[Code of Federal Regulations]

[Title 48, Volume 1]

[Revised as of October 1, 2005]

From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access

[CITE: 48CFR31.001]



[Page 590-594]

 

            TITLE 48--FEDERAL ACQUISITION REGULATIONS SYSTEM

 

                CHAPTER 1--FEDERAL ACQUISITION REGULATION

 

PART 31_CONTRACT COST PRINCIPLES AND PROCEDURES--Table of Contents

 

Sec. 31.001  Definitions.



    As used in this part--

    Accrued benefit cost method means an actuarial cost method under 

which units of benefits are assigned to each cost accounting period and 

are valued as they accrue; i.e., based on the services performed by each 

employee in the period involved. The measure of normal cost under this 

method for each cost accounting period is the present value of the units 

of benefit deemed to be credited to employees for service in that 

period. The measure of the actuarial accrued liability at a plan's 

inception date is the present value of the units of benefit credited to 

employees for service prior to that date. (This method is also known as 

the unit credit cost method without salary projection.)

    Accumulating costs means collecting cost data in an organized 

manner, such as through a system of accounts.

    Actual cash value means the cost of replacing damaged property with 

other property of like kind and quality in the physical condition of the 

property immediately before the damage.

    Actual costs means (except for subpart 31.6) amounts determined on 

the basis of costs incurred, as distinguished from forecasted costs. 

Actual costs include standard costs properly adjusted for applicable 

variances.

    Actuarial accrued liability means pension cost attributable, under 

the actuarial cost method in use, to years prior to the current period 

considered by a particular actuarial valuation. As of such date, the 

actuarial accrued liability represents the excess of the present value 

of future benefits and administrative expenses over the present value of 

future normal costs for all plan participants and beneficiaries. The 

excess of the actuarial accrued liability over the actuarial value of 

the assets of a pension plan is the unfunded actuarial liability. The 

excess of the actuarial value of the assets of a pension plan over the 

actuarial accrued liability is an actuarial surplus and is treated as a 

negative unfunded actuarial liability.

    Actuarial assumption means an estimate of future conditions 

affecting pension cost; e.g., mortality rate, employee turnover, 

compensation levels, earnings on pension plan assets, and changes in 

values of pension plan assets.

    Actuarial cost method means a technique which uses actuarial 

assumptions to measure the present value of future pension benefits and 

pension plan administrative expenses, and that assigns the cost of such 

benefits and expenses to cost accounting periods. The actuarial cost 

method includes the



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asset valuation method used to determine the actuarial value of the 

assets of a pension plan.

    Actuarial gain and loss means the effect on pension cost resulting 

from differences between actuarial assumptions and actual experience.

    Actuarial valuation means the determination, as of a specified date, 

of the normal cost, actuarial accrued liability, actuarial value of the 

assets of a pension plan, and other relevant values for the pension 

plan.

    Allocate means to assign an item of cost, or a group of items of 

cost, to one or more cost objectives. This term includes both direct 

assignment of cost and the reassignment of a share from an indirect cost 

pool.

    Compensated personal absence means any absence from work for reasons 

such as illness, vacation, holidays, jury duty, military training, or 

personal activities for which an employer pays compensation directly to 

an employee in accordance with a plan or custom of the employer.

    Compensation for personal services means all remuneration paid 

currently or accrued, in whatever form and whether paid immediately or 

deferred, for services rendered by employees to the contractor.

    Cost input means the cost, except general and administrative (G&A) 

expenses, which for contract costing purposes is allocable to the 

production of goods and services during a cost accounting period.

    Cost objective means (except for subpart 31.6) a function, 

organizational subdivision, contract, or other work unit for which cost 

data are desired and for which provision is made to accumulate and 

measure the cost of processes, products, jobs, capitalized projects, 

etc.

    Deferred compensation means an award made by an employer to 

compensate an employee in a future cost accounting period or periods for 

services rendered in one or more cost accounting periods before the date 

of the receipt of compensation by the employee. This definition shall 

not include the amount of year end accruals for salaries, wages, or 

bonuses that are to be paid within a reasonable period of time after the 

end of a cost accounting period.

    Defined-benefit pension plan means a pension plan in which the 

benefits to be paid, or the basis for determining such benefits, are 

established in advance and the contributions are intended to provide the 

stated benefits.

    Defined-contribution pension plan means a pension plan in which the 

contributions to be made are established in advance and the benefits are 

determined thereby.

    Directly associated cost means any cost which is generated solely as 

a result of the incurrence of another cost, and which would not have 

been incurred had the other cost not been incurred.

    Estimating costs means the process of forecasting a future result in 

terms of cost, based upon information available at the time.

    Expressly unallowable cost means a particular item or type of cost 

which, under the express provisions of an applicable law, regulation, or 

contract, is specifically named and stated to be unallowable.

    Final cost objective means (except for subparts 31.3 and 31.6) a 

cost objective that has allocated to it both direct and indirect costs 

and, in the contractors accumulation system, is one of the final 

accumulation points.

    Fiscal year means the accounting period for which annual financial 

statements are regularly prepared, generally a period of 12 months, 52 

weeks, or 53 weeks.

    Funded pension cost means the portion of pension cost for a current 

or prior cost accounting period that has been paid to a funding agency.

    Home office means an office responsible for directing or managing 

two or more, but not necessarily all, segments of an organization. It 

typically establishes policy for, and provides guidance to, the segments 

in their operations. It usually performs management, supervisory, or 

administrative functions, and may also perform service functions in 

support of the operations of the various segments. An organization which 

has intermediate levels, such as groups, may have several home offices 

which report to a common home office.



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An intermediate organization may be both a segment and a home office.

    Immediate-gain actuarial cost method means any of the several 

actuarial cost methods under which actuarial gains and losses are 

included as part of the unfunded actuarial liability of the pension 

plan, rather than as part of the normal cost of the plan.

    Independent research and development (IR&D) cost means the cost of 

effort which is neither sponsored by a grant, nor required in performing 

a contract, and which falls within any of the following four areas: (a) 

basic research, (b) applied research, (c) development, and (d) systems 

and other concept formulation studies.

    Indirect cost pools means (except for subparts 31.3 and 31.6) 

groupings of incurred costs identified with two or more cost objectives 

but not identified specifically with any final cost objective.

    Insurance administration expenses means the contractor's costs of 

administering an insurance program; e.g., the costs of operating an 

insurance or risk-management department, processing claims, actuarial 

fees, and service fees paid to insurance companies, trustees, or 

technical consultants.

    Intangible capital asset means an asset that has no physical 

substance, has more than minimal value, and is expected to be held by an 

enterprise for continued use or possession beyond the current accounting 

period for the benefits it yields.

    Job means a homogeneous cluster of work tasks, the completion of 

which serves an enduring purpose for the organization. Taken as a whole, 

the collection of tasks, duties, and responsibilities constitutes the 

assignment for one or more individuals whose work is of the same nature 

and is performed at the same skill/ responsibility level--as opposed to 

a position, which is a collection of tasks assigned to a specific 

individual. Within a job, there may be pay categories which are 

dependent on the degree of supervision required by the employee while 

performing assigned tasks which are performed by all persons with the 

same job.

    Job class of employees means employees performing in positions 

within the same job.

    Labor cost at standard means a preestablished measure of the labor 

element of cost, computed by multiplying labor-rate standard by labor-

time standard.

    Labor market means a place where individuals exchange their labor 

for compensation. Labor markets are identified and defined by a 

combination of the following factors:

    (1) Geography,

    (2) Education and/or technical background required,

    (3) Experience required by the job,

    (4) Licensing or certification requirements,

    (5) Occupational membership, and

    (6) Industry.

    Labor-rate standard means a preestablished measure, expressed in 

monetary terms, of the price of labor.

    Labor-time standard means a preestablished measure, expressed in 

temporal terms, of the quantity of labor.

    Material cost at standard means a preestablished measure of the 

material elements of cost, computed by multiplying material-price 

standard by material-quantity standard.

    Material-price standard means a preestablished measure, expressed in 

monetary terms, of the price of material.

    Material-quantity standard means a preestablished measure, expressed 

in physical terms, of the quantity of material.

    Moving average cost means an inventory costing method under which an 

average unit cost is computed after each acquisition by adding the cost 

of the newly acquired units to the cost of the units of inventory on 

hand and dividing this figure by the new total number of units.

    Nonqualified pension plan means any pension plan other than a 

qualified pension plan as defined in this part.

    Normal cost means the annual cost attributable, under the actuarial 

cost method in use, to current and future years as of a particular 

valuation date excluding any payment in respect of an unfunded actuarial 

liability.

    Original complement of low cost equipment means a group of items 

acquired for the initial outfitting of a tangible capital asset or an 

operational unit, or



[[Page 593]]



a new addition to either. The items in the group individually cost less 

than the minimum amount established by the contractor for capitalization 

for the classes of assets acquired but in the aggregate they represent a 

material investment. The group, as a complement, is expected to be held 

for continued service beyond the current period. Initial outfitting of 

the unit is completed when the unit is ready and available for normal 

operations.

    Pay-as-you-go cost method means a method of recognizing pension cost 

only when benefits are paid to retired employees or their beneficiaries.

    Pension plan means a deferred compensation plan established and 

maintained by one or more employers to provide systematically for the 

payment of benefits to plan participants after their retirements, 

provided that the benefits are paid for life or are payable for life at 

the option of the employees. Additional benefits such as permanent and 

total disability and death payments, and survivorship payments to 

beneficiaries of deceased employees, may be an integral part of a 

pension plan.

    Pension plan participant means any employee or former employee of an 

employer or any member or former member of an employee organization, who 

is or may become eligible to receive a benefit from a pension plan which 

covers employees of such employer or members of such organization who 

have satisfied the plan's participation requirements, or whose 

beneficiaries are receiving or may be eligible to receive any such 

benefit. A participant whose employment status with the employer has not 

been terminated is an active participant of the employer's pension plan.

    Profit center means (except for subparts 31.3 and 31.6) the smallest 

organizationally independent segment of a company charged by management 

with profit and loss responsibilities.

    Projected benefit cost method means either--

    (1) Any of the several actuarial cost methods that distribute the 

estimated total cost of all of the employees' prospective benefits over 

a period of years, usually their working careers; or

    (2) A modification of the accrued benefit cost method that considers 

projected compensation levels.

    Proposal means any offer or other submission used as a basis for 

pricing a contract, contract modification, or termination settlement or 

for securing payments thereunder.

    Qualified pension plan means a pension plan comprising a definite 

written program communicated to and for the exclusive benefit of 

employees that meets the criteria deemed essential by the Internal 

Revenue Service as set forth in the Internal Revenue Code for 

preferential tax treatment regarding contributions, investments, and 

distributions. Any other plan is a nonqualified pension plan.

    Self-insurance charge means a cost which represents the projected 

average loss under a self-insurance plan.

    Service life means the period of usefulness of a tangible capital 

asset (or group of assets) to its current owner. The period may be 

expressed in units of time or output. The estimated service life of a 

tangible capital asset (or group of assets) is a current forecast of its 

service life and is the period over which depreciation cost is to be 

assigned.

    Spread-gain actuarial cost method means any of the several projected 

benefit actuarial cost methods under which actuarial gains and losses 

are included as part of the current and future normal costs of the 

pension plan.

    Standard cost means any cost computed with the use of preestablished 

measures.

    Tangible capital asset means an asset that has physical substance, 

more than minimal value, and is expected to be held by an enterprise for 

continued use or possession beyond the current accounting period for the 

services it yields.

    Termination of employment gain or loss means an actuarial gain or 

loss resulting from the difference between the assumed and actual rates 

at which pension plan participants separate from employment for reasons 

other than retirement, disability, or death.

    Variance means the difference between a preestablished measure and 

an actual measure.

    Weighted average cost means an inventory costing method under which 

an



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average unit cost is computed periodically by dividing the sum of the 

cost of beginning inventory plus the cost of acquisitions by the total 

number of units included in these two categories.



[48 FR 42301, Sept. 17, 1983, as amended at 54 FR 13024, Mar. 29, 1989; 

61 FR 39217, July 26, 1996; 61 FR 69288, Dec. 31, 1996; 63 FR 58596, 

Oct. 30, 1998; 66 FR 2131, Jan. 10, 2001; 68 FR 28091, May 22, 2003; 68 

FR 43866, July 24, 2003]