Cost allocation for indirect costs Cost Pool – Set of costs that are added together before being allocated to cost objects on some common basis Cost Driver/ Allocation base Cost Object Cost Driver Rate = Total Costs in Pool/ Total Quantity of Driver Where total quantity of driver = practical capacity of driver Cost of excess capacity = Cost Driver Rate * Excess capacity Predetermined overhead rate - cost per unit of the allocation base used to charge overhead to products. Predetermined
Premium Costs Cost driver Cost
Cost Benefit Analysis What is cost benefit analysis? Cost benefit analysis (COBA) is a technique for assessing the monetary social costs and benefits of a capital investment project over a given time period. The principles of cost-benefit analysis (CBA) are simple: 1. Appraisal of a project: It is an economic technique for project appraisal‚ widely used in business as well as government spending projects (for example should a business invest in a new information system) 2. Incorporates
Premium Welfare economics Cost-benefit analysis Net present value
Economic Cost of “Power Outages” By Dr. Aisha Ghaus-Pasha Table of Contents Page No. 1. Causes of Power Outages 1 2. Quantifying Outage Costs 2 3. Incidence of Outages 4 4. Pattern of Direct Costs 5 5. Types of Adjustments to Outages 5 6. Extent of Recovery of Output 6 7. Total Outage Costs to the Industrial Sector 6 8. National Costs of Load Shedding 7 9. Policy Implications 9 9.1. Investment in Power Sector 9 9.2. Load Management
Premium Electric power transmission Power outage Costs
Kunyi Li Mr. Harlan RH131 April 12‚ 2013 On-Campus Living vs. Off-Campus Living It’s an inevitable question that every college student must answer: should you live on-campus or off-campus? The fact is living on or off campus can drastically change your college experience; both options have their advantages and disadvantages. So it is crucial for student to weigh their choices before making a final decision. The major proponents of living on-campus are believe that on-campus life is easier to
Free University College Debut albums
Latasha Thomas January 20‚ 2013 HSM 260 Jerome Anderson Exercise 10.1 Recompute fixed costs‚ variable costs‚ and the BEP. What are the variable costs? What are the fixed costs? How many meals will the WHDM program need to provide during the fiscal year to reach the BEP? How much profit will the program earn if it completes its 45‚000-meal contract with the City of Westchester? The variable cost of service is $3.93 during the fiscal year the WHDM should provide 1‚011 meals to reach their
Premium Fixed cost Variable cost Costs
The Cost of Turnover Putting a Price on the Learning Curve by Timothy R. Hinkin and J.BruceTracey Employee turnover does more than reduce service quality and damage employee moraleit hits a hotels pocketbook. E mployee turnover has long been a concern of the hospitality industry‚ and therefore of researchers who examine industry human-resources concerns. One stream of research that arose in the past 20 years was an effort to quantify the cost of employee turnover. Although most managers
Premium Hotel Employment Costs
“The True Cost” is a documentary film that exposes hidden cost of cheap fashion or clothing we are wearing today. The film underlines the condition of workers in Bangladesh and how they were mistreated‚ exploited and forced to work in a place where there is no safety. Based on the film‚ workers only earn $2 dollars a day‚ and some workers were forced to leave their children with their families or relatives to make a living keep themselves alive. This film is related to the theme “Working Toward
Premium Industrial Revolution Wage Employment
Health is described as physical and mental well-being and freedom from disease‚ pain or defect. However‚ such descriptions only superficially define the actual meaning of health. There may be many occasions when individuals are not necessarily ill or in pain but may be overweight‚ stressed or emotionally unstable. Health is a quality of life involving dynamic interaction and interdependence among the individual’s physical state‚ their mental and emotional reactions‚ and the social
Premium Health Medicine Personal life
Occasionally all humans experience emotions that bring them down making them feel sad. Whether it was because your favorite team lost or you and your significant other had a dispute. Feeling this kind of emotion is normal for humans from time time to time. These kind of feelings aren’t temporary‚ they usually last a couple of days and you go on with your everyday life. According to the Mayo Clinic‚ Depression is a mood disorder that causes a persistent feeling of sadness and loss of interest in everyday
Premium Major depressive disorder Seasonal affective disorder Suicide
reasons why our health is so expensive. Administrative Costs The number one reason our healthcare costs are so high‚ says Harvard economist David Cutler‚ is that “the administrative costs of running our healthcare system are astronomical. About one quarter of healthcare cost is associated with administration‚ which is far higher than in any other
Premium Health care Health economics Medicine