An approach to the allocation of common costs of multi‐mission systems
Robert Thomas Crow
Naval Research Logistics Quarterly, 1973, vol. 20, issue 3, 431-447
Abstract:
Many Naval systems, as well as other military and civilian systems, generate multiple missions. An outstanding problem in cost analysis is how to allocate the costs of such missions so that their true costs can be determined and resource allocation optimized. This paper presents a simple approach to handling this problem for single systems. The approach is based on the theory of peak‐load pricing as developed by Marcel Boiteux. The basic principle is that the long‐run marginal cost of a mission must be equal to its “price.” The implication of this is that if missions can cover their own marginal costs, they should also be allocated some of the marginal common costs. The proportion of costs to be allocated is shown to a function of not only the mission‐specific marginal costs and the common marginal costs, but also of the “mission price.” Thus, it is shown that measures of effectiveness must be developed for rational cost allocation. The measurement of effectiveness has long been an intractable problem, however. Therefore, several possible means of getting around this problem are presented in the development of the concept of relative mission prices.
Date: 1973
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https://doi.org/10.1002/nav.3800200307
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:wly:navlog:v:20:y:1973:i:3:p:431-447
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