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管理企业会计15.ppt

发布:2017-09-22约2.37千字共12页下载文档
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McGraw-Hill/Irwin 15-* Target Costing and Cost Analysis for Pricing Decisions 15 Chapter Fifteen Major Influences on Pricing Decisions Pricing Decisions Political, legal, and image issues Competitors Costs Customer demand Quantity made and sold per month Determining the Profit-Maximizing Price and Quantity Dollars per unit Demand Marginal revenue q* p* Marginal cost Profit is maximized where marginal cost equals marginal revenue, resulting in price p* and quantity q*. Determining the Profit-Maximizing Price and Quantity Total revenue Dollars Total cost Total profit at the profit-maximizing quantity and price, q* and p*. Quantity made and sold per month q* Price Elasticity The impact of price changes on sales volume Demand is elastic if a price increase has a large negative impact on sales volume. Demand is inelastic if a price increase has little or no impact on sales volume. Cost-Plus Pricing Price = cost + (markup percentage × cost) Variable manufacturing cost? Full-absorption manufacturing cost? Total cost, including selling and administrative? Total variable cost, including selling and administrative? Target Costing Market research determines the price at which a new product will sell. Management computes a manufacturing cost that will provide an acceptable profit margin. Engineers and cost analysts design a product that can be made for the allowable cost. Target Costing Key principles of target costing Price led costing Focus on the customer Focus on product design Focus on process design Cross-functional teams Life-cycle costs Value-chain orientation Value Engineering and Target Costing Target cost information Product design Product costs Production processes Value Engineering Cost reduction Design improvement Process improvement Competitive Bidding High bid price Low probability of winning bid High profit if winning bid Low bid price High probability of winning bid Low profit if winning bid Competitive Bidding Guidelines for Bidding B
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