Thursday, December 4, 2025

Comprehensive mocktest. Management Accounting 100question


US CMA PART 1Management Account

100 MCQs*

 

**📌 PART 1 — Nature, Source & Purpose of Management Information

(Q1–10)**

 

1. Management accounting primarily provides information for:

A. Shareholders

B. External regulators

C. Internal managers

D. Government agencies

Answer: 

 

2. Financial accounting information is usually:

A. Forward-looking

B. For internal decision-making

C. Mandatory for statutory reporting

D. Non-monetary

Answer: 

 

3. Which of the following is qualitative information?

A. Profit margin

B. Machine efficiency %

C. Customer feedback

D. Cash balance

Answer: 

 

4. Data becomes information when it is:

A. Recorded

B. Stored

C. Processed and made meaningful

D. Collected in raw form

Answer: 

 

5. Salary of factory supervisors is a:

A. Direct cost

B. Indirect production cost

C. Administrative cost

D. Selling cost

Answer: 

 

6. Electricity that increases with production volume is:

A. Fixed cost

B. Stepped cost

C. Variable cost

D. Period cost

Answer: 

 

7. Which costs relate to factory administration?

A. Selling costs

B. Distribution costs

C. Production overheads

D. Administrative overheads

Answer: 

 

8. An example of a stepped cost is:

A. Direct materials

B. Rent increasing after every 500 units

C. Factory rent

D. Machine maintenance cost

Answer: 

 

9. Which user is most interested in management accounting reports?

A. Bank

B. Tax authorities

C. Marketing manager

D. Shareholder

Answer: 

 

10. Which of the following is a non-financial measure?

A. Profit

B. Sales revenue

C. Customer satisfaction score

D. Cost per unit

Answer: 

 

 

**📌 PART 2 — Cost Classification, Concepts & Behaviour

(Q11–20)**

 

11. Direct labour is classified as:

A. Direct cost

B. Indirect cost

C. Fixed cost

D. Period cost

Answer: 

 

12. A sunk cost is:

A. Avoidable

B. Future cost

C. Irrecoverable past cost

D. Decision-relevant

Answer: 

 

13. Relevant costs are always:

A. Fixed

B. Historical

C. Future and avoidable

D. Overhead costs

Answer: 

 

14. High-low method is used for:

A. Cost assignment

B. Cost estimation

C. Price determination

D. Inventory valuation

Answer: 

 

15. Committed costs arise from:

A. Future decisions

B. Non-cancellable long-term contracts

C. Short-term variability

D. Direct labour use

Answer: 

 

16. Opportunity cost is the:

A. Historical cost

B. Cost saved by choosing an option

C. Benefit lost by choosing one alternative over the next best

D. Future unavoidable cost

Answer: 

 

17. Variable cost per unit:

A. Decreases as volume increases

B. Increases as volume increases

C. Remains constant per unit

D. Is always fixed in total

Answer: 

 

18. A cost that changes in lumps is known as:

A. Variable cost

B. Stepped cost

C. Mixed cost

D. Fixed cost

Answer: 

 

19. Mixed (semi-variable) cost consists of:

A. Only fixed cost

B. Only variable cost

C. Fixed + variable elements

D. Sunk costs only

Answer: 

 

20. Product costs are included in:

A. Income statement only

B. Cost of goods sold and inventory

C. Capital expenditure

D. Distribution cost

Answer: 

 

 

**📌 PART 3 — Cost Accounting Techniques

(Q21–25)**

 

21. EOQ helps in determining:

A. Safety stock

B. Minimum stock level

C. Optimal order quantity

D. Maximum stock level

Answer: 

 

22. Under FIFO, issues are valued at:

A. Latest prices

B. Average costs

C. Oldest prices

D. Market value

Answer: 

 

23. Idle time cost is treated as:

A. Direct labour

B. Indirect labour (overhead)

C. Selling cost

D. Product cost directly

Answer: 

 

24. OAR (Overhead Absorption Rate) =

A. Budgeted overhead / Actual units

B. Actual overhead / Budgeted units

C. Budgeted overhead / Budgeted activity

D. Actual overhead / Actual activity

Answer: 

 

25. Under-absorption of overheads occurs when:

A. Actual OH < Absorbed OH

B. Actual OH > Absorbed OH

C. Actual OH = Absorbed OH

D. No OH is incurred

Answer: 

 

 

**📌 PART 4 — Job, Batch, Process & Service Costing

(Q26–40)**

 

26. Job costing is most suitable for:

A. Cement manufacturing

B. Hospital ward

C. Tailoring shop (custom orders)

D. Steel production

Answer: 

 

27. A job cost sheet does NOT include:

A. Direct materials

B. Direct labour

C. Production overhead

D. Selling expenses

Answer: 

 

28. In job costing, indirect materials are treated as:

A. Direct cost

B. Overheads

C. Selling cost

D. Administration cost

Answer: 

 

29. Batch costing is typically used when:

A. Products are unique

B. Mass production occurs

C. Products are made in groups

D. Only services are provided

Answer: 

 

30. The cost per unit in batch costing =

A. Total cost × Batch units

B. Total cost / Batch units

C. Variable cost only

D. Fixed cost only

Answer: 

 

31. Process costing is suitable when production is:

A. Customised

B. Continuous and identical

C. Based on contracts

D. Seasonal

Answer: 

 

32. Normal loss is:

A. Avoidable

B. Inefficient loss

C. Unavoidable loss

D. Always valued at selling price

Answer: 

 

33. Abnormal loss is valued at:

A. Nil value

B. Scrap value

C. Cost per unit

D. Market price

Answer: 

 

34. Abnormal gain occurs when:

A. Actual output < expected output

B. Actual output > expected output

C. Scrap value increases

D. Units are lost in transit

Answer: 

 

35. Equivalent units represent:

A. Physical units

B. Completed units plus proportion of WIP

C. Material units only

D. Scrap units

Answer: 

 

36. FIFO process costing assumes:

A. Opening WIP completed first

B. Closing WIP completed first

C. No opening inventory

D. Ending inventory is valued at opening costs

Answer: 

 

37. AVCO (Weighted Average) process costing values units at:

A. Latest cost

B. First purchase cost

C. Weighted average cost

D. Market price

Answer: 

 

38. Service costing uses which measure?

A. Units produced

B. Material consumed

C. Cost per service unit

D. Overhead absorption rate

Answer: 

 

39. In a transport company, cost per service unit may be:

A. Cost per km

B. Cost per tonne produced

C. Cost per batch

D. Cost per contract

Answer: 

 

40. Hospital costing is an example of:

A. Job costing

B. Batch costing

C. Service costing

D. Process costing

Answer: 

 

 

**📌 PART 5 — Marginal & Absorption Costing

(Q41–50)**

 

41. Contribution =

A. Sales – Fixed cost

B. Sales – Variable cost

C. Fixed cost – Profit

D. Profit – Variable cost

Answer: 

 

42. Break-even point (units) =

A. Fixed cost / Contribution per unit

B. Fixed + Variable cost

C. Profit / Margin of safety

D. Sales – Variable cost

Answer: 

 

43. Margin of safety =

A. BEP – Actual sales

B. (Actual sales – BEP)

C. Sales – Cost

D. Profit / Contribution

Answer: 

 

44. Under marginal costing, closing inventory is valued at:

A. Total cost

B. Variable production cost

C. Absorbed cost

D. Prime cost only

Answer: 

 

45. Under absorption costing, fixed overheads are:

A. Treated as period cost

B. Ignored

C. Absorbed into product cost

D. Not included in valuation

Answer: 

 

46. When production > sales, absorption costing profit is:

A. Equal to marginal costing

B. Higher than marginal costing

C. Lower than marginal costing

D. Always negative

Answer: 

 

47. When sales > production, marginal costing profit is:

A. Higher than absorption costing

B. Lower than absorption costing

C. Same under both

D. Always zero

Answer: 

 

48. CVP analysis assumes:

A. Variable cost per unit changes

B. Selling price fluctuates

C. Costs behave linearly

D. Fixed costs vary with production

Answer: 

 

49. Multi-product BEP requires:

A. Weighted average contribution

B. FIFO valuation

C. Scrap value consideration

D. Idle time analysis

Answer: 

 

50. Absorption costing difference with marginal costing arises due to:

A. Variable overhead

B. Fixed overhead absorption

C. Direct labour treatment

D. Material costing method

Answer: 

 

 

 

**📌 PART 6 — Budgeting & Forecasting

(Q51–75)**

 

51. A budget is best defined as:

A. A long-term plan

B. A statement of actual results

C. A quantified plan of action for a period

D. A financial report for stakeholders

Answer: 

 

52. Zero-based budgeting starts from:

A. Last year’s budget

B. Zero base and justifies each cost

C. Only fixed cost

D. Only variable cost

Answer: 

 

53. Incremental budgeting:

A. Ignores past results

B. Adds incremental changes to prior budget

C. Is always more accurate

D. Requires zero justification

Answer: 

 

54. A rolling budget is:

A. Adjusted every year

B. Updated continuously (monthly/quarterly)

C. Static for the period

D. Only for cash budgets

Answer: 

 

55. The first budget to prepare in a master budget is usually:

A. Production budget

B. Cash budget

C. Sales budget

D. Overhead budget

Answer: 

 

56. A functional budget includes:

A. Shareholders’ funds

B. Material, labour, and overhead budgets

C. Dividends payable

D. Variance report

Answer: 

 

57. The production budget formula is:

A. Sales + Closing stock – Opening stock

B. Opening stock – Closing stock

C. Sales – Purchases

D. Closing stock / Opening stock

Answer: 

 

58. Material purchase budget =

A. Sales – COGS

B. Required material + Closing stock – Opening stock

C. Opening stock – Closing stock

D. Material used × Selling price

Answer: 

 

59. Labour hour requirement =

A. Labour rate × Total cost

B. Units × Labour hours per unit

C. Overhead absorption rate × Units

D. Material usage × Rate

Answer: 

 

60. Cash budget includes:

A. Only credit sales

B. All income & expenditure whether cash or credit

C. Only cash inflows and outflows

D. Only profit-related items

Answer: 

 

61. Non-cash expenses such as depreciation are:

A. Included in cash budget

B. Excluded from cash budget

C. Treated as cash outflows

D. Included only if asset sold

Answer: 

 

62. Master budget does NOT include:

A. Budgeted income statement

B. Budgeted balance sheet

C. Budgeted cash flow

D. Actual performance report

Answer: 

 

63. A fixed budget is prepared for:

A. A single level of activity

B. Multiple activity levels

C. Flexible operations

D. All departments

Answer: 

 

64. A flexible budget adjusts for:

A. Capital structure

B. Changes in activity level

C. Market demand only

D. Depreciation adjustments

Answer: 

 

65. Behavioural problems in budgeting can arise due to:

A. Too much working capital

B. Tight or unrealistic targets

C. Accurate forecasting

D. Use of flexible budgets

Answer: 

 

66. Budgetary slack occurs when:

A. Managers set realistic targets

B. Managers intentionally underestimate revenue or overestimate costs

C. Targets are too aggressive

D. Zero-based budgeting is used

Answer: 

 

67. Participation in budgeting generally leads to:

A. Lower motivation

B. Higher resistance

C. Greater ownership and motivation

D. Higher costs only

Answer: 

 

68. A top-down budgeting approach means:

A. Lower management prepares the budget

B. Only cash budgets are used

C. Senior management imposes budgets

D. No communication occurs

Answer: 

 

69. Which budget is influenced by production capacity?

A. Sales budget

B. Cash budget

C. Production budget

D. Fixed cost budget

Answer: 

 

70. The principal budget factor (key factor) is:

A. Production cost

B. The limiting factor that restricts activity

C. Sales price

D. Labour efficiency

Answer: 

 

71. If sales demand is the limiting factor, then the first budget prepared is:

A. Production budget

B. Labour budget

C. Sales budget

D. Overhead budget

Answer: 

 

72. In a cash budget, credit sales are included when:

A. Sale is made

B. Cash is received

C. Invoice is raised

D. Profit is calculated

Answer: 

 

73. The main purpose of a cash budget is to:

A. Prepare income statement

B. Control working capital and liquidity

C. Value closing inventory

D. Calculate net worth

Answer: 

 

74. Controllable costs are:

A. Always fixed

B. Always variable

C. Costs that managers can influence

D. Never allocated

Answer: 

 

75. The principal purpose of variance analysis is:

A. Prepare cash budget

B. Compare actual to budget

C. Calculate absorption rate

D. Determine EOQ

Answer: 


**📌 PART 7 — Standard Costing & Variance Analysis


(Q76–90)**



---


76. A standard cost is:


A. Actual cost

B. Estimated cost per unit for planning & control

C. Historical average

D. Minimum cost achievable


Answer: 



---


77. Ideal standards assume:


A. Normal inefficiencies

B. No wastage and perfect efficiency

C. Past performance

D. Market fluctuations


Answer: 



---


78. Material price variance is calculated as:


A. (Standard price – Actual price) × Actual quantity

B. (Standard quantity – Actual quantity) × Standard price

C. (Actual price – Standard price) × Standard quantity

D. Materials used × Actual price


Answer: 



---


79. Material usage variance =


A. (AQ × SP) – (SQ × SP)

B. (AP × AQ) – (SP × AQ)

C. (Actual cost – Standard cost)

D. (Standard price × Standard quantity)


Answer



---


80. Labour rate variance =


A. (Standard rate – Actual rate) × Standard hours

B. (Actual hours – Standard hours) × Standard rate

C. (Standard rate – Actual rate) × Actual hours

D. Actual hours × Standard hours


Answer: 



---


81. Labour efficiency variance =


A. (SH – AH) × SR

B. (AR – SR) × AH

C. (AQ – SQ) × SP

D. (Actual rate – Standard rate) × SH


Answer: 



---


82. Variable overhead efficiency variance uses:


A. Hours

B. Units

C. Production cost

D. Selling price


Answer: 



---


83. A favourable variance means:


A. Actual cost > Standard cost

B. Actual revenue < Standard revenue

C. Actual performance better than expected

D. Budget was unrealistic


Answer: 



---


84. If actual price > standard price, material price variance is:


A. Favourable

B. Adverse

C. Zero

D. Cannot be computed


Answer: 



---


85. Sales price variance =


A. (Actual price – Standard price) × Actual units

B. (Standard price – Actual price) × Standard units

C. (Actual units – Standard units) × SP

D. (Sales revenue – COGS)


Answer: 



---


86. Sales volume variance =


A. (Actual units – Budgeted units) × Standard profit per unit

B. (Actual price – Standard price) × Actual units

C. (AQ – SQ) × SP

D. (SH – AH) × SR


Answer: 



---


87. Mix variance is used in:


A. Labour

B. Materials

C. Overheads

D. Selling expenses


Answer: 



---


88. Yield variance measures:


A. Loss due to material mix

B. Output obtained vs expected

C. Price change impact

D. Labour efficiency


Answer: 



---


89. An adverse variance indicates:


A. Performance is better

B. Costs are lower

C. Actual results worse than expected

D. Budget was unnecessary


Answer: 



---


90. Revision of standards is required when:


A. There is no inflation

B. Environment is stable

C. Machinery or processes change significantly

D. Variances are zero


Answer: 



---



---


**📌 PART 8 — Performance Measurement


(Q91–97)**



---


91. ROI =


A. Sales / Profit

B. Profit / Capital employed

C. Profit margin × Asset turnover

D. B + C


Answer: 



---


92. ROCE measures:


A. Efficiency of labour

B. Return on long-term capital

C. Sales efficiency

D. Liquidity


Answer: 



---


93. A limitation of ROI is:


A. Easy to calculate

B. Encourages short-term decision making

C. Ignores profitability

D. Always increases with investment


Answer: 



---


94. Productivity is measured as:


A. Output / Input

B. Profit / Cost

C. Sales / Overheads

D. Output × Input


Answer: 



---


95. A non-financial performance indicator is:


A. Return on assets

B. Net profit margin

C. Customer satisfaction score

D. Gross margin


Answer: 



---


96. Quality performance can be measured using:


A. Profit margin

B. Scrap rate

C. Sales revenue

D. ROCE


Answer: 



---


97. A limitation of financial indicators is:


A. Easy to measure

B. Short-term focus and ignores qualitative factors

C. Widely used

D. Comparable across firms


Answer: 



---



---


**📌 PART 9 — Spreadsheets in Management Accounting


(Q98–100)**



---


98. Cell referencing “A1” refers to:


A. The entire sheet

B. Column A, Row 1

C. Column 1, Row A

D. A formula


Answer: 



---


99. The function to calculate average in a spreadsheet is:


A. =SUM()

B. =COUNT()

C. =AVG()

D. =AVERAGE()


Answer: 



---


100. A risk of spreadsheet use is:


A. Automatic error checking

B. Easy sharing

C. Manual input errors leading to incorrect results

D. Reduced flexibility


Answer: 


www.gmsisuccess.in


Answers:



  Management Accounting

100 MCQs with Answers (Set 1: Q1–25)**

 

**📌 PART 1 — Nature, Source & Purpose of Management Information

(Q1–10)**

 

1. Management accounting primarily provides information for:

A. Shareholders

B. External regulators

C. Internal managers

D. Government agencies

Answer: C

 

2. Financial accounting information is usually:

A. Forward-looking

B. For internal decision-making

C. Mandatory for statutory reporting

D. Non-monetary

Answer: C

 

3. Which of the following is qualitative information?

A. Profit margin

B. Machine efficiency %

C. Customer feedback

D. Cash balance

Answer: C

 

4. Data becomes information when it is:

A. Recorded

B. Stored

C. Processed and made meaningful

D. Collected in raw form

Answer: C

 

5. Salary of factory supervisors is a:

A. Direct cost

B. Indirect production cost

C. Administrative cost

D. Selling cost

Answer: B

 

6. Electricity that increases with production volume is:

A. Fixed cost

B. Stepped cost

C. Variable cost

D. Period cost

Answer: C

 

7. Which costs relate to factory administration?

A. Selling costs

B. Distribution costs

C. Production overheads

D. Administrative overheads

Answer: C

 

8. An example of a stepped cost is:

A. Direct materials

B. Rent increasing after every 500 units

C. Factory rent

D. Machine maintenance cost

Answer: B

 

9. Which user is most interested in management accounting reports?

A. Bank

B. Tax authorities

C. Marketing manager

D. Shareholder

Answer: C

 

10. Which of the following is a non-financial measure?

A. Profit

B. Sales revenue

C. Customer satisfaction score

D. Cost per unit

Answer: C

 

 

**📌 PART 2 — Cost Classification, Concepts & Behaviour

(Q11–20)**

 

11. Direct labour is classified as:

A. Direct cost

B. Indirect cost

C. Fixed cost

D. Period cost

Answer: A

 

12. A sunk cost is:

A. Avoidable

B. Future cost

C. Irrecoverable past cost

D. Decision-relevant

Answer: C

 

13. Relevant costs are always:

A. Fixed

B. Historical

C. Future and avoidable

D. Overhead costs

Answer: C

 

14. High-low method is used for:

A. Cost assignment

B. Cost estimation

C. Price determination

D. Inventory valuation

Answer: B

 

15. Committed costs arise from:

A. Future decisions

B. Non-cancellable long-term contracts

C. Short-term variability

D. Direct labour use

Answer: B

 

16. Opportunity cost is the:

A. Historical cost

B. Cost saved by choosing an option

C. Benefit lost by choosing one alternative over the next best

D. Future unavoidable cost

Answer: C

 

17. Variable cost per unit:

A. Decreases as volume increases

B. Increases as volume increases

C. Remains constant per unit

D. Is always fixed in total

Answer: C

 

18. A cost that changes in lumps is known as:

A. Variable cost

B. Stepped cost

C. Mixed cost

D. Fixed cost

Answer: B

 

19. Mixed (semi-variable) cost consists of:

A. Only fixed cost

B. Only variable cost

C. Fixed + variable elements

D. Sunk costs only

Answer: C

 

20. Product costs are included in:

A. Income statement only

B. Cost of goods sold and inventory

C. Capital expenditure

D. Distribution cost

Answer: B

 

 

**📌 PART 3 — Cost Accounting Techniques

(Q21–25)**

 

21. EOQ helps in determining:

A. Safety stock

B. Minimum stock level

C. Optimal order quantity

D. Maximum stock level

Answer: C

 

22. Under FIFO, issues are valued at:

A. Latest prices

B. Average costs

C. Oldest prices

D. Market value

Answer: C

 

23. Idle time cost is treated as:

A. Direct labour

B. Indirect labour (overhead)

C. Selling cost

D. Product cost directly

Answer: B

 

24. OAR (Overhead Absorption Rate) =

A. Budgeted overhead / Actual units

B. Actual overhead / Budgeted units

C. Budgeted overhead / Budgeted activity

D. Actual overhead / Actual activity

Answer: C

 

25. Under-absorption of overheads occurs when:

A. Actual OH < Absorbed OH

B. Actual OH > Absorbed OH

C. Actual OH = Absorbed OH

D. No OH is incurred

Answer: B

 

 

 

✅  Management Accounting

MCQs with Answers (Set 2: Q26–50)**

 

**📌 PART 4 — Job, Batch, Process & Service Costing

(Q26–40)**

 

26. Job costing is most suitable for:

A. Cement manufacturing

B. Hospital ward

C. Tailoring shop (custom orders)

D. Steel production

Answer: C

 

27. A job cost sheet does NOT include:

A. Direct materials

B. Direct labour

C. Production overhead

D. Selling expenses

Answer: D

 

28. In job costing, indirect materials are treated as:

A. Direct cost

B. Overheads

C. Selling cost

D. Administration cost

Answer: B

 

29. Batch costing is typically used when:

A. Products are unique

B. Mass production occurs

C. Products are made in groups

D. Only services are provided

Answer: C

 

30. The cost per unit in batch costing =

A. Total cost × Batch units

B. Total cost / Batch units

C. Variable cost only

D. Fixed cost only

Answer: B

 

31. Process costing is suitable when production is:

A. Customised

B. Continuous and identical

C. Based on contracts

D. Seasonal

Answer: B

 

32. Normal loss is:

A. Avoidable

B. Inefficient loss

C. Unavoidable loss

D. Always valued at selling price

Answer: C

 

33. Abnormal loss is valued at:

A. Nil value

B. Scrap value

C. Cost per unit

D. Market price

Answer: C

 

34. Abnormal gain occurs when:

A. Actual output < expected output

B. Actual output > expected output

C. Scrap value increases

D. Units are lost in transit

Answer: B

 

35. Equivalent units represent:

A. Physical units

B. Completed units plus proportion of WIP

C. Material units only

D. Scrap units

Answer: B

 

36. FIFO process costing assumes:

A. Opening WIP completed first

B. Closing WIP completed first

C. No opening inventory

D. Ending inventory is valued at opening costs

Answer: A

 

37. AVCO (Weighted Average) process costing values units at:

A. Latest cost

B. First purchase cost

C. Weighted average cost

D. Market price

Answer: C

 

38. Service costing uses which measure?

A. Units produced

B. Material consumed

C. Cost per service unit

D. Overhead absorption rate

Answer: C

 

39. In a transport company, cost per service unit may be:

A. Cost per km

B. Cost per tonne produced

C. Cost per batch

D. Cost per contract

Answer: A

 

40. Hospital costing is an example of:

A. Job costing

B. Batch costing

C. Service costing

D. Process costing

Answer: C

 

 

**📌 PART 5 — Marginal & Absorption Costing

(Q41–50)**

 

41. Contribution =

A. Sales – Fixed cost

B. Sales – Variable cost

C. Fixed cost – Profit

D. Profit – Variable cost

Answer: B

 

42. Break-even point (units) =

A. Fixed cost / Contribution per unit

B. Fixed + Variable cost

C. Profit / Margin of safety

D. Sales – Variable cost

Answer: A

 

43. Margin of safety =

A. BEP – Actual sales

B. (Actual sales – BEP)

C. Sales – Cost

D. Profit / Contribution

Answer: B

 

44. Under marginal costing, closing inventory is valued at:

A. Total cost

B. Variable production cost

C. Absorbed cost

D. Prime cost only

Answer: B

 

45. Under absorption costing, fixed overheads are:

A. Treated as period cost

B. Ignored

C. Absorbed into product cost

D. Not included in valuation

Answer: C

 

46. When production > sales, absorption costing profit is:

A. Equal to marginal costing

B. Higher than marginal costing

C. Lower than marginal costing

D. Always negative

Answer: B

 

47. When sales > production, marginal costing profit is:

A. Higher than absorption costing

B. Lower than absorption costing

C. Same under both

D. Always zero

Answer: A

 

48. CVP analysis assumes:

A. Variable cost per unit changes

B. Selling price fluctuates

C. Costs behave linearly

D. Fixed costs vary with production

Answer: C

 

49. Multi-product BEP requires:

A. Weighted average contribution

B. FIFO valuation

C. Scrap value consideration

D. Idle time analysis

Answer: A

 

50. Absorption costing difference with marginal costing arises due to:

A. Variable overhead

B. Fixed overhead absorption

C. Direct labour treatment

D. Material costing method

Answer: B

 

 

✅  Management Accounting

MCQs with Answers (Set 3: Q51–75)**

 

**📌 PART 6 — Budgeting & Forecasting

(Q51–75)**

 

51. A budget is best defined as:

A. A long-term plan

B. A statement of actual results

C. A quantified plan of action for a period

D. A financial report for stakeholders

Answer: C

 

52. Zero-based budgeting starts from:

A. Last year’s budget

B. Zero base and justifies each cost

C. Only fixed cost

D. Only variable cost

Answer: B

 

53. Incremental budgeting:

A. Ignores past results

B. Adds incremental changes to prior budget

C. Is always more accurate

D. Requires zero justification

Answer: B

 

54. A rolling budget is:

A. Adjusted every year

B. Updated continuously (monthly/quarterly)

C. Static for the period

D. Only for cash budgets

Answer: B

 

55. The first budget to prepare in a master budget is usually:

A. Production budget

B. Cash budget

C. Sales budget

D. Overhead budget

Answer: C

 

56. A functional budget includes:

A. Shareholders’ funds

B. Material, labour, and overhead budgets

C. Dividends payable

D. Variance report

Answer: B

 

57. The production budget formula is:

A. Sales + Closing stock – Opening stock

B. Opening stock – Closing stock

C. Sales – Purchases

D. Closing stock / Opening stock

Answer: A

 

58. Material purchase budget =

A. Sales – COGS

B. Required material + Closing stock – Opening stock

C. Opening stock – Closing stock

D. Material used × Selling price

Answer: B

 

59. Labour hour requirement =

A. Labour rate × Total cost

B. Units × Labour hours per unit

C. Overhead absorption rate × Units

D. Material usage × Rate

Answer: B

 

60. Cash budget includes:

A. Only credit sales

B. All income & expenditure whether cash or credit

C. Only cash inflows and outflows

D. Only profit-related items

Answer: C

 

61. Non-cash expenses such as depreciation are:

A. Included in cash budget

B. Excluded from cash budget

C. Treated as cash outflows

D. Included only if asset sold

Answer: B

 

62. Master budget does NOT include:

A. Budgeted income statement

B. Budgeted balance sheet

C. Budgeted cash flow

D. Actual performance report

Answer: D

 

63. A fixed budget is prepared for:

A. A single level of activity

B. Multiple activity levels

C. Flexible operations

D. All departments

Answer: A

 

64. A flexible budget adjusts for:

A. Capital structure

B. Changes in activity level

C. Market demand only

D. Depreciation adjustments

Answer: B

 

65. Behavioural problems in budgeting can arise due to:

A. Too much working capital

B. Tight or unrealistic targets

C. Accurate forecasting

D. Use of flexible budgets

Answer: B

 

66. Budgetary slack occurs when:

A. Managers set realistic targets

B. Managers intentionally underestimate revenue or overestimate costs

C. Targets are too aggressive

D. Zero-based budgeting is used

Answer: B

 

67. Participation in budgeting generally leads to:

A. Lower motivation

B. Higher resistance

C. Greater ownership and motivation

D. Higher costs only

Answer: C

 

68. A top-down budgeting approach means:

A. Lower management prepares the budget

B. Only cash budgets are used

C. Senior management imposes budgets

D. No communication occurs

Answer: C

 

69. Which budget is influenced by production capacity?

A. Sales budget

B. Cash budget

C. Production budget

D. Fixed cost budget

Answer: C

 

70. The principal budget factor (key factor) is:

A. Production cost

B. The limiting factor that restricts activity

C. Sales price

D. Labour efficiency

Answer: B

 

71. If sales demand is the limiting factor, then the first budget prepared is:

A. Production budget

B. Labour budget

C. Sales budget

D. Overhead budget

Answer: C

 

72. In a cash budget, credit sales are included when:

A. Sale is made

B. Cash is received

C. Invoice is raised

D. Profit is calculated

Answer: B

 

73. The main purpose of a cash budget is to:

A. Prepare income statement

B. Control working capital and liquidity

C. Value closing inventory

D. Calculate net worth

Answer: B

 

74. Controllable costs are:

A. Always fixed

B. Always variable

C. Costs that managers can influence

D. Never allocated

Answer: C

 

75. The principal purpose of variance analysis is:

A. Prepare cash budget

B. Compare actual to budget

C. Calculate absorption rate

D. Determine EOQ

Answer: B

 

 

 

✅  Management Accounting

MCQs with Answers (Set 4: Q76–100)**

 

**📌 PART 7 — Standard Costing & Variance Analysis

(Q76–90)**

 

76. A standard cost is:

A. Actual cost

B. Estimated cost per unit for planning & control

C. Historical average

D. Minimum cost achievable

Answer: B

 

77. Ideal standards assume:

A. Normal inefficiencies

B. No wastage and perfect efficiency

C. Past performance

D. Market fluctuations

Answer: B

 

78. Material price variance is calculated as:

A. (Standard price – Actual price) × Actual quantity

B. (Standard quantity – Actual quantity) × Standard price

C. (Actual price – Standard price) × Standard quantity

D. Materials used × Actual price

Answer: A

 

79. Material usage variance =

A. (AQ × SP) – (SQ × SP)

B. (AP × AQ) – (SP × AQ)

C. (Actual cost – Standard cost)

D. (Standard price × Standard quantity)

Answer: A (Note: AQ-SQ) × SP

 

80. Labour rate variance =

A. (Standard rate – Actual rate) × Standard hours

B. (Actual hours – Standard hours) × Standard rate

C. (Standard rate – Actual rate) × Actual hours

D. Actual hours × Standard hours

Answer: C

 

81. Labour efficiency variance =

A. (SH – AH) × SR

B. (AR – SR) × AH

C. (AQ – SQ) × SP

D. (Actual rate – Standard rate) × SH

Answer: A

 

82. Variable overhead efficiency variance uses:

A. Hours

B. Units

C. Production cost

D. Selling price

Answer: A

 

83. A favourable variance means:

A. Actual cost > Standard cost

B. Actual revenue < Standard revenue

C. Actual performance better than expected

D. Budget was unrealistic

Answer: C

 

84. If actual price > standard price, material price variance is:

A. Favourable

B. Adverse

C. Zero

D. Cannot be computed

Answer: B

 

85. Sales price variance =

A. (Actual price – Standard price) × Actual units

B. (Standard price – Actual price) × Standard units

C. (Actual units – Standard units) × SP

D. (Sales revenue – COGS)

Answer: A

 

86. Sales volume variance =

A. (Actual units – Budgeted units) × Standard profit per unit

B. (Actual price – Standard price) × Actual units

C. (AQ – SQ) × SP

D. (SH – AH) × SR

Answer: A

 

87. Mix variance is used in:

A. Labour

B. Materials

C. Overheads

D. Selling expenses

Answer: B

 

88. Yield variance measures:

A. Loss due to material mix

B. Output obtained vs expected

C. Price change impact

D. Labour efficiency

Answer: B

 

89. An adverse variance indicates:

A. Performance is better

B. Costs are lower

C. Actual results worse than expected

D. Budget was unnecessary

Answer: C

 

90. Revision of standards is required when:

A. There is no inflation

B. Environment is stable

C. Machinery or processes change significantly

D. Variances are zero

Answer: C

 

 

**📌 PART 8 — Performance Measurement

(Q91–97)**

 

91. ROI =

A. Sales / Profit

B. Profit / Capital employed

C. Profit margin × Asset turnover

D. B + C

Answer: D

 

92. ROCE measures:

A. Efficiency of labour

B. Return on long-term capital

C. Sales efficiency

D. Liquidity

Answer: B

 

93. A limitation of ROI is:

A. Easy to calculate

B. Encourages short-term decision making

C. Ignores profitability

D. Always increases with investment

Answer: B

 

94. Productivity is measured as:

A. Output / Input

B. Profit / Cost

C. Sales / Overheads

D. Output × Input

Answer: A

 

95. A non-financial performance indicator is:

A. Return on assets

B. Net profit margin

C. Customer satisfaction score

D. Gross margin

Answer: C

 

96. Quality performance can be measured using:

A. Profit margin

B. Scrap rate

C. Sales revenue

D. ROCE

Answer: B

 

97. A limitation of financial indicators is:

A. Easy to measure

B. Short-term focus and ignores qualitative factors

C. Widely used

D. Comparable across firms

Answer: B

 

 

**📌 PART 9 — Spreadsheets in Management Accounting

(Q98–100)**

 

98. Cell referencing “A1” refers to:

A. The entire sheet

B. Column A, Row 1

C. Column 1, Row A

D. A formula

Answer: B

 

99. The function to calculate average in a spreadsheet is:

A. =SUM()

B. =COUNT()

C. =AVG()

D. =AVERAGE()

Answer: D

 

100. A risk of spreadsheet use is:

A. Automatic error checking

B. Easy sharing

C. Manual input errors leading to incorrect results

D. Reduced flexibility

Answer: C

 

 

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