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Contractor Accounting

Contractor Accounting. National Business Institute Richard E. McDermott, Ph.D. Defense Contractors Construction Contractors General Contractors. Defense Contractor Accounting. Session Objectives--Defense. To give students an introductory vocabulary in defense contracting and accounting.

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Contractor Accounting

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  1. Contractor Accounting National Business Institute Richard E. McDermott, Ph.D. Defense Contractors Construction Contractors General Contractors

  2. Defense Contractor Accounting

  3. Session Objectives--Defense • To give students an introductory vocabulary in defense contracting and accounting. • To help students understand the unique problems faced by the Department of Defense in the procurement of sophisticated weapons systems and the role that the contractor’s accountant plays in this process.

  4. Session Objectives--Defense • To show students how to bid government defense contracts. • To give students the steps in the establishment of a defense contractor cost accounting system.

  5. First Step in Procurement Process • Preparation of functional specification--narrative description of the proposed system. • Preparation of detailed design--technical drawings. • The more time you spend on these steps the less time you will spend later.

  6. Pricing Considerations • Two general types of pricing--prospective(i.e. fixed price) and retroactive(i.e. cost reimbursement). • Fixed price contracts put contractor at risk. • Cost reimbursement put the customer at risk. • There are multiple variations of these two contract forms.

  7. Choose fixed price contract when: • There is a market price for the contract or service (i.e. “off-the-shelf” items). • It is relatively easy to estimate prospectively thecost of aproduct or service.

  8. Choose cost reimbursement when: • It is impossible to estimate the amount of work it will take to complete the project. • Technology beyond “state-of-the-art” is required. • The project is a research and development effort and involves the development of new technology or knowledge. • There are immeasurable contingencies.

  9. Contract Pricing Arrangements

  10. Contract Pricing Arrangements: • Firm Fixed Price • Fixed Price Incentive--Firm Target • Fixed Price Incentive--Successive Targets • Fixed Price with Redetermination • Fixed Price with Economic Price Adjustment

  11. Contract Pricing Arrangements: • Cost Plus Incentive Fee • Cost Fixed Fee • Cost Contract • Cost Sharing • Time and materials • Labor Hour contract

  12. Firm Fixed Price (FFP) • Refers to a family of pricing arrangements whose common discipline is a ceiling beyond which the Government bears no financial responsibility.

  13. FP Incentive--Firm Target • The ingredients of this type of contract are: • Target cost • Target profit • Target price • Price ceiling • Share arrangement

  14. FP Incentive--Firm Target Costs above $10,000,000 are subject to sharing arrangement. If total costs hit $12,833,333 that becomes the final contract price.

  15. FP Incentive Successive Targets • Long lead-times make make it necessary when acquiring a new system to contract for a follow-on-quantity before designor production stabilityhas been achieved.

  16. FP Incentive Successive Targets • This arrangement is designed for situations involving the procurement of first or second production quantity of a newly developed item. • There is price uncertainty that precludes finalizing the contract now. The uncertainty will be resolved before the contract if “firmed up.”

  17. FP Incentive Successive Targets • Negotiate initial target cost. When the contract is “firmed up” if the target cost is decreased, the difference between the final fixed price and the target cost is split between the government and the contractor (contractor receives split in addition to the contract price).

  18. FP Incentive Successive Targets • If the target price is increased at the time of “firm-up” then the contractor has a percentage of the increasededucted from his ceiling on profits.

  19. Fixed Price with Redetermination • The government and contractor agree in advance to have two fixed price contracts--one negotiated now and one to be negotiated later.

  20. FP with Economic Price Adj. • Designed to cope with economic uncertainties that threaten long-run, fixed price typecontracts.

  21. FP with Economic Price Adj. • These contracts provide for contract increases or decreases to protect the Government and contractor from the effect of economic changes.

  22. Cost Plus Incentive Fee • Injects an incentive sharing formula into what would otherwise be a cost-reimbursement with a 100/0 share.

  23. Cost Plus Incentive Fee • Three characteristics differentiate this contract from Fixed Price Incentive Fee or Fixed Price Incentive Target contracts: • There is no ceiling price. • Total reimbursable costs are the final contract costs. • The maximum fee of the contractor is subject to limitations.

  24. Cost Plus Incentive Fee PROFIT MAX SHARE LINE $25,000 $20,000 $15,000 $10,000 $5,000 MIN $300 $400 $500 $600 $700 CONTRACT COSTS (000s)

  25. Other Contract Types • Cost plus fixed fee--self explanatory. • Cost contract--no profit is paid. Used for research contracts. • Cost sharing--government reimburses contractor a predetermined percentage of costs. Used for research contracts.

  26. Other Contract Types • Time and materials--this arrangement is used to buy labor loaded with indirect costs and profit, and materials which are loaded with indirect costs but no profit. • Labor hour contract--same as above except materials are not purchased under the contract.

  27. Specific guidelines for . . . • Defense Contractors • Construction Contractors • General Contractors

  28. Contract Phases • Preparing to bid • Bidding • Tracking costs • Reporting costs • Managing contracts • Final analysis

  29. Preparing to Bid Contracts

  30. Decide . . . • The number and kind of cost pools you will use. • The types of rates you will use to distribute indirect costs to contracts. • The rate base or denominator activity to be used in calculating the rate.

  31. Typical Rates: • Overhead rates (factory or on-site OH). • Materials handling rates (purchasing & materials handling costs. • General and Administrative (G&A) rates (non overhead administrative costs). • Other. Rate = Estimated Indirect Cost Pool Denominator Activity

  32. Typical Denominator Activities: • Direct or loaded labor dollars • Number of Purchase Orders • Total contract costs • Total direct costs • Machine hours • Material costs • Labor hours

  33. Forward Pricing Rates: • Contractor forecasts rates based on historical and estimated indirect costs and projected denominator volume. • Defense Contract Audit Agency (DCAA) audits proposed rates and makes a recommendation to the Government. • Once rates are accepted they are typically used to bid all contracts for the fiscal year.

  34. Preparing to Bid • Once you have decided on the rates you will use, prepare estimates of indirect costs pools for the year. • Then prepare estimates of company direct contract costs for the coming year (direct labor, direct materials, travel, etc.) and any other denominator activity to be used in calculating rates.

  35. Preparing to Bid • Calculate rates. • Negotiate calculated rates with Government if you are a defense contractor. • Prepare a pro-forma financial statement based on projected direct and indirect costs.

  36. Problem 1 • TriStar is a defense contractor • It has three indirect cost rates • Overhead rate – base is direct labor dollars • Materials handling rate – base is direct material dollars • General and administrative rate (G&A) – base is total costs excluding G&A

  37. Problem 1 • At the beginning of the year the controller makes the following estimates • Overhead expense $2 million • Direct labor dollars $8 million • Material handling expense $1 million • Direct materials expense $10 million • General and administrative expense $4,200,000

  38. Problem 1 • The United States Air Force comes to TriStar with a fixed-price contract. • Estimated direct costs to complete the contract are: • Direct labor dollars $520,000 • Direct material costs $1,020,000 • The company has decided it wants to earn a profit of 10% of total costs • What should the company bid?

  39. Step One: Calculate Rates • Overhead rate: • $2,000,000/$8,000,000 = 25% • Materials handling rate: • $1,000,000/$10,000,000 = 10% • G&A rate: • $4,200,000/$21,000,000 = 20% Calculation of G&A base

  40. Step Two: Load Contract with Rates and Profit

  41. Estimating Contract Costs

  42. Estimation Methodologies • Round table estimating • Estimation by comparison • Detailed estimating

  43. Round Table Estimating • Representatives of interested departments such as Engineering, Manufacturing, Contracts and Purchasing are broughttogether to estimatecosts based on marketconditions.

  44. Round Table Estimating: • The estimate is developed without the benefit of design drawings. • Advantagesof this method include speed of application and low cost. • Disadvantages include greater risk. It should only be used on projects involving existing.

  45. Estimation by Comparison • Products similar to those requested are selected and compared. Costs are adjusted to the new task.

  46. Detailed Estimating: • This method is characterized by a thorough analysis of all components, tasks, etc. • Break each product component into parts, operations, and cost elements. • Tools used include specifications, drawings, bill of materials, production rates, production quantities, etc.

  47. Detailed Estimating: • The most importantstep is the preparation of the functional specification and detailed design. The more complete these documents are, theeasier it will be toprice the contract.

  48. Detailed Estimating: • It is often to divide the work statement into two contracts. • A cost reimbursement contract for the preparation of a functional specification and detailed design. • A fixed price contract for the manufacture or construction of the product from the completed design documents.

  49. Bidding the Contract

  50. Bidding a Contract • Review project’s functional specification and detailed design. • Review bidding requirements & contract conditions. • Bonding and insurance requirements • Method and timing of progress payments

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