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Cost Principles Seminar

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Title: Cost Principles Seminar


1
Cost Principles Seminar
National Contract Management Association Southern
Nevada Chapter May 30, 2008
Randall K. Gibson, Director of Compliance,
NPS rgibson26_at_csc.com
2
Computer Sciences Corporation
  • CSC has about 90,000 employees in 80 countries
    worldwide
  • In April 1959 - One Hundred Dollars and a Dream
  • In the fiscal year ending March 38, 2008, Revenue
    was 16.5 billion
  • FY 2007 Revenue from Continuing Operations
  • 24 Department of Defense
  • 11 Civil Agencies
  • 1 Other U.S. Federal
  • 36 Total U.S. Federal Government
  • 26 U.S. Commercial
  • 28 Europe
  • 10 Other International
  • 64 Total Global Commercial

2


3
North American Public Sector
  • IT, business operations and specialized
    engineering services for government clients
    throughout North America
  • Headquartered in Falls Church, Virginia, CSC NPS
    serves government clients across North America
  • NPS has approximately 26,000 employees in more
    than 600 locations worldwide.
  • Annual revenue is approximately 5.1 billion
    (FY06).

3


4
Plan for the Day
  • Applicability and Scope of FAR Part 31.2
  • General Cost Principles
  • Allowability
  • Reasonableness
  • Allocability
  • Selected Areas of Cost
  • Overview of the 46 Cost Principles
  • Focus on Selected Cost Principles
  • Government Audit Rights
  • Relationship of FAR to CAS

4


5
Federal Acquisition Regulation
  • FAR 31.000 Scope of part - This part contains
    cost principles and procedures for
  • whenever cost analysis is performed
  • the determination, negotiation, or allowance of
    costs when required by a contract clause.

5


6
Federal Acquisition Regulation
  • Part 31 - Cost Allowability Generally
  • Allowable
  • Reasonable, allocable, CAS/GAAP compliant,
    contract terms compliant, FAR compliant
  • Allocable
  • Incurred for contract, can be distributed in
    reasonable proportion to benefits received,
    necessary for operation of business
  • Reasonable
  • Prudent person in conduct of competitive business
  • Government makes no presumption of reasonableness
  • If cost challenged by Government, burden of proof
    on contractor to establish

6

7
Federal Acquisition Regulation
  • Part 31 Specific Areas of Cost

7


8
Federal Acquisition Regulation Part 31
Specific Areas of Cost
8


9
Total Cost
  • FAR 31.201-1 Composition of total cost
  • sum of the direct and indirect costs allocable to
    the contract, incurred or to be incurred
  • plus any allocable cost of money pursuant to
    31.205-10,
  • less any allocable credits.
  • allowable costs to the Government are limited to
    those allocable costs which are allowable
    pursuant to Part 31

9


10
Total Cost By Cost Element
10


11
FAR 31.202 Direct Costs
  • Direct cost means any cost that is identified
    specifically with a particular final cost
    objective.
  • No contract shall have allocated to it as a
    direct cost any cost, if other costs incurred for
    the same purpose in like circumstances have been
    included in any indirect cost pool to be
    allocated to contracts.
  • For reasons of practicality, the contractor may
    treat any direct cost of a minor dollar amount as
    an indirect cost if the accounting treatment
  • (1) Is consistently applied to all final cost
    objectives and
  • (2) Produces substantially the same results as
    treating the cost as a direct cost.

11


12
FAR 31.203 Indirect Costs
  • After direct costs have been determined and
    charged directly to the contract or other work,
    indirect costs are those remaining to be
    allocated .
  • No contract shall have allocated to it as an
    indirect cost any cost, if other costs incurred
    for the same purpose, in like circumstances, have
    been included as a direct cost of that or any
    other contract.



13
Indirect Cost expense pool
  • Accumulate indirect costs by logical cost
    groupings with due consideration of the reasons
    for incurring such costs.

13


14
Indirect Cost base
  • The base selected shall allocate the grouping on
    the basis of the benefits accruing to contracts.
  • For contracts other than those subject to full or
    modified CAS coverage, the base period for
    allocating indirect costs shall be the
    contractors fiscal year used for financial
    reporting purposes in accordance with generally
    accepted accounting principles.

14


15
Allocability
  • FAR 31.201-4 Determining allocability
  • If it is assignable or chargeable to one or more
    cost objectives on the basis of relative benefits
    received or other equitable relationship.
  • A cost is allocable to a Government contract if
    it
  • Is incurred specifically for the contract
  • Benefits both the contract and other work, and
    can be distributed to them in reasonable
    proportion to the benefits received or
  • Is necessary to the overall operation of the
    business, although a direct relationship to any
    particular cost objective cannot be shown.

15


16
Allowability
  • FAR 31.201-2 Determining allowability A cost is
    allowable only when the cost complies with all of
    the following requirements
  • Reasonableness
  • Allocability
  • Standards promulgated by the CAS Board, if
    applicable, otherwise, generally accepted
    accounting principles and practices appropriate
    to the circumstances.
  • Terms of the contract
  • Any limitations set forth in this subpart

16


17
Allowability
  • FAR 31.201-2 - Determining allowability -
  • Contractor is responsible for accounting for
    costs . . ., including supporting documentation,
    adequate to demonstrate that costs claimed have
    been incurred, are allocable to the contract, and
    comply with applicable cost principles . . ..
  • The contracting officer may disallow all or part
    of a claimed cost that is inadequately supported.

17


18
FAR 31.201-3 Reasonableness
  • A cost is reasonable if,
  • It does not exceed that which would be incurred
    by a prudent person in the conduct of competitive
    business.
  • No presumption of reasonableness shall be
    attached to the incurrence of costs.
  • If an initial review of the facts results in a
    challenge, the burden of proof shall be upon the
    contractor to establish that such cost is
    reasonable.

18

19
Reasonableness
  • Depends upon a variety of considerations and
    circumstances, including
  • (1) Whether it is the type of cost generally
    recognized as ordinary and necessary for the
    conduct of the contractors business or the
    contract performance
  • (2) Generally accepted sound business practices,
    arms-length bargaining, and Federal and State
    laws and regulations
  • (3) The contractors responsibilities to the
    Government, other customers, the owners of the
    business, employees, and the public at large and
  • (4) Any significant deviations from the
    contractors established practices

19


20
FAR 31.201-5 Credits
  • The applicable portion of any income, rebate,
    allowance, or other credit relating to any
    allowable cost and received by or accruing to the
    contractor shall be credited to the Government
    either as a cost reduction or by cash refund.

20


21
FAR 31.201-6 Accounting for Unallowable Costs
  • Expressly unallowable or mutually agreed to be
    unallowable, including mutually agreed to be
    unallowable directly associated costs, shall be
    identified and excluded from any billing, claim,
    or proposal applicable to a Government contract.
  • Costs that specifically become designated as
    unallowable or as unallowable directly associated
    costs of unallowable costs as a result of a
    written decision furnished by a contracting
    officer shall be identified if included in or
    used in computing any billing, claim, or proposal
    applicable to a Government contract.

21


22
Accounting for Unallowable Costs
  • Directly Associated
  • A directly associated cost is any cost that is
    generated solely as a result of incurring another
    cost, and that would not have been incurred had
    the other cost not been incurred.

22


23
Accounting for Unallowable Costs
  • The practices for accounting for and presentation
    of unallowable costs must be those described CAS
    405, Accounting for Unallowable Costs.

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24
Accounting for Unallowable Costs
  • Statistical sampling is an acceptable practice in
    accounting for and presenting unallowable costs
    provided the following criteria are met
  • (i) The statistical sampling results in an
    unbiased sample that is a reasonable
    representation of the sampling universe.
  • (ii) Any large dollar value or high risk
    transaction is separately reviewed for
    unallowable costs and excluded from the sampling
    process.
  • (iii) The statistical sampling permits audit
    verification.

24


25
Accounting for Unallowable Costs
  • A penalty is imposed by 10 U.S.C. 2324(a) through
    (d) and 41 U.S.C. 256(a) through (d). The
    penalty can be assessed against contractors which
    include unallowable indirect costs in
  • (1) Final indirect cost rate proposals or
  • (2) The final statement of costs incurred or
    estimated to be incurred under a fixed-price
    incentive contract.
  • The penalty assessable for all contracts in
    excess of 650,000
  • except fixed-price contracts without cost
    incentives or any firm-fixed-price contracts for
    the purchase of commercial items.

25


26
FAR 31.201-6 Accounting for Unallowable Costs
  • When unallowable costs, including directly
    associated costs, would normally be part of an
    indirect cost allocation base, they remain in the
    base
  • Unallowable costs are removed from the indirect
    expense pool for purposes of computing indirect
    expense rates.

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27
FAR 31.205-6 Compensation for personal services
  • One of the largest components of cost incurred
  • The cost principle is the longest and most
    detailed of the FAR cost principles.
  • Defines the term compensation to include all
    remuneration paid currently or accrued, in
    whatever form and whether paid immediately or
    deferred, for services rendered by employees to
    the contractor.
  • Compensation includes payments made or to be made
    in the future in the form of cash, corporate
    securities, such as stocks, bonds, and other
    financial instruments, and other assets,
    products, or services.

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28
FAR 31.205-6 Compensation for personal services
  • General Criteria
  • Criteria 1. Must be for work performed in the
    current year and may not represent a retroactive
    payment for work performed in prior years
    exceptions include severance pay, deferred
    compensation, pensions, and other postretirement
    benefits
  •  
  • Criteria 2. In total must be reasonable for the
    work performed. Factors the ACO may consider in
    analyzing the reasonableness of compensation
    include conformity with the compensation
    practices of other firms (i) Of the same size
    (ii) In the same industry (iii) In the same
    geographic area and (iv) Engaged in similar
    non-Government work under comparable
    circumstances. Upon challenge by the Government,
    the burden of proof is with contractor(FAR
    31.201-3(a))?

28


29
FAR 31.205-6 Compensation for personal services
  • General Criteria
  • Criteria 3. Must have been paid in accordance
    with an established compensation plan or
    practice followed so consistently as to imply, in
    effect, an agreement to the payment.
  •  
  • Criteria 4. No presumption of allowability
    exsists where the contractor has made a major
    revision to its compensation plan or practice,
    without having notified the cognizant ACO of the
    change and provided the Government an opportunity
    to review it.
  • Criteria 5. Costs that are unallowable under any
    other cost principle are not considered allowable
    simply because they constitute compensation.

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30
FAR 31.205-6 Compensation for personal services
  • Criteria 6 Compensation costs for certain
    individuals give rise to the need for special
    consideration.

30

31
FAR 31.205-6 Compensation for personal services
  • Differential Pay principle expressly permits the
    cost of differential pay when services are
    performed in a foreign country
  • including expenses associated with housing, cost
    of living adjustments, transportation, bonuses,
    additional Federal, State, local or foreign
    income taxes resulting from the foreign
    assignment
  • Bonuses and Incentive Compensation Government
    auditors often assert that the bonus or incentive
    compensation was not paid pursuant to an
    agreement entered into before the services where
    performed, as required by the principle.

31

32
FAR 31.205-6 Compensation for personal services
  • Severance Pay
  • defined as payment in addition to regular
    salaries and wages by the contractor to workers
    whose employment is being involuntarily
    terminated, is allowable
  • Provided it is reasonable and required by law,
    employer-employee agreement, an established
    policy that effectively constitutes an implied
    agreement, or the circumstances of the particular
    employment
  • If, however, the employee is employed by a
    replacement contactor under substantially equal
    conditions of employment and with credit for
    prior service, or if the employee is employed by
    an affiliate of the contractor, the severance pay
    is unallowable.

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33
FAR 31.205-6 Compensation for personal services
  • All backpay is unallowable unless it is for work
    performed but underpaid.
  • Corporate Securities (1) The securities must be
    valued at their fair market value on the
    measurement date, which is defined as the first
    date the number of shares awarded is known, and
    (2) any accruals for the cost of the securities
    before issuance to the employees must take into
    account the possibility that the employees
    interest in the accruals might be forfeited.
  • Any compensation that is calculated , valued, or
    based on changes in the price of corporate
    securities is unallowable.

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34
FAR 31.205-6 Compensation for personal services
  • Pensions.
  • There are two basic types of pension plans
    defined benefit and defined contribution.
  • Subject to the cost limitations and exclusions in
    paragraphs (j)(2) through (8) of the cost
    principle, pension costs incurred under either
    type of plan are allowable provided they are
    measured, allocated, and accounted for in
    compliance with CAS 412 and 413.
  • To be allowable in the current year, pension
    costs must be funded by the time for filing of
    the Federal income tax return, including any
    extensions
  • Pension payments must be paid pursuant to a
    good-faith agreement entered into before the work
    or services are performed and according to the
    terms and conditions of an established plan
  • The Government has a right to share in the
    reversion of pension funds resulting from either
    the termination of an overfunded defined benefit
    pension plan or other constructive receipt of
    pension funds

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35
FAR 31.205-6 Compensation for personal services
  • Post-retirement Benefits Other Than Pensions
  • Must be reasonable and incurred pursuant to law,
    employer-employee agreement, or an established
    policy of the contractor.
  • Costs must be funded by the time set for filing
    the contractors Federal income tax return.

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36
FAR 31.205-6 Compensation for personal services
  • Deferred Compensation
  • To allowable, it must, be based on current or
    future services and be measured, allocated, and
    accounted for in compliance with CAS 415.
  • requires that the cost of deferred compensation
    be (a) measured by the present value of future
    benefits to paid, and (b) assigned to the cost
    accounting period in which the contractor incurs
    an obligation to compensate the employee.

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FAR 31.205-6 Compensation for personal services
  • Special Rules for-Business Acquisitions golden
    parachutes and golden Handcuffs that are paid
    in connection with business acquisitions are
    unallowable.
  • Fringe Benefits the cost principles proscribe
    the costs of employee rebate and purchase
    discount plans the portion of the costs of
    company-furnished automobiles related to personal
    use by the employee, including home-to-work
    transportation and the costs of membership in
    social dining, and country clubs.

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38
FAR 31.205-6 Compensation for personal services
  • Limitations on Highly Compensated Employees.
  • Costs of compensation of a senior executive in
    excess of the benchmark compensation amount
    determined applicable for the contractor fiscal
    year by the Administrator, Office of Federal
    Procurement Policy (OFPP) are unallowable
  • Senior executive means -- Effective January 2,
    1999, the five most highly compensated employees
    in management positions at each home office and
    each segment of the contractor, whether or not
    the home office or segment reports directly to
    the contractors headquarters.

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39
FAR 31.205-1 Public relations and advertising
costs
  • Allowable public relations costs include the
    following
  • 1) Costs specifically required by contract.
  • 2) Costs of
  • Responding to inquiries on company policies and
    activities
  • Communicating with the public, press,
    stockholders, creditors, and customers and
  • Conducting general liaison with news media and
    Government public relations officers, to the
    extent that such activities are limited to
    communication and liaison necessary to keep the
    public informed on matters of public concern
  • 3) Costs of participation in community service
    activities (e.g., blood bank drives, charity
    drives, savings bond drives, disaster assistance,
    etc.)?
  • 4) Costs of plant tours and open houses
  • 5) Costs of keel laying, ship launching,
    commissioning, and roll-out ceremonies, to the
    extent specifically provided for by contract.


39

40
FAR 31.205-1 Public relations and advertising
costs
  • The only allowable advertising costs are those
    that are
  • (1) Specifically required by contract, or that
    arise from requirements of Government contracts
    and that are exclusively for
  • (i) Acquiring scarce items for contract
    performance or
  • (ii) Disposing of scrap or surplus materials
    acquired for contract performance.
  • (2) Costs of activities to promote sales of
    products normally sold to the U.S. Government,
    including trade shows, which contain a
    significant effort to promote exports from the
    United States. However, such costs do not include
    the costs of memorabilia (e.g., models, gifts,
    and souvenirs), alcoholic beverages,
    entertainment, and physical facilities that are
    primarily used for entertainment rather than
    product promotion or
  • (3) Allowable in accordance with
    31.205-34Recruitment costs)?


40

41
FAR 31.205-7 Contingencies
  • The allowability of the cost of contingencies
    depends upon whether the pricing is being done
    retroactively or prospectively.
  • Contingencies are generally unallowable for
    historical costing purposes, such as
    retroactively determining the adjustment due for
    previously performed work.
  • On the other hand, contingencies are not
    unallowable for estimating and forward pricing
    purposes. Contingencies that may arise from
    known and existing conditions, the effects of
    which can reasonably be foreseen and estimated,
    are allowable and should be included in the
    estimated cost. Contingencies that cannot
    reasonably be measured must be excluded from the
    estimate but disclosed separately to permit
    appropriate contractual coverage, such as through
    insurance costs or a re-opener clause.

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42
FAR 31.205-8 Contributions or donations
  • Contributions or donations, including cash,
    property and services, regardless of recipient,
    are unallowable, except as provided in
    31.205-1(e)(3).

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43
FAR 31.205-10 Cost of Money
  • Facilities capital cost of money is the imputed
    cost of investment income forgone when a
    contractor commits its resources to capital
    assets used to perform a contract.
  • FCCM must be measured, assigned, and allocated to
    contracts in accordance with CAS 414, and cost of
    money as an element of capital assets under
    construction must be measured and added to the
    cost of capital assets under construction in
    accordance with CAS 417
  • For FCCM only, the estimated cost of money must
    have been specifically identified and proposed in
    cost proposals relating to the contract under
    which the cost is to be claimed.

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44
FAR 31.205-11 Depreciation
  • Contracts subject to CAS 409, must comply with
    that standard.
  • Contracts not subject to CAS 409, except as
    otherwise provided by paragraphs (g) and (h) of
    the principle, allowable depreciation costs are
    limited to the amount used for financial
    accounting purposes, and must be determined in a
    manner consistent with the contractors
    depreciation policies and procedures followed in
    the same segment on non-Government business.
  • No depreciation is allowed on property that has
    been fully depreciated by the contractor or any
    of its divisions, subsidiaries or affiliates
    under common control.
  •  

44


45
FAR 31.205-13 Employee morale, health, welfare,
food service, and dormitory costs and credits
  • Costs incurred on activities designed to improve
    working conditions, employer-employee relations,
    employee morale, and employee performance (less
    income generated by these activities) are
    allowable.
  • Some examples of allowable activities are
  • (1) House publications
  • (2) Health clinics
  • (3) Wellness/fitness centers
  • (4) Employee counseling services and
  • (5) Food and dormitory services, for the
    contractors employees at or near the
    contractors facilities.

45


46
FAR 31.205-13 Employee morale, health, welfare,
food service, and dormitory costs and credits
  • Costs of recreation are unallowable, except for
    the costs of employees participation in company
    sponsored sports teams or employee organizations
    designed to improve company loyalty, team work,
    or physical fitness.

46


47
FAR 31.205-13 Employee morale, health, welfare,
food service, and dormitory costs and credits
  • The allowability of food and dormitory losses are
    determined by the following factors
  • (i) Losses from operating food and dormitory
    services are allowable only if the contractors
    objective is to operate such services on a
    break-even basis.
  • (ii) Losses sustained because food services or
    lodging accommodations are furnished without
    charge or at prices or rates which obviously
    would not be conducive to the accomplishment of
    the above paragraph (d)(1)(i) are not allowable,
    except that
  • (iii) A loss may be allowed to the extent that
    the contractor can demonstrate that unusual
    circumstances exist such that even with efficient
    management, operating the services on a
    break-even basis would require charging
    inordinately high prices, or prices or rates
    higher than those charged by commercial
    establishments offering the same services in the
    same geographical areas.

47


48
FAR 31.205 - Entertainment
  • Costs of amusement, diversions, social
    activities, and any directly associated costs
    such as tickets to shows or sports events, meals,
    lodging, rentals, transportation, and gratuities
    are unallowable.
  • Costs made specifically unallowable under this
    cost principle are not allowable under any other
    cost principle.
  • Costs of membership in social, dining, or country
    clubs or other organizations having the same
    purposes are also unallowable, regardless of
    whether the cost is reported as taxable income to
    the employees.

48


49
FAR 31.205-23 Losses on other contracts
  • An excess of costs over income under any other
    contract is unallowable.

49


50
FAR 31.205-32 Precontract Costs
  • Precontract costs are generally allowable
    provided they satisfy the circumstances
    prescribed by the cost principle.

50


51
FAR 31.205-33 Professional and Consultant Service
Costs
  • Except when incurred in any of the circumstances
    listed in paragraph (c) of the principle and as
    may be limited by other applicable cost
    principles, the costs of professional and
    consultant services are generally allowable when
    reasonable in relation to the services rendered
    and not contingent upon recovery of the costs
    from the Government.

51


52
FAR 31.205-33 Professional and Consultant Service
Costs
  • Paragraph (e) imposes 4 additional requirements
    to support the allowability of retainer fees.
  • Paragraph (f) requires that be allowable, fees
    for professional and consultant services must be
    support by evidence of the nature and scope of
    the services furnished.

52


53
FAR 31.205-41 Taxes
  • With seven listed exceptions, taxes that are
    required to be paid and are paid or accrued in
    accordance with generally accepted accounting
    principles are allowable.
  • The following types of costs are not allowable
  • (1) Federal income and excess profits taxes.
  • (2) Taxes in connection with financing,
    refinancing, refunding operations, or
    reorganizations
  • (3) Taxes from which exemptions are available to
    the contractor directly, or available to the
    contractor based on an exemption afforded the
    Government,
  • (4) Special assessments on land that represent
    capital improvements
  • (5) Taxes (including excises) on real or personal
    property
  • (6) Any excise tax
  • (7) Income tax accruals designed to account for
    the tax effects of differences between taxable
    income and pretax income as reflected by the
    books of account and financial statements.

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54
FAR 31.205-42 Termination costs
  • Contract terminations generally give rise to the
    incurrence of costs or the need for special
    treatment of costs that would not have arisen had
    the contract not been terminated.
  • The cost principle addresses elements peculiar to
    termination situations and are to be used in
    conjunction with the other cost principles in
    Subpart 31.2
  • Common items. The costs of items reasonably
    usable on the contractors other work shall not
    be allowable unless the contractor submits
    evidence that the items could not be retained at
    cost without sustaining a loss.

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55
FAR 31.205-42 Termination costs
  • Initial costs. Initial costs, including starting
    load and preparatory costs, are allowable.
  • Loss of useful value. Loss of useful value of
    special tooling, and special machinery and
    equipment is generally allowable, with listed
    provisions.
  • Rental under unexpired leases. Rental costs under
    unexpired leases, less the residual value of such
    leases, are generally allowable when shown to
    have been reasonably necessary for the
    performance of the terminated contract, if --
  • (1) The amount of rental claimed does not exceed
    the reasonable use value of the property leased
    for the period of the contract and such further
    period as may be reasonable and
  • (2) The contractor makes all reasonable efforts
    to terminate, assign, settle, or otherwise reduce
    the cost of such lease.

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56
FAR 31.205-42 Termination costs
  • Alterations of leased property. The cost of
    alterations and reasonable restorations required
    by the lease may be allowed when the alterations
    were necessary for performing the contract.
  • Settlement expenses, including the following, are
    generally allowable
  • (i) Accounting, legal, clerical, and similar
    costs reasonably necessary for --
  • (A) The preparation and presentation, including
    supporting data, of settlement claims to the
    contracting officer and
  • (B) The termination and settlement of
    subcontracts.
  • (ii) Reasonable costs for the storage,
    transportation, protection, and disposition of
    property acquired or produced for the contract.
  • (iii) Indirect costs related to salary and wages
    incurred as settlement expenses in (i) and (ii)
    normally, such indirect costs shall be limited to
    payroll taxes, fringe benefits, occupancy costs,
    and immediate supervision costs.
  • Subcontractor claims. Subcontractor claims,
    including the allocable portion of the claims
    common to the contract and to other work of the
    contractor, are generally allowable.

56


57
FAR 31.205-46 Travel
  • Costs for transportation, lodging, meals, and
    incidental expenses.
  • (1) Costs for transportation may be based on
    mileage rates, actual costs incurred, or on a
    combination thereof, provided the method used
    results in a reasonable charge.
  • (2) Except as provided in subparagraph (a)(3) of
    this subsection, costs incurred for lodging,
    meals, and incidental expenses shall be
    considered to be reasonable and allowable only to
    the extent that they do not exceed on a daily
    basis the maximum per diem rates in effect at the
    time of travel as set forth in the
  • (i) Federal Travel Regulations
  • (ii) Joint Travel Regulation
  • (iii) Standardized Regulations

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58
FAR 31.205-46 Travel
  • In special or unusual situations, actual costs in
    excess of the above-referenced maximum per diem
    rates are allowable provided that such amounts do
    not exceed the higher amounts authorized for
    Federal civilian employees

58


59
FAR 31.205-46 Travel
  • Airfare costs in excess of the lowest customary
    standard, coach, or equivalent airfare offered
    during normal business hours are unallowable
    except when such accommodations require
    circuitous routing, require travel during
    unreasonable hours, excessively prolong travel,
    result in increased cost that would offset
    transportation savings, are not reasonably
    adequate for the physical or medical needs of the
    traveler, or are not reasonably available to meet
    mission requirements.
  • However, in order for airfare costs in excess of
    the above standard airfare to be allowable, the
    applicable condition(s) set forth above must be
    documented and justified.

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Audit Rights and Access
  • Audit and Records Negotiation (FAR 52.215-2)?
  • Contract Terms and Conditions Required to
    Implement Statues or Executive Orders
    Commercial Items
  • Requirements for Cost or Pricing Data or
    Information Other Than Cost or Pricing Data
  • Allowable Cost and Payment (FAR 52.216-7)
    included in cost-reimbursement contracts other
    than facilities contracts regardless of dollar
    value.
  • Payments Under Time-and-Material and Labor-Hour
    Contracts required in TM and LH contracts.

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Audit Rights and Access
  • Economic Price Adjustment Labor and Material
    included in negotiated, fixed-price contracts
    that provide for an economic price adjustment on
    the basis of labor and material.
  • Progress Payments included in fixed price
    contracts under which the Government will provide
    progress payments based on costs.
  • Performance-Based Payments included in
    contracts under which the Government will provide
    performance-based payments.
  • Advance Payments and Advance Payments Without
    Special Account included in contracts under
    which the Government provides advance payments.

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Audit Rights and Access
  • Government audit rights and access are frequently
    obtained by mandatory contract terms and
    conditions
  • Many include
  • Right to examine and audit all records and other
    evidence sufficient to reflect properly all costs
    claimed . . ..
  • Right to examine . . . those records, which
    include books, documents, accounting procedures
    and practices, and other data, regardless of type
    and form . . ..
  • Shall permit any authorized representative of
    the Government to examine and make copies of any
    documents, papers, or records relating to
    compliance . . ..

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