Storage Overhead
The NCAS allows a warehouse
to mark up the price of inventory items that are issued to customers. This
price mark up is referred to as storage overhead. Storage overhead is established
at the item-warehouse level on the Item Warehouse Accounting Entry (IWAE)
screen. In other words, the storage overhead values established on the
IWAE screen apply only to specified items in specified warehouses.
Note: If you are
establishing storage overhead for a new item (in other words, the item
has just been linked to your warehouse), you can use the Item Warehouse
Accounting Entry (IWAE) screen to establish storage overhead. If your warehouse
has stocked the item for some time, but has only recently made the decision
to apply storage overhead, then you must use the Item Warehouse Accounting
Update (IWAU) screen to establish storage overhead.
Storage overhead can be a fixed
or a variable amount. A fixed overhead is established as a single
monetary value. A variable overhead is calculated as a percentage
of average cost. The issuing cost (i.e., the price charged to the
customer) is the sum of the average cost and storage overhead.
Issuing Cost = Average Cost
+ Storage Overhead
For example, your agencys
warehouse stocks insulin. The current average cost of the insulin is $9
per vial. Your warehouse has decided to charge a storage overhead for insulin.
Your warehouse could charge a fixed storage overhead of $1 per vial or
a variable overhead of 10 percent of the current average cost per vial
of insulin.
-
With the fixed overhead, the
cost of the insulin to the customer would be $10 per vial (current average
cost of $9 plus storage
-
With the variable storage overhead,
the current overhead value would be $0.90 (10 percent variable overhead
multiplied by the current average cost of $9). The cost of the insulin
to the customer would be $9.90 per vial (current average cost of $9 plus
variable storage overhead of $0.90).
Note: If your warehouse
decides to establish both a fixed overhead and a variable overhead, the
NCAS will add both overhead values to the average cost.