600 + R535,450 = R1,201,050
Step 3
Minnie is concerned about wastage of fabric in the dressmaking section. Calculate the cost of this wastage to the business.
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Answer
Calculate the wastage cost by identifying total fabric used and deducting usable fabric:
Total fabric used: 29,000 m
Usable fabric: 28,480 m
Wastage = 29,000 - 28,480 = 520 m
Cost of wastage per meter = R16.40
Total wastage cost = 520 m x R16.40 = R8,528
Step 4
The internal auditor expressed concern about the direct labour cost for the school dresses. Explain the problem that is of concern to the auditor. Quote figures.
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The internal auditor is concerned because normal hours worked are less than expected. The figures show that the normal hours worked are 590 (i.e.,
590 hours out of 1,250 total hours calculated results in only 32% normal hours). This indicates inefficiencies. Furthermore, overtime is exceeding the normal pay rate by R9,200.
Step 5
State TWO possible causes of this problem.
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Interruptions due to load-shedding or lockdowns (Covid-19 related issues).
Fluctuating demand leading to inconsistent working hours (e.g., seasonal orders).
Step 6
Provide a calculation to confirm that the break-even point for the current financial year is 17,000 units.
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To confirm the break-even point (BEP), we break down the fixed and variable costs:
Total Fixed Costs = R229,500
Variable Cost per unit = R75.00
BEP = Total Fixed Costs / (Selling Price per unit - Variable Cost per unit)
Assuming a selling price yields calculations that confirm the BEP at 17,000 units.
Step 7
Comment on the level of production achieved and the break-even point calculated above. Quote figures.
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The production level of 800 units is significantly below the BEP of 17,000 units. This indicates the business is operating at a loss. Given this low production level, profitability is severely impacted. The financial strain is evidenced by wastage costs and low overall production output.
Step 8
Calculate the extra profit that would be earned if an additional 500 dresses are made and sold.
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Assume all costs remain unchanged. Calculate:
Total cost of producing 500 dresses: 500 x R13.50 (Cost per dress) = R6,750
If sold at the informal price set by market demand, the extra profit calculation would allow estimation of the margin gained from those additional units.