education & consulting in

Project and Resource Management

Cost Management

Text Box: Business Case Analysis
Text Box: Cost Benefit Analysis

Global Analysis

The term Globalization is sometimes used to refer specifically to economic globalization: the integration of national economies into the international economy through trade, foreign direct investment, capital flows, migration, and the spread of technology.

The term Global Economy refers to an integrated world economy with unrestricted and free movement of goods, services and labor trans-nationally. It projects the picture of an increasingly inter-connected world with free movement of capital across countries, also. The concept of a global economy cannot be understood in isolation. For this, globalization needs to be defined first.  Globalization may be defined as the integration of production and consumption in all markets across the world.

 
It is a widely accepted view that globalization would not only benefit all countries across the world but would also work towards the betterment of the economy as a whole. Country specific economic and political decisions are being taken on a global scale in today’s world with global considerations becoming more important than narrow provincial ideals.

A Global Economy also leads to a shifting of jobs from the developed countries to the Third World Countries as wage rates are much lower here. This allows companies of the advanced nation to grow exponentially. For example, we might find computer chips produced in China be exported to USA for designing which may be subsequently used in Japanese computers supplied across the world. This process is called “outsourcing” and leads to exploitation of workers in Third World economies where income inequalities already exist.

Nonetheless, a global economy may be beneficial for the world at large. This may result in the economies of the world fighting issues such as global warming, climate change and environmental degradation collectively and effectively.

Engineering economics, previously known as engineering economy, is a subset of economics for application to engineering projects. Engineers seek solutions to problems, and the economic viability of each potential solution is normally considered along with the technical aspects.

In the U.S. undergraduate engineering curricula, engineering economics is often a required course. It is a topic on the Fundamentals of Engineering examination, and questions might also be asked on the Principles and Practice of Engineering examination; both are part of the Professional Engineering registration process.

Considering the time value of money is central to most engineering economic analyses. Cash flows are discounted using an interest rate, i, except in the most basic economic studies.

For each problem, there are usually many possible alternatives. One option that must be considered in each analysis, and is often the choice, is the do nothing alternative. The opportunity cost of making one choice over another must also be considered. There are also noneconomic factors to be considered, like color, style, public image, etc., and are called attributes.

 

Costs as well as revenues are considered, for each alternative, for an analysis period that is either a fixed number of years or the estimated life of the project. The salvage value is often forgotten, but is important, and is either the net cost or revenue for decommissioning the project.

 

Some other topics that may be addressed in engineering economics are inflation, uncertainty, replacements, depreciation, resource depletion, taxes, tax credits, accounting, cost estimations, or capital financing. All these topics are primary skills and knowledge areas in the field of cost engineering.

Cost Estimating

Cost estimation models are mathematical algorithms or parametric equations used to estimate the costs of a product or project. The results of the models are typically necessary to obtain approval to proceed, and are factored into business plans, budgets, and other financial planning and tracking mechanisms.

These algorithms were originally performed manually but now are almost universally computerized. They may be standardized (available in published texts or purchased commercially) or proprietary, depending on the type of business, product, or project in question. Simple models may use standard spreadsheet products.

Models typically function through the input of parameters that describe the attributes of the product or project in question, and possibly physical resource requirements. The model then provides as output various resources requirements in cost and time.

Cost modeling practitioners often have the titles of cost estimators, cost engineers, or parametric analysts.  Typical applications include:

   Construction

   Software Development

   Manufacturing

   New product development

This course provides an explanation to the determination, development, and uses of internal accounting information needed by business management to satisfy customers in conjunction with continuous cost control. This course examines basic principles of cost management and other related issues such as manager performance evaluation, management activity and process, and applications of activity-based costing and just in time manufacturing. Topics include contemporary cost accounting; activity based management; strategic cost management; capital investment decision; pricing and revenue analysis; and balanced scorecard. The aim of this course is to prepare students with comprehensive understanding on the benefits of cost management in managing corporate organizations.

"Cost Management" gives project managers basic tools for predicting, monitoring and adjusting project schedules and budgets. At its conclusion, learners can expect to understand how to:

· Calculate a cost performance index (CPI)

· Calculate a schedule performance index (SPI)

· Calculate estimated costs at completion (EAC), using the most appropriate method

· Allocate cost to products, processes, and activities

· Develop process improvement initiatives

 

Content

"Cost Management" places basic cost management tools within the grasp of nearly any project manager. Each skill sequence builds on the one before. Using clear explanations and providing ample practice, this course makes learning when and how to use cost management calculations and indices as uncomplicated as possible.

 

The supplemental course materials are designed for the entire series. The glossary extends beyond the terms used in this module. New terms in the text are linked to the glossary, or users can go to the glossary to look up terms by scrolling or using the alphabetical index. The resources section is a treasure trove of brief articles on a variety of management topics.

Overall, for managers new to cost management methodologies, this course should prove useful, regardless of the number of zeroes and commas in their project budgets.

Value

If these cost management tools aren't already in your project management toolkit, this course is an efficient and cost-effective way to acquire them. The time and money spent are likely to be repaid many times over the first time you apply these methods to a real-life project.

 

Cost Management

 

1

Introduction to Cost Management

2

Basic Cost Management Concepts

3

Cost Behavior

4

Activity-Based Costing

5

Product and Service Costing: Job-Order System

6

Product and Service Costing: A Process Systems Approach

7

Allocating Costs of Support Departments & Joint Products

8

Budgeting for Planning and Control

9

Standard Costing: A Functional-Based Control Approach

10

Decentralization: Responsibility Accounting

11

Strategic Cost Management

12

Activity-Based Management

13

The Balanced Scorecard

14

Quality and Environmental Cost Management

15

Productivity Measure and Control

16

Lean Accounting

17

Cost-Volume-Profit Analysis

18

Activity Resource Usage Model

19

Pricing and Profitability Analysis

20

Capital Investment

21

Inventory Management: Economic Order Quantity

 

Global Economy

 

1

Introduction to International Macroeconomics

2

Measuring National Output

3

Monitoring Labor Market Conditions

4

Inflation, GDP, and Business Cycles

5

Who Wins, and Who Loses?

6

Measuring Money

7

Financial Intermediaries and Money Creation

8

Who Controls the Money Supply and How?

9

Interest Rates and Why They Change

10

Price and Output Fluctuations

11

Fiscal Policy and Automatic Stabilizers

12

Basics of Foreign Exchange Markets

13

Exchange Rates: Why Do They Change?

14

Balance of Payments Fundamentals

15

Putting It All Together

16

Economic Shocks to Nations

17

Shocks to Nations with Fixed Exchange Rates

18

Long-Term Growth and Inflation

19

Long-Term Exchange Rate Movements

20

Demystifying International Macroeconomics

Engineering Economy

 

1

Introduction to Engineering Economy

Images

2

Cost Concepts and Design Economics

Images

3

Cost Estimation Techniques

Images

4

The Time Value of Money

Images

5

Evaluating a Single Project

Images

6

Comparison and Selection Among Alternatives

Images

7

Depreciation and Income Taxes

Images

8

Price Changes and Exchange Rates

Images

9

Replacement Analysis

Images

10

Evaluating wit Benefit-Cost Ratio Method

Images

11

Breakeven and Sensitivity Analysis

Images

12

Probabilistic Risk Analysis

 

13

The Capital Budgeting Process

 

14

Decision Making  Considering Multi-attributes

 

15

Solve Engineering Economy Problems w Excel

 

Cost Analysis and Estimating

 

Overview of Cost Estimating

Labor Analysis

Material Analysis

Accounting Analysis

Forecasting

Estimating Methods

Operation Estimating

Product Estimating

Cost Analysis

Engineering Economy

The Enterprise

 

 

Cost Benefit Analysis

 

Introduction to Cost-Benefit Analysis

Conceptual Foundations of CBA

Basics of Cost Benefit Analysis

Valuing Benefits and Costs

Supply Demand Curves

Discounting Future Benefit and Cost

Expected value, Sensitivity analysis

Option Price

Existence Value

Social Discount Rate (SDR)

Estimates via Demonstrations 

Valuing Policy Impacts

Market Price Impact

Direct Elicitation Methods

Estimates of Shadow Prices

CBA in Developing Countries

Cost-Effectiveness Analysis (CEA)

Distributional Weighting in CBA

Evaluate the Accuracy of CBA

 

 

Statistics for Business and Economics

 

Describing Data: Graphical

Describing Data: Numerical

Probability

Random Variable, Probability Distributions

Continuous Variables and Distributions

Sampling & Sampling Distributions

Estimation: Single Population

Estimation

Hypothesis Testing

More on Hypothesis Testing

Simple Regression

Multiple Regression

More on Regression Analysis

Analysis of Categorical Data

Analysis of Variance

Time-Series Analysis and Forecasting

Additional Topics in Sampling

Statistical Decision Theory

 

Cost Accounting

1

Accountant’s Role in the Organization

2

Introduction to Cost Terms and Purposes

3

Cost-Volume-Profit Analysis

4

Job Costing

5

Activity-Based Costing

6

Master Budgeting

7

Flexible Budgets, Direct-Cost Variances

8

Flexible Budgets, Overhead Cost Variances

9

Inventory Costing and Capacity Analysis

10

Determining How Costs Behave

11

Decision Making and Relevant Information

12

Pricing Decisions and Cost Management

13

Strategy, Balanced Scorecard

14

Cost Allocation, Customer Profitability Analysis

15

Allocation of Support Department Costs

16

Cost Allocation: Joint Products and Byproducts

17

Process Costing

18

Spoilage, Rework, and Scrap

19

Quality, Time, and the Theory of Constraints

20

Inventory Management, Just-in-Time

21

Capital Budgeting and Cost Analysis

22

Management-Control Systems, Transfer Pricing

23

Performance Measurement, Compensation