(engineering) A contract under which a contractor furnishes all material, construction equipment, and labor at actual cost, plus an agreed-upon fee for his services.
| Sci-Tech Dictionary: cost-plus contract |
(engineering) A contract under which a contractor furnishes all material, construction equipment, and labor at actual cost, plus an agreed-upon fee for his services.
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| Financial & Investment Dictionary: Cost-Plus Contract |
Contract basing the selling price of a product on the total cost incurred in making it plus a stated percentage or a fixed fee-called a cost-plus-fixed-fee contract. Cost-plus contracts are common when there is no historical basis for estimating costs and the producer would run a risk of loss-defense contracts involving sophisticated technology, for example. The alternative is a Fixed Price contract.
| Wikipedia: Cost-plus contract |
A cost-plus contract, more accurately termed a Cost Reimbursement Contract, is a contract where a contractor is paid for all of its allowed expenses to a set limit plus additional payment to allow for a profit.[1] Cost reimbursement contracts contrast with fixed-price contract, in which the contractor is paid a negotiated amount regardless of incurred expenses.
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There are four general types of cost reimbursement contracts, all of which pay every allowable, allocatable, and reasonable cost incurred by the contractor plus a fee or profit which differs by contract type.
| Contract Type | US government outlays in FY07[3] |
|---|---|
| Award-fee contracts | $38B |
| Incentive fee contracts | $8B |
| Fixed-fee contracts | $32B |
A cost reimbursement contract is appropriate when it is desirable to shift some risk of successful contract performance from the contractor to the buyer. It is most commonly used when the item purchased cannot be explicitly defined, as in research and development, or in cases where there is not enough data to accurately estimate the final cost.
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Disadvantage:
Between 1995 and 2001 fixed fee cost-plus contracts constituted the largest sub group of cost-plus contracting in the U.S. defense sector. Starting in 2002 award-fee cost plus contracts took over the lead from fixed fee cost plus contracts.
The distribution of annual contract values by sector category and award types indicates that cost plus contracts in the past carried the largest importance in research, followed by services and products. In 2004 however services replaced research as the dominant sector category for cost plus contracts. For all other contract vehicles combined the relative ranking is reversed to the original cost-plus order, meaning that products leads, followed by service and research.
With cost-plus contracting being primarily designed for research and development tasks, the percent share of cost-plus contracting within a contract is expected to be in correlation with the percent share of research undertaken in any given program. However, several programs, such as for instance the F-35, the Trident II, the CVN 68, and the CVN 21 deviate from this pattern by continuing to make extensive usage of cost-plus contracting despite programs progressively moving beyond the resarch and development state.[4]
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)
| Fixed-Price Contract (business term) | |
| Cost-Plus-Percentage Contract | |
| Fixed Price (finance term) |
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