Oak Creek Furniture Factory (OCFF), a custom furniture manufacturer, uses job order costing to track the cost of each customer order. On March 1, OCFF had two jobs in process with the following costs: Work in Process Balance on 3/1 Job 33 $ 4,300 Job 34 4,200 $ 8,500 Source documents revealed the following during March: Materials Requisitions Forms Labor Time Tickets Status of Job at Month-End Job 33 $ 2,200 $ 5,700 Completed and sold Job 34 3,300 4,100 Completed, but not sold Job 35 3,100 3,700 In process Indirect 1,300 2,500 $ 9,900 $ 16,000 The company applies overhead to products at a rate of 55 percent of direct labor cost. Required: 1. Compute the cost of Jobs 33, 34, and 35 at the end of the month. 2. Calculate the balance in the Work in Process Inventory, Finished Goods Inventory, and Cost of Goods Sold accounts at month-end.

Respuesta :

Answer:

job 33 $  15335 (COGS)

job 34 $  13855 (Finished goods)

jon 35 $    8835 (Ending WIP inventory)

Explanation:

We will construct the job sheet

[tex]\left[\begin{array}{cccccc}&Beginning&Materials&Labor&overhead&Total\\job 33&4300&2200&5700&3135&15335\\job 34&4200&3300&4100&2255&13855\\job 35&&3100&3700&2035&8835\\total&8500&8600&13500&7425&38025\\\end{array}\right][/tex]

Now, job 33 as being sold will constitute the COGS

while job 34 as complete but not sold is finished good

and job 35 incomplete is the ending WIP

the overhead amount is donde by taking the labor const nd multiplying it by 55%

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