[Code of Federal Regulations]

[Title 48, Volume 7]

[Revised as of October 1, 2005]

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

[CITE: 48CFR9904.403-40]



[Page 360-361]

 

            TITLE 48--FEDERAL ACQUISITION REGULATIONS SYSTEM

 

     CHAPTER 99--COST ACCOUNTING STANDARDS BOARD, OFFICE OF FEDERAL 

           PROCUREMENT POLICY, OFFICE OF MANAGEMENT AND BUDGET

 

PART 9904_COST ACCOUNTING STANDARDS--Table of Contents

 

Sec. 9904.403-40  Fundamental requirement.



    (a)(1) Home office expenses shall be allocated on the basis of the 

beneficial or causal relationship between supporting and receiving 

activities. Such expenses shall be allocated directly to segments to the 

maximum extent practical. Expenses not directly allocated, if 

significant in amount and in relation to total home office expenses, 

shall be grouped in logical and homogeneous expense pools and allocated 

pursuant to paragraph (b) of this subsection. Such allocations shall 

minimize to the extent practical the amount of expenses which may be 

categorized as residual (those of managing the organization as a whole). 

These residual expenses shall be allocated pursuant to paragraph (c) of 

this subsection.

    (2) No segment shall have allocated to it as an indirect cost, 

either through a homogeneous expense pool, or the residual expense pool, 

any cost, if other costs incurred for the same purpose have been 

allocated directly to that or any other segment.

    (b) The following subparagraphs provide criteria for allocation of 

groups of home office expenses.

    (1) Centralized service functions. Expenses of centralized service 

functions performed by a home office for its segments shall be allocated 

to segments on the basis of the service furnished to or received by each 

segment. Centralized service functions performed by a home office for 

its segments are considered to consist of specific functions which, but 

for the existence of a home office, would be performed or acquired by 

some or all of the segments individually. Examples include centrally 

performed personnel administration and centralized data processing.

    (2) Staff management of certain specific activities of segments. The 

expenses incurred by a home office for staff management or policy 

guidance functions which are significant in amount and in relation to 

total home office expenses shall be allocated to segments receiving more 

than a minimal benefit over a base, or bases, representative of the 

total specific activity being managed. Staff management or policy 

guidance to segments is commonly provided in the overall direction or 

support of the performance of discrete segment activities such as 

manufacturing, accounting, and engineering (but see paragraph (b)(6) of 

this subsection).

    (3) Line management of particular segments or groups of segments. 

The expense of line management shall be allocated only to the particular 

segment or group of segments which are being managed or supervised. If 

more than one segment is managed or supervised, the expense shall be 

allocated using a base or bases representative of the total activity of 

such segments. Line management is considered to consist of management or 

supervision of a segment or group of segments as a whole.

    (4) Central payments or accruals. Central payments or accruals which 

are made by a home office on behalf of its segments shall be allocated 

directly to segments to the extent that all such payments or accruals of 

a given type or class can be identified specifically with individual 

segments. Central payments or accruals are those which but for the 

existence of a number of segments would be accrued or paid by the 

individual segments. Common examples include centrally paid or accrued 

pension costs, group insurance costs, State and local income taxes and 

franchise taxes, and payrolls paid by a home office on behalf of its 

segments. Any such types of payments or accruals which cannot be 

identified specifically with individual segments shall be allocated to 

benefitted segments using an allocation base representative of the 

factors on which the total payment is based.



[[Page 361]]



    (5) Independent research and development costs and bid and proposal 

costs. Independent research and development costs and bid and proposal 

costs of a home office shall be allocated in accordance with 9904.420.

    (6) Staff management not identifiable with any certain specific 

activities of segments. The expenses incurred by a home office for staff 

management, supervisory, or policy functions, which are not identifiable 

to specific activities of segments shall be allocated in accordance with 

paragraph (c) of this subsection as residual expenses.

    (c) Residual expenses. (1) All home office expenses which are not 

allocable in accordance with paragraph (a) of this subsection and 

paragraphs (b)(1) through (b)(5) of this subsection shall be deemed 

residual expenses. Typical residual expenses are those for the chief 

executive, the chief financial officer, and any staff which are not 

identifiable with specific activities of segments. Residual expenses 

shall be allocated to all segments under a home office by means of a 

base representative of the total activity of such segments, except where 

paragraph (c) (2) or (3) of this subsection applies.

    (2) Residual expenses shall be allocated pursuant to 9904.403-

50(c)(1) if the total amount of such expenses for the contractor's 

previous fiscal year (excluding any unallowable costs and before 

eliminating any amounts to be allocated in accordance with paragraph 

(c)(3) of this subsection) exceeds the amount obtained by applying the 

following percentage(s) to the aggregate operating revenue of all 

segments for such previous year: 3.35 percent of the first $100 million; 

0.95 percent of the next $200 million; 0.30 percent of the next $2.7 

billion; 0.20 percent of all amounts over $3 billion. The determination 

required by this paragraph for the 1st year the contractor is subject to 

this Standard shall be based on the pro forma application of this 

Standard to the home office expenses and aggregate operating revenue for 

the contractor's previous fiscal year.

    (3) Where a particular segment receives significantly more or less 

benefit from residual expenses than would be reflected by the allocation 

of such expenses pursuant to paragraph (c) (1) or (2) of this subsection 

(see 9904.403-50(d)), the Government and the contractor may agree to a 

special allocation of residual expenses to such segment commensurate 

with the benefits received. The amount of a special allocation to any 

segment made pursuant to such an agreement shall be excluded from the 

pool of residual expenses to be allocated pursuant to paragraph (c) (1) 

or (2) of this subsection, and such segment's data shall be excluded 

from the base used to allocate this pool.