Posted: 30 Aug 2009 at 16:06 | IP Logged
|
|
|
Becker hw. problem: Central Winery manufactured 2 products, A&B. Estimated demand for Product A was 10,000 bottles and for product B was 30,000 bottles. The estimated sales price per bottle for A was $6.00 and for B was $8.00. Actual demand for product A was 8,000 bottles and for product B was 33,000 bottles. The actual price per bottle for A was $6.20 & for B was $7.70. What amount would be the total selling price variance for Central Winery?
Answer: b. $8,300 unfavorable
SPV = (Actual SP per unit - Budgeted SP per unit) x Actual units sold
SPV Product A = (6.20-6.00) x 8,000 = $1,600
SPV Product B = (7.70-8.00) x 33,000 = ($9,900)
Total SPV = ($8,300) Unfavorable.
HOWEVER; shouldn't we be using the "SAD" Standard less Actual to calc the difference? If that's the case it would equate to a Favorable variance??
|