
Fundamental Accounting Principles 22th Edition by John Wild ,Ken Shaw,Barbara Chiappetta
Edition 22ISBN: 978-0077862275
Fundamental Accounting Principles 22th Edition by John Wild ,Ken Shaw,Barbara Chiappetta
Edition 22ISBN: 978-0077862275 Exercise 35
Refer to the information in QS 19-11. During the month, the jobs used direct labor as shown below. Jobs 1 and 3 are not finished by the end of March, and Job 2 is finished but not sold by the end of March. (1) Determine the amounts of direct materials, direct labor, and factory overhead applied that would be reported on job cost sheets for each of the three jobs for March. (2) Determine the total dollar amount of Work in Process Inventory at the end of March. (3) Determine the total dollar amount of Finished Goods Inventory at the end of March. Assume the company has no beginning Work in Process or Finished Goods inventories.
REFERENCE: in QS 19-11
On March 1 a dressmaker starts work on three custom-designed wedding dresses. The company uses job order costing and applies overhead to each job (dress) at the rate of 40% of direct materials costs. During the month, the jobs used direct materials as shown below. Compute the amount of overhead applied to each of the three jobs.

REFERENCE: in QS 19-11
On March 1 a dressmaker starts work on three custom-designed wedding dresses. The company uses job order costing and applies overhead to each job (dress) at the rate of 40% of direct materials costs. During the month, the jobs used direct materials as shown below. Compute the amount of overhead applied to each of the three jobs.

Explanation
1.
Job order costing refers to the syste...
Fundamental Accounting Principles 22th Edition by John Wild ,Ken Shaw,Barbara Chiappetta
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