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Composite cost unit

Composite cost unit is a two-part measure — such as cost per tonne-kilometre or per patient-day — used to cost a service where a single output unit alone would be meaningless.

ByHoang TruongUpdated

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A composite cost unit multiplies two measures rather than adding them: a delivery moving 8 tonnes over 25 kilometres represents 8 times 25, or 200, tonne-kilometres. At a rate of €54,000 total monthly cost divided by 45,000 tonne-kilometres, or €1.20 per tonne-kilometre, that delivery costs 200 times €1.20, or €240.

Where it fits
TopicCost Terms & ClassificationCoreSubjectCost AccountingCore

The formula

LaTeX
c=TCQ×Dc = \frac{TC}{Q \times D}

Variables

Cost per composite unit ()
Total cost ()
Quantity measure, e.g. tonnes or patients (varies)
Distance or time measure, e.g. kilometres or days (varies)

Spreads total cost over the combined composite output actually delivered, such as tonnes carried times kilometres travelled.

Check yourself

PracticeCORE

A hospital ward incurs total costs of €96,000 in a month and provides 800 patient-days of care in total (number of patients multiplied by the days each stayed). What is the cost attributable to a patient who stayed 5 days?

Select an answer to check your understanding.
Composite cost unit — Edlintics Glossary