Materials mix variance
The materials mix variance measures the cost effect of combining raw materials in proportions that differ from the standard blend, holding total input quantity constant; a favourable variance means cheaper inputs were substituted, but.
FrameworkMix and yield variances
See it move
A food manufacturer's standard recipe calls for 60% premium grain and 40% standard grain. Actual production instead used a 50/50 blend, substituting cheaper standard grain for some of the premium share. Holding total input constant, that shift produces a favourable materials mix variance — a saving from the blend alone, before checking what it did to yield.
The formula
Variables
- standard proportion of material i in the total input blend (decimal, e.g. 0.60 for 60%) (decimal)
- total actual input quantity of all materials combined in the period (kg or units)
- actual input quantity of material i used in production during the period (kg or units)
- standard price per unit of material i (€ per kg or unit)
Positive result is favourable, indicating a cheaper blend than standard was used. Must be read alongside the yield variance: a favourable mix achieved by substituting cheaper ingredients may cause an adverse yield that more than offsets the apparent saving.