Showing posts with label MCQ questions on Management Accounting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MCQ questions on Management Accounting. Show all posts

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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