In 2000,1 Toyota had a strong and growing reputation for quality. Its engineering excellence was peaking with the worldwide introduction of the first successful commercially available hybrid, the Prius, in 2001. But by 2010, over 10 million individual recalls2—including multiple recalls of some models—had left Toyota’s reputation in tatters, allowing other manufacturers to regain their momentum and even the leadership in sales. Ultimately, Akio Toyoda, the president of Toyota Motor Corporation, journeyed from Japan to testify before the U.S. House Oversight and Government Reform Committee on February 24, 2010. How this change of fortune transpired is a complex and interesting story. Toyota’s own website reports seventeen specific recalls beginning in 2000 and ending in 2010.3 These recalls were all related to floor mat interference with the accelerator pedal or with accelerator malfunctions from other causes. Numerous accidents were reported where the installation of a winter floor mat over the regular summer floor mat caused the accelerator to jam at high speeds so that the car would race uncontrollably and sometimes crash. To remedy this, Toyota contacted current owners and explained the problem. They told customers that two mats were not to be installed on top of one another. The company also shortened the accelerator pedal so that two mats could not jam the pedal. The second set of reported problems related to a suspected flaw in the accelerator link- age, or the acceleration control software, that also caused the car to accelerate suddenly and race uncontrollably. The remedy for this problem was to install a small metal chip in the pedal linkage to remove the possibility that the mechanism would stick. Toyota maintained that the braking system in the car would bring it to a stop in either case, but it installed a brake override system in some cars to further facilitate this. Toyota’s recall problems were exacerbated by several sensational news stories about runaway cars where drivers reportedly could only hang on and hope for salvation. In California, a Prius driver had to stand on his brake pedal and, as directed by a highway patrol policeman who caught up and drove alongside, pull on the emergency brake to get the car to slow down.4 One 911 call from a driver of a Lexus whose accelerator was reportedly jammed was broadcast on some media outlets right up to the crash that killed all four members of his family.5 Other interviews were aired on TV stations with individuals who claimed that jammed accelerator pedals led to similar incidents. Pressure mounted dramatically as Toyota seemed to be facing a wall of criticism. To many observers, Toyota was slow to react empathetically to what seemed to be evident problems. In addition, there were charges that the company knew of the problems long before any recalls were initiated or information was shared with car owners. There were also claims that Toyota was unconcerned about or ignored the problems in an effort to reduce expected legal costs. Toyota was later fined $16.4 mil- lion because the company did not report potential difficulties on a timely basis. The company knew about the sticking pedals on September 29, 2009, but did not report this until January 2010 even though the National Highway Traffic Safety Association (NHTSA) required reporting this problem within five days.6 The cost to Toyota was significant. “More than 20 percent of those who said they were considering a Toyota prior to the recall now say they no longer are considering the brand for their next vehicle purchase. In addition, Toyota’s overall brand consideration dropped to third place and now trails its domestic rivals, first place Ford and second place 7 was called to testify in Washington in public on February 24, 2010. During his testimony, he stated, • In the past few months, our customers have started to feel uncertain about the safety of Toyota’s vehicles, and I take full responsibility for that… • Toyota has, for the past few years, been expanding its business rapidly. Quite frankly, I fear the pace at which we have grown may have been too quick. I would like to point out here that Toy- ota’s priority has traditionally been the following: First; Safety, Second; Quality, and Third; Volume. These priorities became confused, and we were not able to stop, think, and make improvements as much as we were able to before, and our basic stance to listen to customers’ voices to make better products has weakened somewhat. We pursued growth over the speed at which we were able to develop our people and our organization, and we should sincerely be mindful of that. Chevrolet.” Toyota’s stock price declined I regret that this has resulted in the approximately 16% from January 1, 2010, to October 22, 2010, on the New York Stock Exchange, and as a result Zacks Equity Research ranked the stock as a “strong sell” for investors.8 Estimates of the cost of the recalls reached as high as $2 billion, including warranty payments and lost sales. The number of class action suits was growing daily.9 The pressure mounted on Toyota to be accountable, and the Japanese parent company president, Akio Toyoda, safety issues described in the recalls we face today, and I am deeply sorry for any accidents that Toyota drivers have experienced. • Especially, I would like to extend my condolences to the members of the Saylor family, for the accident in San Diego. I would like to send my prayers again, and I will do everything in my power to ensure that such a tragedy never hap- pens again. • Since last June, when I first took office, I have personally placed the highest priority on improving quality over quantity, and I have shared that direction with our stakeholders. As you well know, I am the grandson of the founder, and all the Toyota vehicles bear my name. For me, when the cars are damaged, it is as though I am as well. I, more than any- one, wish for Toyota’s cars to be safe, and for our customers to feel safe when they use our vehicles. Under my leadership, I would like to reaffirm our values of plac- ing safety and quality the highest on our list of priorities, which we have held to firmly from the time we were founded. I will also strive to devise a system in which we can surely execute what we value… • I would like to discuss how we plan to manage quality control as we go for- ward. Up to now, any decisions on con- ducting recalls have been made by the Customer Quality Engineering Division at Toyota Motor Corporation in Japan. This division confirms whether there are technical problems and makes a decision on the necessity of a recall. However, reflecting on the issues today, what we lacked was the customers’ perspective. • To make improvements on this, we will make the following changes to the recall decision-making process. When recall decisions are made, a step will be added in the process to ensure that management will make a responsible decision from the perspective of “customer safety first.” To do that, we will devise a sys- tem in which customers’ voices around the world will reach our management in a timely manner, and also a system in which each region will be able to make decisions as necessary. Further, we will form a quality advisory group composed of respected outside experts from North America and around the world to ensure that we do not make a misguided decision. Finally, we will invest heavily in quality in the United States, through the establishment of an Automotive Center of Quality Excellence, the introduction of a new position—Product Safety Executive, and the sharing of more information and responsibility within the company for product quality decisions, including defects and recalls. • Even more importantly, I will ensure that members of the management team actually drive the cars, and that they check for themselves where the problem lies as well as its severity. I myself am a trained test driver. As a professional, I am able to check on problems in a car, and can understand how severe the safety concern is in a car. I drove the vehicles in the accelerator pedal recall as well as the Prius, comparing the vehicles before and after the remedy in various environ- mental settings. I believe that only by examining the problems on-site, can one make decisions from the customer perspective. One cannot rely on reports or data in a meeting room. • Through the measures I have just dis- cussed, and with whatever results we obtain from the investigations we are conducting in cooperation with NHTSA, I intend to further improve on the quality of Toyota vehicles and fulfill our principle of putting the customer first. • My name is on every car. You have my personal commitment that Toyota will work vigorously and unceasingly to restore the trust of our customers.10 Reaction to Mr. Toyoda’s testimony was generally favorable, even though rumors about cost cutting and misguided leader- ship11 continued to affect consumer assessment of Toyota quality. For example, two former company presidents, Katsuaki Watanabe and Hiroshi Okuda, took the view that the troubles were “less a quality crisis and more a management and public-relations crisis of Mr. Toyoda’s making.”12 Others have speculated that the governance mechanism of Toyota was partly to blame since Toyota had taken advantage of a “home-country exemption” from SOX regulations. Furthermore, its directors may have lacked independence and have been less loyal to shareholders. This may have fostered “a cul- ture of stonewalling and secrecy.”13 Throughout the period, the U.S. media continued to stir the pot with one sensational story after another. Some observers wondered if some stories were slanted to damage the reputation of Toyota cars relative to North American car manufacturers, which had suffered through bankruptcy and bailout and had lost sales to Toyota in major markets. To some degree, Toyota’s delay in responding strongly to such stories may have allowed reputational damage that could have been avoided. In fairness to Toyota, there may have been more smoke than fire in the news stories. Although it was not known publicly until mid-July 2010, when seventy-five fatal accidents attributed to sudden acceleration due to jammed or sticking gas pedals were investigated by the NHTSA using “black boxes” from the cars involved, it was found that “the throttles were wide open and the brakes were not being depressed.” This result suggested that driver error was the cause since “drivers were mistakenly standing on the gas pedal when they thought they were standing on the brakes.” None of the throttle linkages were at fault. In only one case was the gas pedal jammed, and that was due to an all-weather floor mat from another automobile being installed over the Toyota mat.14 Questions 1. Did Toyota handle its recalls ethically? Why and why not? 2. What changes would you recommend to Toyota’s crisis management approach? Why? 3. Do you think that Mr. Toyoda’s testimony on February 24, 2010, was effective? How might it be improved? 4. Toyota did not immediately disclose that each car carried an airplane-style “black box” that recorded details on how the car was functioning. Was this timing appropriate? 5. What possible reasons could account for Toyota’s delay in advising the NHTSA of the problems known on September 29, 2009? 6. Can Toyota recover from these recall problems? If so, how long will that take? What would Toyota have to do to recover fully?
> In each case discussed at some length in this chapter – Enron, Arthur Andersen, WorldCom, and Bernie Madoff – the problems were known to whistleblowers. Should those whistleblowers each have made more effort to be heard? How?
> Rank the three worst villains in the film Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps (2010). Explain your ranking.
> Use the Jennings “Seven Signs” framework to analyze the Enron and WorldCom cases in this chapter.
> Many cases of financial malfeasance involve misrepresentation to mislead boards of directors and/or investors. Identify the instances of misrepresentation in the Enron, Arthur Andersen, and WorldCom cases discussed in this chapter. Who was to benefit, an
> Is there anything else that can be done to curtail this sort of egregious business behavior other than legislation?
> The events recorded in this chapter have given rise to legislative reforms concerning how business executives, directors, and accountants are to behave. There is a recurring pattern of questionable action followed by more stringent legislation, regulatio
> Is the 2019 Business Roundtable Statement (BRS) redefining the purpose of corporations likely to make any difference to boards of directors and to activists?
> The J & J (talcum powder) and Wells Fargo (unethical incentives) scandals suggest that even companies whose reputations are based on ethical conduct can suffer ethical scandals. Why is this?
> Decades after the event, Johnson & Johnson (J&J), the 130-year-old American multinational, is still praised for swiftly recalling nearly 31 million bottles of Tylenol in 1982 when in-store tampering resulted in several cyanide poisoning–related deaths. T
> The legal consequences for frauds, bribery, or other malfeasance have become very severe, particularly since 2009. Why has this happened? Are higher legal consequences having much of an impact?
> What are the reactions and outcomes that can be attributed to the leaked Panama and Paradise Papers?
> The CEOs of Valeant Pharmaceuticals and Turing Pharmaceuticals took the view that they could jack up the price of their drugs by huge percentages because they could, and they failed to consider seriously enough whether they should. Whose fault was this?
> At GM and Takata, whose improper actions finally came to light, a whistleblower raised objections to the actions before or very early in the production process. Why were their concerns ignored and risks taken? In VW’s case, why didn’t a whistleblower com
> The new anti-bribery prosecution regime involves serious charges and penalties for bribery in foreign countries during past times when many people were bribing in the normal course of international business, and penalties were not levied. Is it unreason
> Do you think that the events recorded in this chapter are isolated instances of business malfeasance, or are they systemic through the business world?
> What three ethics risks must a company guard against, and why?
> Why is an ethical corporate culture important?
> Why should a professional accountant be aware of the Ethics Code of the International Federation of Accountants (IFAC)?
> Why is it important for a professional accountant to understand the ethical trends discussed in this chapter?
> In 1964, at the1 invitation of the Ecuadorian government, Texaco Inc. began operations through a subsidiary, TexPet, in the Amazon region of Ecuador. The purpose of the project was to “develop Ecuador’s natural resources and encourage the colonization of
> Will the NOCLAR standards assist or hurt the accounting profession?
> Is a professional accountant a businessperson pursuing profit or a fiduciary that is to act in the public interest?
> What are the common elements of the three practical approaches to ethical decision making that are briefly outlined in the chapter?
> Why are philosophical approaches to ethical decision making relevant to modern corporations and professional accountants?
> How can conflicts between the interests of stakeholders be resolved by a corporation’s management?
> How can a corporation show respect for its stakeholders?
> Why are the expectations of a corporation’s stakeholders important to the reputation of the corporation and to its profitability?
> The advantage of commission sales is that if the salesperson puts in effort and makes a sale, then both the company and the sales- person benefit. The salesperson receives a commission, and the company receives the proceeds of the sale, net of the commis
> Although the Canadian banks did not suffer as much as other financial institutions around the world, they were not immune from the economic consequences of the subprime mortgage meltdown. In Canada, the earliest crisis concerned the liquidity of asset-ba
> In December 2002, Stan O’Neal became CEO of Merrill Lynch & Co. Inc., the world’s largest brokerage house. Known as “Mother Merrill” to insiders, the firm had a nurturing environment that accepted lower profit margins so that veteran employees could rema
> On April 24, 1985, Warren M. Anderson, the sixty-three-year-old chairman of Union Carbide Corporation, had to make a disappointing announcement to angry stockholders at their annual meeting in Danbury, Connecticut. Anderson, who had been jailed briefly b
> American International Group, Inc. (AIG) was the world’s largest insurance company with major offices in New York, London, Paris, and Hong Kong. From 2005 to 2008, the company had a series of accounting problems. First, it was convicted of fraudulent fin
> During the depths of the subprime lending crisis in 2008, a major U.S. investment banking firm, Goldman Sachs, required a $10 billion bailout from the U.S. government’s Troubled Asset Relief Pro- gram (TARP) to stay afloat. But in 2009, Goldman’s fortu
> On September 15, 2008, Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., one of the world’s most respected and profitable investment banks, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in the United States Bankruptcy Court in the Southern District of New Yo
> Short selling occurs when a seller borrows shares from a brokerage house and then sells those shares. At a later date, the seller buys the shares and delivers them to the brokerage house. If the price falls during the shorting period, then the short sell
> Allegations of serious impropriety and perhaps illegality surrounding Goldman Sachs’s contribution to the 2008 financial crisis have been well publicized. Allegations included trading for their own benefit directly against the interests of its clients (e
> In 2007, Danske Bank, Denmark’s largest bank, bought Finland’s Sampo Bank, which had a tiny branch office in Tallinn, Estonia. From 2007 until 2015, €200 billion of suspicious money flowed through the Tallinn branch, approximately ten times the gross dom
> Headquartered in London, Barclays is an investment and financial services bank with operations throughout the world. In December 2015, Barclays hired Jes Staley as CEO. Previously, Staley had been a 30-year veteran with JP Morgan in its investment bankin
> Assume that you have just been placed in charge of the Claims Investigation Unit of a small insurance company based in Minneapolis. Your personnel department has provided the following details on your personnel. However, because your insurance company is
> On May 17, 2010, a federal jury in New York decided that Novartis, a Swiss- headquartered drug company, was guilty of discriminating against women and should pay the twelve women plaintiffs who testified in the trial $3.37 million in compensatory damages
> In October 2008, Jill Hubley, a former senior strategist in the Dell Americas human resource group, a Dell Inc. division located in Texas, filed a lawsuit against the world’s second-largest maker of personal computers. She alleged that Dell had systemati
> The bottled water industry is lucrative and expanding, especially in the United States, where it has been growing steadily since 2010, reaching 11 billion gallons in 2014.1 This upward trend is likely to continue as health conscious consumers opt for wat
> In March 1994, six African Americans employed at Texaco Inc.1 filed a class action lawsuit on behalf of 1,400 current and former African American employees. They alleged that Texaco had systematically discriminated against them in terms of promotions and
> In essence, cruise ships are floating small towns. They carry thousands of passengers on ships that often stand thirteen decks tall. The cruise ship industry that travels from Washington State to Alaska contributes billions of dollars into the economies
> Lynn James was in the vortex of a set of crises. Lynn, an entrepreneur and the president, CEO, and 75% owner of Wind River Energy Inc., was one week away from closing a deal to secure much-needed financing for existing and new operations via an independe
> Society is quite concerned about the level of greenhouse gases that are being emitted by various businesses. Many firms are responding by becoming more candid about the effects that their operations are having on the planet. Some are reporting this infor
> According to the Greenpeace Web page, On 16 February last year (1995), Greenpeace learned that the U.K. government had granted permission for Shell Oil to dump a huge, heavily contaminated oil installation, the 14,500 tonne Brent Spar, into the North Atl
> Shortly after midnight on March 24, 1989, the oil tanker Exxon Valdez ran aground on Bligh Reef in Alaska’s Prince William Sound, spilling 11 million gallons of crude oil. Ecological systems were threatened, and the lives and livelihood of area residents
> A two-month-old child was accidentally given a drug overdose at a Texas hospital despite the fact that seven health care professionals reviewed the prescription order before the drug was given to the baby. The following excerpts from a New York Times art
> BP has had a record of mishaps affecting life, the environment, and the property of the company and other stakeholders. On October 26, 2010, the Public Broadcasting System (PBS) in the United States aired a fifty-three-minute TV documentary titled The Sp
> In its own Internal Investigation,1 released on September 8, 2010, BP provided its analysis of why the Deepwater Horizon oil rig exploded, precipitating one of the largest oil spills the world has ever seen. Eleven oil rig crew members were killed and se
> On July 16, 2008, it was announced that several Chinese producers of baby milk powder had been adding melamine, a chemical usually used in countertops, to increase the “richness” of their milk powder and to increase the protein count. Shockingly, the mel
> South Africa and the drug companies have changed forever,” say David Pilling and Nicol degli Innocenti.1 South Africa is to the drug pharmaceutical industry what Vietnam was to the U.S. military. Nothing will be quite the same again. That, at least, is t
> Harold Johns found himself in jail in Germany. He was a vice president of Baranca Industries Inc., a U.S. firm that constructs and installs factory equipment. Unfortunately, he was the highest-ranking Baranca official in Germany while he was in Germany o
> Walt1 Pavlo joined MCI in 1992 and rapidly became second in command at the company’s finance or long-distance collections unit, as is documented in the ethics case “Manipulation of MCI’s Allowance for Doubtful Accounts” in Chapter 5. Walt left MCI in 199
> A cryptocurrency, such as a Bitcoin, is a digital commodity that can be used in financial transactions. Unlike the U.S. or Canadian dollar, cryptocurrencies have no government backing. It is worth only what another person will pay for it. A crypto- curre
> Harry Potter is known to tens of millions of readers as a figment of J. K. Rowling’s imagination. One of the good guys, he is a gifted apprentice magician and budding wizard. Harry and his pals have bested evil wizards in tale after tale and many movies,
> Assume that you are a professional accountant who is CFO of a medium-sized manufacturing company that plans to do the following: • Misrepresent products that come from environmentally irresponsible sources as environmentally friendly. • Bribe officials o
> In 1984, twenty-three-year-old Wanda Liczyk received her designation as a chartered accountant. The following year, she left Coopers & Lybrand (now part of PricewaterhouseCoopers) to become a budget analyst for the City of North York. By 1991, she had be
> Martin Pilzmaker was a young, aggressive lawyer from Montreal who was invited in 1985 to join the law firm Lang Michener in Toronto. It was expected that his immigration law practice “could enrich the (firm’s) coffers by $1 million a year catering to the
> Livent, once the world’s premier live entertainment companies, was sold in 1998 to buyers who soon found that the value they had paid for was an illusion. Livent had thrilled audiences with performances of Phantom of the Opera, Ragtime, Kiss of the Spide
> On July 1, 2013, Scott London, a former KPMG audit partner, pleaded guilty to securities fraud. He had been passing information to his friend, Bryan Shaw, over a two-year period ending in 2012. He told his friend about earnings announcements by Herbalife
> Google is the world’s largest search engine. In 2009, it had approximately 400 million Web users, of which 200 million are located in the United States. Its global revenue from advertising amounted to $23.6 billion. China is the world’s third-largest eco
> The Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 created the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (PCAOB). The PCAOB reports to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). One of the PCAOB’s responsibilities is to audit the accounting firms through practice in
> At the firm, we’ve got a new way of looking at tax issues. It’s called ‘risk management,’ and, in your case, John, it means that we can be more aggressive than in the past. In the past, when there was an issue open to interpretation, we advised you to ad
> Sophia and Maya were having a quiet afterwork drink at the Purple Pheasant around the corner from their office. Both are professional accountants in their late twenties and were talking about their futures in public accounting. “I want to concentrate on
> Before 2002, accounting firms would provide multiple services to the same firm. Hired by the shareholders, they would audit the financial statements that were prepared by management while also pro- viding consulting services to those same managers. Some
> As Bill Adams packed his briefcase on Friday, March 15, he could never remember being so glad to see a weekend. As a senior tax manager with a major accounting firm, Hay & Hay, on the fast track for partnership, he was worried that the events of the week
> The Italian federal corporate tax system has an official, legal tax structure and tax rates just as the U.S. system does. However, all similarity between the two systems ends there. The Italian tax authorities assume that no Italian corporation would eve
> The leak of the Panama Papers in 2016 revealed the existence of hundreds of thou- sands of offshore shell companies used by the world’s wealthy to avoid paying taxes, raised the public’s awareness of advantaged treatment of the wealthy, and led to renewe
> Multinationals are headquartered in one country but have operations worldwide. Generally, each multinational pays income taxes in the jurisdiction in which it generates its profits. For example, a German company with operations in the United States and S
> Multidisciplinary practices are probably an inevitable development. Clients want “one- stop shopping,” at a professional firm where they can go for all their needs, and where the partner responsible for their work can keep them briefed on new services th
> Stan Jones was an investor who had recently lost money on his investment in Fine Line Hotels, Inc., and he was anxious to discuss the problem with Janet Todd, a qualified accountant who was his friend and occasional advisor. “How can they justify this, J
> In June 2002, Martha Stewart began to wrestle with allegations that she had improperly used inside information to sell a stock investment to an unsuspecting investing public. That was when her personal friend Sam Waksal was defending himself against SEC
> It’s legal, but is it ethical? For years, a nationally known doughnut chain only sold sugary drinks at its retail outlets on a prominent university campus. Sugar consumption is known to contribute to diseases such as heart disease, tooth decay, diabetes,
> At one time, a well-known communications firm measured all managers at all levels on return on net assets (RONA). Write a report to the firm’s CFO indicating why you believe that the use of a single performance measure for managers at all levels will not
> Consider the following jobs. Identify a nonfinancial performance measure that you would recommend. a. Flight attendant b. Hotel parking valet c. Sports venue ticket-taker d. Bank teller e. Restaurant wait-staff
> Kipling’s Taco Shop was the only establishment serving tacos and other quick bites in a small college town for more than 20 years. Service was limited to the walk-up window, with no delivery and no inside seating. The owner of Kipling’s focused on well-m
> Refer to the information in Exercise 17-43. Required Write a memo to the managers at Crescent Call Centers recommending which variances they should investigate this period along with your reasons. Exercise 17-43: The standard direct labor cost per call
> Refer to the information in Exercise 17-41. Required Write a memo to the senior manager of Oakman Accounting Partners recommending which variances from the past year the firm should investigate along with your reasons. Exercise 17-41:
> Gerisch Consolidated sold 21,150 units of its only product last period. It had budgeted sales of 24,300 units based on an expected market share of 25 percent. The sales activity variance for the period is $340,200 U. The industry volume variance was $194
> Refer to the information in Exercise 17-22. Assume that Fischer Fabrication had no beginning finished goods inventory and only produced one product. A count of inventory showed that 4,400 units remained in the warehouse. Required a. Assume Fischer writes
> The River Plant of Carlisle, Inc. produces a particular metal fixture used in aerospace and maritime industries. The following information is available for the last operating month: ∙ The plant produced and sold 27,600 fixtures for $72
> The (partial) cost sheet for the single product manufactured at Briarcliff Corporation follows: The master budget level of production is 45,000 direct labor-hours, which is also the production volume used to compute the fixed overhead application rate. O
> Refer to the information in Exercises 16-38 and 16-39. Required What are the fixed overhead price and production volume variances for Golden Food Products? Exercise 16-38: Exercise 16-39:
> When would you advise a firm to use direct intervention to set transfer prices? What are the disadvantages of such a practice?
> Annland Components applies fixed overhead at the rate of $5.10 per unit. For October, budgeted fixed overhead was $513,825. The production volume variance amounted to $3,825 favorable, and the price variance was $12,750 unfavorable. Required a. What was
> Coe Parts applies fixed overhead at the rate of $6.80 per unit. Budgeted fixed overhead was $197,200. This month 28,120 units were produced, and actual fixed overhead was $192,100. Required a. What are the fixed overhead price and production volume varia
> Rankin Fabrication reports the following information with respect to its direct materials: Rankin Fabrication holds no materials inventories. Required a. Prepare a short report for Rankin’s management showing direct materials price and
> Refer to the information in Exercises 16-38 and 16-39. During the year, the company purchased 320,000 pounds of material and employed 32,500 hours of direct labor. Required a. Compute the direct materials price and efficiency variances. b. Compute the di
> Golden Food Products produces special-formula pet food. The company carries no inventories. The master budget calls for the company to manufacture and sell 120,000 cases at a budgeted price of $60 per case this year. The standard direct cost sheet for on
> Engleside Components produces testing equipment for medical devices. Recently, one of the company’s usual suppliers was unable to fill an order, so the purchasing manager chose a supplier who had been approved. The price was significantly higher than the
> Selected data for March for Irvington, Inc. follow. The variable material sales activity variance is $21,600 U. Required a. How many units were budgeted for March in the master budget? b. Recreate the master budget for March.
> The following data are available for the most recent year of operations for Prest Products. The revenue portion of the sales activity variance is $225,000 U. Required a. How many units were actually sold in the most recent period? b. Prepare a sales acti
> The Main Street plant controller at Nowak Enterprises sends you the following graph to explain the plant’s costs. Required Given the data shown in the graph, determine the following: a. Budgeted fixed cost per period. b. Budgeted variab
> Burdeno Appliances has two divisions, Sales and Financing. Sales is responsible for selling Burdeno’s inventory and maintaining inventory for future sale. Financing Division takes loan applications, packages loans into pools, and sells them in the financ
> What are the limitations of market-based transfer prices? What are the limitations of cost based transfer prices?
> Refer to the information in Exercise 15-36. Suppose Manufacturing is located in Country X with a tax rate of 35 percent and Marketing in Country Y with a tax rate of 15 percent. All other facts remain the same. Required a. Current output in Manufacturing
> Refer to the information in Exercise 15-24. Assume there is no special order pending. Required a. What transfer price would you recommend for Hamlet Industries? b. Using your recommended transfer price, what will be the income of the two divisions, assum
> Anstell Corporation operates a Manufacturing Division and a Marketing Division. Both divisions are evaluated as profit centers. Marketing buys products from Manufacturing and packages them for sale. Manufacturing sells many components to third parties in