213.83
it is direct labor plus overhead costs
it is a more efficient way to calculate the costs of electricity being used in the home, it breaks up each use power being used
it costs 5000000
If you are talking about operating costs, it would depend on the prices of the energy sources and the efficiencies of the heaters in question. You must compare the efficiency ratings of the two heaters in question and then calculate the cost of using them in your particular application. As far as unit purchase costs and installation costs, it depends on what units you are considering for installation. Right now, in North America, at least, and likely elsewhere as well, the cost of heating with fossil fuels is becoming more and more expensive than heating with electricity.
Economies of scale (costs decrease), diseconomies of scale (costs increase), constant returns to scale (costs stay the same)
14674.58
it is direct labor plus overhead costs
15%
First you calculate 40% of the original price, which is .4 times original price. Then you subtract that number from the original price to get 40% off. For example, if a pair of shoes originally costs $10 but is 40% off, then you would calculate .4 x 10, which is 4, then subtract 4 from 10, which is 6. So 40 percent off of 10 is 6.
It is 100*staff costs/total costs.
The discount is 30%
To calculate the cost to manufacture fabric, you need to know the cost of materials, labor, and other costs like electricity and building costs. There is not a formula specific to fabric costs.
it is important to calculate costs and measure media effectiveness to best reach audience.
there is no specific formula to calculate direct cost but direct cost are all those costs which are directly related to production of goods and separately identifiable.
To know what they have spent....
The answer will depend on profits as a percentage of what! As a percentage of revenue, it would be 100*(Total Revenue - Total Costs)/Total Revenue In example (as given in discussion page) Total Revenue = 236,000 Total Costs = 173,000 Total Profit = Total Revenue - Total Costs = 63,000 So percentage profit = 100*63,000/236,000 = 26.7% (approx).
Airlines calculate ticket costs by how much the fuel is for the duration of the flight, and they divide it by the number of passengers the flight can hold. They also add in other costs including maintenence and pilot's salary, increasing the ticket price for profit.