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What is the Economic Order Quantity (EOQ) for materials that have an annual demand of 2,400 units, ordering cost of $100 per order, and holding cost of $5 per unit per year?

Correct Answer

B) 310 units

EOQ = √(2 × Annual Demand × Ordering Cost / Holding Cost) = √(2 × 2,400 × 100 / 5) = √(480,000 / 5) = √96,000 = 310 units. This minimizes total inventory costs.

Answer Options
A
200 units
B
310 units
C
400 units
D
480 units

Why This Is the Correct Answer

Option B (310 units) is correct because it applies the Economic Order Quantity formula properly. The EOQ formula balances ordering costs against holding costs to find the optimal order quantity. When we substitute the given values (annual demand = 2,400 units, ordering cost = $100, holding cost = $5) into the formula √(2 × D × S / H), we get √(2 × 2,400 × 100 / 5) = √96,000 = 310 units. This quantity minimizes the total inventory costs for the contractor.

Why the Other Options Are Wrong

Option A: 200 units

200 units is too low and would result from incorrectly calculating the formula, possibly by using wrong values or making arithmetic errors in the square root calculation.

Option C: 400 units

400 units is too high and likely results from calculation errors, possibly forgetting to divide by the holding cost or making errors in the square root computation.

Option D: 480 units

480 units is significantly too high and may result from forgetting to take the square root of the result or other major calculation errors in applying the EOQ formula.

Memory Technique

Remember 'EOQ = Square root of (2DS/H)' where D=Demand, S=Setup/ordering cost, H=Holding cost. Think 'Two Dogs Sitting on a Hill' for the formula structure.

Reference Hint

Look up 'Inventory Management' or 'Economic Order Quantity' in construction management or business management sections of your reference materials.

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