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Cost Accounting: How Do Capacity Constraints Work on The Bottom Line? 0 Views
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Transcript
- 00:00
and finance Allah shmoop How do capacity constraints work on
- 00:05
the bottom line All right people you're the CEO of
- 00:09
Little Poker is a company that makes shrimp forks You
- 00:12
just received an order for twenty thousand forks from a
- 00:15
shrimp fest in Gulf Port Mississippi Big order Big revenue
Full Transcript
- 00:18
It should be time to pop the champagne and celebrate
- 00:21
but there's a problem You currently make forty eight thousand
- 00:24
forks per month and you only have capacity for fifty
- 00:27
thousand a month Which means that your facility working at
- 00:30
full speed has a limit or a constraint of fifty
- 00:33
thousand units that it can produce in any given month
- 00:36
Well we've run into a problem known as capacity constraints
- 00:39
You just don't have enough capacity now to fulfill the
- 00:42
Gulf port order in a timely fashion They want delivery
- 00:45
in two months and it would take you ten months
- 00:47
to make it the additional twenty thousand You need to
- 00:50
fill the order right So why not just increased capacity
- 00:53
Well it might not be that easy Whether you can
- 00:55
take the order or not depends on the specific reason
- 00:58
you have a cap on your production Well there are
- 01:00
different kinds of capacity constraints In your case Well you
- 01:03
don't have enough machines to make more than fifty thousand
- 01:06
a month If you want to expand production you'LL have
- 01:08
to buy some additional equipment It's very expensive solution to
- 01:11
the problem here Well they already be worth that additional
- 01:14
costs Buying those machines In other words is your bottom
- 01:17
line hurt or helped by an attempt to break through
- 01:20
your capacity constraint Well before we tackle that question directly
- 01:23
let's look at some other potential reasons that company's capacity
- 01:26
might be constrained Some situations are easier to fix than
- 01:29
others For instance the company might not have enough workers
- 01:32
will If that's the case they could just hire extra
- 01:34
people pay him a little bit of overtime to increase
- 01:36
production or they can pay a lot of overtime to
- 01:39
their current workers The only thing to look out for
- 01:41
with additional labor is whether the increased costs are going
- 01:44
to cut into their profit margins Bringing in additional workers
- 01:48
shouldn't matter The gross profit and gross margin figures already
- 01:52
include the cost of direct labor The new workers will
- 01:54
make more products The additional cost come with additional revenue
- 01:58
gross margins stay the same But using overtime workers that
- 02:02
you have to pay a lot of overtime to could
- 02:03
get too costly to be worth it Well since the
- 02:06
company would pay more per hour in the overtime shift
- 02:08
the gross margins for the products made during that time
- 02:11
would decrease On the other hand getting more use out
- 02:14
of the machinery and overhead means that the company is
- 02:16
able to leverage its operating expenses Mohr And that's a
- 02:18
good thing The overtime costs might hurt gross margins but
- 02:21
operating margins might not be impacted as much they might
- 02:25
even improved while based on the situation Right lot of
- 02:28
moving parts here another potential capacity constraints Not enough raw
- 02:32
materials like say you make caviar ice cream and your
- 02:35
supplier can't provide enough caviar to make more than ten
- 02:38
thousand gallons of ice cream a month That raw material
- 02:41
constraint limits your production will The solution here involves finding
- 02:44
an additional source of product or caviar The main worry
- 02:47
though in terms of the bottom line would be well
- 02:50
what if the prices for that extra caviar are really
- 02:53
high Getting additional raw materials might force you to tap
- 02:56
into a way more expensive means of obtaining them like
- 02:58
to get more caviar You might have to await into
- 03:00
expensive Russian black markets Make more than ten thousand gallons
- 03:04
of the caviar ice cream in the class per gallon
- 03:07
might actually increase We'LL all that expensive black market caviar
- 03:10
then you know really cuts into your profits Is it
- 03:12
worth it Is it worth it That's what you're asking
- 03:14
all the time here Or the mere fact that you
- 03:16
need more raw materials could drive prices higher like you're
- 03:19
now a big buyer a big commander of a limited
- 03:22
supply product More demand for the caviar consent Caviar prices
- 03:25
higher across the board Well if your raw materials cost
- 03:28
more it'LL cut into your gross margin of fact That
- 03:30
could make the additional production less profitable and that might
- 03:33
not be worth the effort Remember that's what we're asking
- 03:35
here Is it worth it Is it worth it Okay
- 03:37
back to little pokers In your case that capacity constraint
- 03:40
comes from limits to the output of your machinery You
- 03:43
have two time slapping machines These things here each one
- 03:47
can bust out twenty five thousand marks a month There's
- 03:49
nothing you can do to get them to produce Maur
- 03:52
If you want to increase capacity your only choice is
- 03:54
to buy additional machine Well the first question you have
- 03:57
to ask Can we fit anymore machines in the warehouse
- 04:00
singing here Well if the answer is no and you're
- 04:02
probably s out of luck if you're out of physical
- 04:05
space you may need then a new factory in warehouse
- 04:08
and laborers and all that That's an extremely expensive proposition
- 04:12
Buying a new factory would only make sense if you
- 04:14
force a long term demand well above your current capacity
- 04:17
If you believe that you could make and sell double
- 04:19
your current output for example well then maybe it be
- 04:22
worth it Well luckily for you you don't have to
- 04:24
make that choice Your chief engineer says she can move
- 04:27
things around toe add an additional machine She says she
- 04:30
can do it in such a way that you don't
- 04:31
have to interrupt current production to install the new machine
- 04:34
Right Well the big worries here one Will you have
- 04:36
enough sustained demand justify buying a new machine into How
- 04:40
will the cost of the new machine impact your real
- 04:43
bottom line Well the reason you're considering buying a new
- 04:45
machine because he received a special order from the Gulf
- 04:47
Port Shrimp fest Another time sliding machine cost two million
- 04:50
dollars If you spend that amount just to fill the
- 04:53
one order well then it's a money losing proposition and
- 04:56
or fit Say you buy the machine for two million
- 04:58
dollars and use it to make the additional twenty thousand
- 05:01
additional units It brings in ninety grand in revenue But
- 05:04
then the machine sits idle while you go back to
- 05:06
your normal production levels You lost more than one point
- 05:09
nine million dollars on that deal for buying that machine
- 05:11
that now holds coats very nicely Better to just turn
- 05:14
down that special order not worth it But if that
- 05:17
special order is a sign of long term demand for
- 05:19
Shrimp Fork thing is well it might be worth the
- 05:21
expansion You have your salespeople call around you bring in
- 05:24
some outside consultants who produced a lot of fancy pretty
- 05:26
looking charts you don't really understand but they tell you
- 05:29
bottom line they think there's enough demand to expand capacity
- 05:32
long term So you take the plunge you spend two
- 05:35
million dollars to buy the new machine And yes you
- 05:37
could have leased it for a month or two or
- 05:39
something like that and much higher prices But we won't
- 05:42
get you all complicated here That machine is enough to
- 05:44
increase your capacity to seventy five thousand Shrimp fork Thing
- 05:47
is a month You easily get the special order in
- 05:50
on time The customers so impressed they tell all the
- 05:53
other regional shrimp fest about your company You start to
- 05:56
get tons of orders Literally Infact you become the official
- 05:59
shrimp fork provider for the entire Gulf Coast Enough demand
- 06:02
for seventy five thousand forks a month Additional revenue of
- 06:05
one hundred twelve thousand five hundred dollars a month to
- 06:08
well you're gross Margins on the forks remain steady at
- 06:10
sixty five percent Meaning you bring in gross profit of
- 06:12
seventy three grand from that new product Well you were
- 06:15
able to sign a long term lease for the time
- 06:17
slapping machine that cost you fifty grand a month Yeah
- 06:20
So instead of buying in fall the capital twenty three
- 06:22
thousand one hundred twenty five dollars in new monthly profit
- 06:25
from the expansion Good for you The visitors to all
- 06:28
the Gulf Region Shrimp fest Get a shrimp eating experience
- 06:31
that's a really great and you add to your bottom 00:06:33.635 --> [endTime] line the only real losers here and the shrimp
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