[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 48, Volume 7]
[Revised as of October 1, 2007]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 48CFR9904.403-50]

[Page 337-339]
 
            TITLE 48--FEDERAL ACQUISITION REGULATIONS SYSTEM
 
     CHAPTER 99--COST ACCOUNTING STANDARDS BOARD, OFFICE OF FEDERAL 
           PROCUREMENT POLICY, OFFICE OF MANAGEMENT AND BUDGET
 
Sec. 9904.403-50  Techniques for application.

    (a)(1) Separate expense groupings will ordinarily be required to 
implement 9904.403-40. The number of groupings will depend primarily on 
the variety and significance of service and management functions 
performed by a particular home office. Ordinarily, each service or 
management function will have to be separately identified for allocation 
by means of an appropriate allocation technique. However, it is not 
necessary to identify and allocate different functions separately, if 
allocation in accordance with the relevant requirements of 9904.403-
40(b) can be made using a common allocation base. For example, if the 
personnel department of a home office provides personnel services for 
some or all of the segments (a centralized service function) and also 
established personnel policies for the same segments (a staff management 
function), the expenses of both functions could be allocated over the 
same base, such as the number of personnel, and the separate functions 
do not have to be identified.
    (2) Where the expense of a given function is to be allocated by 
means of a particular allocation base, all segments shall be included in 
the base unless:
    (i) Any excluded segment did not receive significant benefits from, 
or contribute significantly to the cause of the expense to be allocated 
and,
    (ii) Any included segment did receive significant benefits from or 
contribute significantly to the cause of the expense in question.
    (b)(1) Section 9904.403-60 illustrates various expense pools which 
may be

[[Page 338]]

used together with appropriate allocation bases. The allocation of 
centralized service functions shall be governed by a hierarchy of 
preferable allocation techniques which represent beneficial or causal 
relationships. The preferred representation of such relationships is a 
measure of the activity of the organization performing the function. 
Supporting functions are usually labor-oriented, machine-oriented, or 
space-oriented. Measures of the activities of such functions ordinarily 
can be expressed in terms of labor hours, machine hours, or square 
footage. Accordingly, costs of these functions shall be allocated by use 
of a rate, such as a rate per labor hour, rate per machine hour or cost 
per square foot, unless such measures are unavailable or impractical to 
ascertain. In these latter cases the basis for allocation shall be a 
measurement of the output of the supporting function. Output is measured 
in terms of units of end product produced by the supporting function, as 
for example, number of printed pages for a print shop, number of 
purchase orders processed by a purchasing department, number of hires by 
an employment office.
    (2) Where neither activity nor output of the supporting function can 
be practically measured, a surrogate for the beneficial, or causal 
relationship must be selected. Surrogates used to represent the 
relationship are generally measures of the activity of the segments 
receiving the service; for example, for personnel services reasonable 
surrogates would be number of personnel, labor hours, or labor dollars 
of the segments receiving the service. Any surrogate used should be a 
reasonable measure of the services received and, logically, should vary 
in proportion to the services received.
    (c)(1) Where residual expenses are required to be allocated pursuant 
to 9904.403-40(c)(2), the three factor formula described below must be 
used. This formula is considered to result in appropriate allocations of 
the residual expenses of home offices. It takes into account three broad 
areas of management concern: The employees of the organization, the 
business volume, and the capital invested in the organization. The 
percentage of the residual expenses to be allocated to any segment 
pursuant to the three factor formula is the arithmetical average of the 
following three percentages for the same period.
    (i) The percentage of the segment's payroll dollars to the total 
payroll dollars of all segments.
    (ii) The percentage of the segment's operating revenue to the total 
operating revenue of all segments. For this purpose, the operating 
revenue of any segment shall include amounts charged to other segments 
and shall be reduced by amounts charged by other segments for purchases.
    (iii) The percentage of the average net book value of the sum of the 
segment's tangible capital assets plus inventories to the total average 
net book value of such assets of all segments. Property held primarily 
for leasing to others shall be excluded from the computation. The 
average net book value shall be the average of the net book value at the 
beginning of the organization's fiscal year and the net book value at 
the end of the year.
    (d) The following paragraphs provide guidance for implementing the 
requirements of 9904.403-40(c)(3).
    (1) An indication that a segment received significantly less benefit 
in relation to other segments can arise if a segment, unlike all or most 
other segments, performs on its own many of the functions included in 
the residual expense. Another indication may be that, in relation to its 
size, comparatively little or no costs are allocable to a segment 
pursuant to 9904.403-40(b) (1) through (5). Evidence of comparatively 
little communication or interpersonal relations between a home office 
and a segment, in relation to its size, may also indicate that the 
segment receives significantly less benefit from residual expenses. 
Conversely, if the opposite conditions prevail at any segment, a greater 
allocation than would result from the application of 9904.403-40(c) (1) 
or (2) may be indicated. This may be the case, for example, if a segment 
relies heavily on the home office for certain residual functions 
normally performed by other segments on their own.
    (2) Segments which may require special allocations of residual 
expenses

[[Page 339]]

pursuant to 9904.403-40(c)(3) include, but are not limited to foreign 
subsidiaries, GOCO's, domestic subsidiaries with less than a majority 
ownership, and joint ventures.
    (3) The portion of residual expenses to be allocated to a segment 
pursuant to 9904.403-40(c)(3) shall be the cost of estimated or recorded 
efforts devoted to the segments.
    (e) Home office functions may be performed by an organization which 
for some purposes may not be a part of the legal entity with which the 
Government has contracted. This situation may arise, for example, in 
instances where the Government contracts directly with a corporation 
which is wholly or partly owned by another corporation. In this case, 
the latter corporation serves as a ``home office,'' and the corporation 
with which the contract is made is a ``segment'' as those terms are 
defined and used in this Standard. For purposes of contracts subject to 
this Standard, the contracting corporation may only accept allocations 
from the other corporation to the extent that such allocations meet the 
requirements set forth in this Standard for allocation of home office 
expenses to segments.