Title: SERVICE COSTING AND PRICING
1SERVICE COSTING AND PRICING
- By MUGISHA Fred
- National University of Rwanda
2SERVICE COSTING AND PRICING
- SESSION OUTCOMES
- At the end of this course, participants should be
able to - Appreciate the purpose of costing
- Reflect on Costing methods/models
- Appreciate the purpose of pricing
- Reflect on pricing methods/models
- Explore the challenges in costing and pricing
challenges in and effort to identify solutions
3SESSION CONTENT
- 1.0 INTRODUCTION TO THE SESSION
- 2.0 SERVICE COSTING
- 2.1. Introduction
- 2.2. Distinction between economic, accounting,
and engineering cost definitions - 2.3. Important cost Concepts
- Direct and indirect costs
- Fixed and Variable costs
- Common and joint cost
4SESSION CONTENT Ctd..
- 2.4. Costing methodologies
- Main costing methodologies
- Fully Distributed Costing
- Long-Run Average Incremental Costing
- Other costing methodologies
- Activity Based Costing (ABC)
- Marginal costing
5SESSION CONTENT Ctd..
- 3.0 SERVICE PRICING
- 3.1 Introduction
- Price Regulation Objectives
- Basic Pricing Goals
- Basic Pricing Principles
6SESSION CONTENT Ctd..
- 3.2 Factors that affect pricing decision
- 3.3. Pricing Methodologies
- 3.3.1.Two-common approaches to pricing
- -Rate of Return
- -Price Cap
- 3.3.2 Other Methodologies
- -Prices based on costs
- -Subsidized pricing
- -Demand-based pricing
- -Price floors and ceiling
- 4.0 Challenges in costing and pricing regulation
7GENERAL INTRODUCTION
- The major purpose of this session is to
provide a basis for comments and suggestions from
telecom regulators to look at the process of
costing and pricing for telecom services. - It is expected that by sharing experiences,
regulators, and/ or operators will gain much in
identifying key telecom service costing and
pricing challenges, and relevant solutions. -
8GENERAL INTRODUCTION ctd
- In environments where there is insufficient
competition, tariff regulation is more useful in
guarding against imposition of unreasonable
terms, especially on tariffs. - In cases where the market is young and growing it
qualifies to be subject to tariff regulation
until such time that more operators are licensed
to compete in the fixed line and mobile
operations. However, for efficient tariff
regulation, a suitable costing and pricing
information is indispensable.
9GENERAL INTRODUCTION ctd
- Regulators have to be concerned with respect
to determining the principles that the
telecommunications operators must follow in the
costing and pricing of their services. - This essentially refers to the formulation of the
general framework governing costing and pricing
for these services, through the definition of the
general principles that the obliged operators
must follow in costing and pricing the services.
10Distinction Between The Concepts Of Costing And
Pricing
- Costing involves determining the value of
resources consumed in the production of goods or
the provision of a service. Its role in pricing
is to act as a benchmark against which pricing
and production decisions can be made. - Pricing refers to the process of determining a
figure at which products or services will be
exchanged in the marketplace.
11SERVICE COSTING
- 2.1. INTRODUCTION
- There is need for the application of appropriate
cost accounting methodologies to calculate the
actual cost of telecommunication services. This
is to ensure that tariffs are reflective of
associated costs. - Detailed cost accounting in telecommunications,
is no longer an elective pursuit, it is a
compulsory exercise. However, telecom service
enterprises do not tend to have such an easily
identifiable cost unit, nor is it easy to trace
costs to specific output.
12SERVICE COSTING ctd..
- 2.2. Distinction between Economic, accounting,
and engineering cost definitions - Which costs are we talking about? The regulator
must decide on the relevant definition of costs
to be considered in cost models. The term "cost"
is used in different contexts (and by different
individuals) with different meanings. - When economists talk about costs they are always
concerned with economic cost, which can be very
different from accounting cost for example.
13SERVICE COSTING ctd..
- Accountants are concerned primarily with the
proper recording and measuring of historical
costs based upon a uniform set of rules. - Engineering methods of analyzing cost behavior
are based on the use of engineering analyses of
technological relationships between inputs and
outputs. The method is appropriate when there is
a physical relationship between costs and cost
driver.
142.3 Costing methodologies
- There are important costing principles which a
costing model should observe and these include
Cost causation principle (like an Activity based
costing,), Objectivity principle, Consistency
principle, Transparency principle (Auditability
and Accounting Separation), practicality,
efficiency, and contribution to common costs,
present value. - However, objective costs can not be calculated
without sufficiently detailed cost data.
15Costing methodologies ctd..
- 1.The Fully Distributed Cost(FDC) approach
- Here, the cost of a service derives from the
usage of a set of algorithms that allocate both
direct and indirect costs to it. However, some of
the indirect allocations are arbitrary and may
cause cost distortion. - The idea of the FDC approach is to simply divide
the total cost that the firm incurs amongst the
services that it sells. Both fixed and variable
costs are used in the production of the output
and therefore both contribute to the revenue
generated by these products or services.
16The fully distributed cost(fdc) approach ctd
- Its simplicity in directly relating prices to
information that is available in the accounting
and billing system makes the model auditable. - FDC is naturally based on historic costs. This is
because accounting data concerns the firms
actual costs. It is not impossible to use current
costs, but this requires modifications to the
accounting.
172. Long Run Average Incremental cost (LRAIC)
- The method equates tariff to cost of production
of the additional unit of the service. Added to
unit cost is an allocated share of common costs,
excluding administrative costs. - The cost of the services is computed by
apportioning the cost of the network elements
(similarly as in the activity-based approach),
and by adding the cost of labor and the rest of
the overheads as a simple markup on the cost of
the infrastructure. Such a markup follows the
trends observed in actual networks.
18LRAIC ctd..
- LRAIC of a service equals to the total cost of
the company minus the cost of the total company
if it continues to provide all the other
currently provided services but the specific one.
The sum of LRAIC of all services is less than the
total cost of the company due to the existence of
common costs.
19LRAIC ctd..
- It is natural to use current cost with LRAIC
because the aim is to construct prices that would
prevail in a competitive market. - The use of current rather than historic costs
does not pass on the inefficiencies of the
operator due to high historical costs and
inefficient out-of-date technologies.
20LRAIC ctd..
- Where pricing is the focus of interest, the more
appropriate measure of cost is likely to be the
"incremental service incremental cost," because
this measure can provide a close approximation to
marginal cost, if it is properly estimated.
21LRAIC ctd..
- However, it is difficult to calculate the
incremental costs. Sometimes, studies provided by
telephone utilities include an amalgamation of
embedded, reproduction, and forward-looking
costs, blended together and computed on an
average cost basis and such should not be called
incremental cost.
22Activity Based Costing (ABC)
- ABC is the methodology by which costs are
assigned based on the activities required to
deliver a service and the resources these
activities absorb. -
- The key to this methodology lies in two aspects
(1) What is causing the activity (2) What is
causing the costs. Simply put, ABC works on the
premise that the budget is absorbed by resources
and the resources are absorbed by services.
23ABC ctd..
- ABC is one way of trying to make a more accurate
determination of the true time, cost and value of
specific activities, and thereby evaluate their
real contribution to meeting the overall
objective. - Some organizations are therefore starting to use
this approach in formulating their cost
estimates, rather than simply relying on the
traditional cost-accounting elements.
24ABC ctd..
- Through early involvement, the cost estimator
can not only influence the final design by
feeding in the relevant cost information, but can
also actively contribute to cost reduction by
identifying cost drivers and to highlight how,
for instance, a relatively small increase in
system performance can have a disproportionately
heavy impact on final cost.
25ABC ctd..
- Costs are assigned based on the activities
required to deliver a service and the resources
these activities absorb. - The major cost drivers are the number of
subscribers, the volume of traffic (call attempts
and call minutes) and the geographical area
covered by the network. For many of the elements,
there is more than one cost driver.
26ABC ctd..
- It is based upon a hierarchy of four levels and
is a refinement of the traditional FDC approach. - The bottom level consists of the input factors
that are consumed by the network operator, e.g,
salaries of personnel, depreciation of network
elements, cost of capital, depreciation of
buildings and vehicles, marketing cost, overhead,
power consumption, and the cost of renting raw
bandwidth. The goal is to apportion these cost
elements to the services that the network
provides.
27ABC ctd..
- Instead of a one-stage assignment where costs are
assigned directly to Products and Services, ABC
assigns costs from the General Ledger
(Resources) to Activities. Costs in
Activities are then assigned to Products and
Services (Cost Object). - ABC does not replace the accounting system. ABC
draws data from the General Ledger an
Accumulator, focuses it for analysis and turns
those data into Operational and Strategic
management decision support information.
28ABC ctd..
- In theory, ABC has no conflict with FDC and
LRAIC either. ABC can be used to replace the
arbitrary cost absorption method that is used to
calculate to say, LRAIC. - The use of ABC might bring much more transparency
in the calculation of transferred cost, making
the current costing practice look redundant. But
ABC does not necessarily judge or replace the
economic thinking behind LRAIC.
29ABC ctd..
- ABC however, hides potential inefficiencies of
the network provider. Even if a network element
is underutilized, its cost is completely shared
by the services that use it and there is no
incentive for the provider to improve its
efficiency. - If the provider were only allowed to recover the
cost of a network element in proportion to its
actual utilization, he would have a clear
incentive to improve the efficiency of his
network (by for example better routing,
resolving potential bottlenecks, and reselling
spare capacity,).
30MARGINAL COSTING
- Marginal cost is one of the most important
concepts in standard microeconomic theory. - It focuses attention not on the total level of
cost, nor the average level of cost but rather on
the change in costs that occurs as the volume of
output is increased or decreased.
31MARGINAL COSTING ctd..
- Marginal cost is defined as the change in the
total cost of production resulting from an
extremely small change (upward or downward) in
the level of output. To be strictly technical
about it, marginal cost is the first derivative
of the total cost function with respect to
output. - The minimal measurable change can be extremely
small e.g, one more mill watt of electricity, one
more second of calling duration, or one more
local loop.
32MARGINAL COSTING ctd..
- In attempting to estimate marginal costs, the
analyst often encounters practical difficulties
when the measurements are directly calculated at
the smallest possible level. Accordingly, most
practical estimates of marginal cost are based at
least in part on a slightly larger increment of
output than what is envisioned in economic
theory. - The incremental cost can be viewed as an
"average" level of marginal cost, if it is
computed over a narrow increment in the immediate
vicinity of the current volume of production.
33Conclusion on service costing
- There are various methodologies used in service
costing but these are the common ones in
literature. However, FDC and LRAIC are the most
used. - Efforts should be made to encourage operators to
use ABC especially in apportioning the indirect
costs.
34 3.0 SERVICE PRICING
- 3.1. INTRODUCTION
- Pricing is a key strategic lever for telecom
operators, with a direct impact on customer
acquisition, retention, revenues and margins. - In a fully competitive environment, market forces
are more effective than regulations in providing
consumers with a wide choice of services at
reasonable prices. Hence, price regulation is
imposed only on dominant operators that have the
potential to abuse their market power and engage
in anti-competitive practices.
35INTRODUCTION ctd..
- Prices are an important means to achieve policy
objectives. For achieving these objectives, there
is an increasing focus on efficient cost-based
pricing, with a forward-looking perspective. At
the same time, flexibility of prices and
competitive pressure on prices are also
emphasized. Price floors and ceiling, together
with unbundling of the various services, have
been considered for addressing the issue of
unfair competition.
363.1.1 Price Regulation Objectives
- Regulators are interested in price regulation to
achieve three primary objectives namely - Financing Objective regulated operators
permitted to earn sufficient revenue to finance
on going operations and future investments. - Efficiency Objective Efficiency is achieved when
prices equal marginal cost of producing the
service and/or when increased levels of output
are realized through unchanged levels of input. - Equity Objective Equity objectives generally
relate to the fair distribution of welfare
benefits among members of society.
Operator-consumer equity and Consumer to consumer
equity is desirable.
37Principles in pricing
- For the telecom sector, the key principles in
setting price/tariffs can include the following - Cost basis
- Unbundling
- Transparency
- Non discrimination
38Principles in pricing ctd
- Cost basis Tariffs must reflect the underlying
cost of providing service. Operators should
provide justification of how they arrived at the
proposed tariff by reflecting the underlying cost
of providing service. - Unbundling The tariffs offered by the operators
have to be sufficiently unbundled, so that
customers do not pay for facilities, which are
not part of their service package.
39Principles in pricing ctd
- Transparency operators must publish details of
tariffs and fees and make them available to the
public or any interested parties. - Non-discrimination An operator should offer
customers the same tariff for identical services
and should offer discounts where it makes
commercial sense, and the discounts should be
clearly reflected as discount on the published
tariff.
40Factors that affect pricing decision
- Organizational goals e.g. cash maximization,
setting of selling prices must be seen as a means
of achieving this end. - Product mix
- Price/demand relationship
- Competitors and markets
- Peak and off-peak
- Cost
41Peak/off-peak pricing
- Prices are set at a higher level in peak time to
discourage use of facilities and transfer demand
to off-peak periods. - Advantages
- Capacity utilization maximized
- Traffic congestion reduced
- Quality of service improved,
- Purchase of additional equipment avoided.
42PRICING METHODOLOGIES
- There are two main approaches to preventing firms
from charging excessively high prices price cap
regulation and rate of return regulation. - 1. Rate-of-return approach
- This is the traditional method of utility
regulation. The regulator allows the company to
charge the prices expected to produce profits
equal to a fair rate of return on the fair value
of the capital invested in the company.
43Rate of return ctd..
- The regulatory agencies fix the rate of return
that a utility can earn on its assets. They set
the price the utility can charge so as to allow
it to earn a specified rate of return and no
more. - The regulated price can be adjusted up-ward if
the utility starts making a lower rate of return,
and it will be adjusted downward if the utility
makes a higher rate.
44Rate of return ctd..
- In this regulation the allowable revenue to the
company is fixed. This system ensures that the
utility can continue to provide the service,
ensuring security of supply to the consumer. It
however provides no incentive for the company to
become more efficient and reduce production
costs.
45Disadvantages of ROR
- There is lack of incentive to minimize costs. In
ROR regulation, the operators prices are set at
a level sufficient to cover its costs. This is
why ROR regulation is often referred to as cost
plus regulation. From a dynamic perspective,
therefore, the operator has little incentive to
reduce its rate base or its operating costs.
46Disadvantages of ROR ctd..
- Overtime, ROR regulation of a monopoly operator
will lead to a lower rate of productivity
improvement than would occur under effective
competition. ROR regulation does not provide the
operator with a strong incentive to increase its
productivity.
47Disadvantages of ROR ctd..
- ROR regulation requires the operator and the
regulator to spend significant amounts of time
and money. The rate base reviewed by the
regulator, the cost of capital must be
calculated, and so on. Rate reviews on hearings
must be held on a regular basis, incurring costs
to the regulator, the operator, and other
participants in the process.
482. Price cap approach
- This is the preferred form of rules based price
regulation around the world. A flexible price
range is usually provided under a price cap
methodology, which imposes an upper limit on the
average price increase for a basket of telecom
services. - Price cap regulation uses a formula to determine
the maximum allowable price increases for a
regulated operators services for a specified
number of years. The formula is designed to
permit an operator to recover its unavoidable
cost increase(e.g inflation, tax increase, etc)
through price increases.
49Price cap approach ctd..
- The price cap regulation is founded on a
principle that efficiency and productivity gains
by the operator should be passed on to the
consumers through reduced prices i.e.
Operator-consumer equity is realized. The Price
cap provides incentive for operator to improve
efficiency hence mimicking an operator in a
competitive market.
50Price cap approach ctd..
- The Price Cap formula is defined as PI (t)CPI
(t-1)X, where PI (t) is the maximum allowable
price increase (measured as revenue increases) in
the relevant year(s), for a given basket of
regulated services as determined by the
Regulator.
51Price cap approach ctd..
- (t) is year. CPI(t-1), the Consumer Price Index,
is the inflation measure averaged for the
previous calendar year ( t-1). The average CPI in
the previous calendar year has sole influence on
the future CPI and is therefore a good predictor
of future CPI. - X represents expected productivity gain of the
operator over the relevant period. The Regulator
determines such period.
52Price cap approach ctd..
- The X factor is usually determined by the
Operator and approved by the regulator. The X
factor is such that it poses a challenge to the
operator to improve efficiency whilst also
ensuring that the operator meets its revenue
requirements without earning excess profits. -
53Price cap approach ctd..
- Each price cap is for a specific period. Before
the end of each given period, a review should be
carried out by the Operator to determine the new
X factor to be filed with the Regulator for
approval. - As the telecommunication market moves towards
competition, the implementation of a form of
regulation with incentive to increase
productivity was considered more desirable.
54Price cap approach ctd..
- In the Price Cap regulatory framework, the
company will be encouraged to operate the
business in a manner that would be similar to
what would obtain if it were in a competitive
market, constantly seeking to improve efficiency.
- When this market opens up to allow full
competition, the incumbent operator will be more
easily able to adapt than if he was required to
change immediately from a Rate of Return scheme
to full liberalization.
55Price cap regime advantages
- 1. Productivity gains in the market are shared
between operators and consumers - 2. Greater pricing flexibility and
- 3. Incentive for greater efficiency.
56price cap and rate of return pricing-comparison
- The price cap approach has become increasingly
common internationally because it is thought to
give firms stronger incentives to be efficient. - The regulator naturally takes into account the
regulated utilitys rate of return. If it is
high, the price cap is likely to be reduced if
it is low, the price cap may be relaxed.
57price cap and rate of return pricing-comparison
ctd
- As long as price cap reviews are sufficiently
infrequent (say, every five years), price cap and
rate of return regulation should have different
effects on regulated firms. - Under price cap regulation, if a firms costs
rise, its profits will fall because it cannot
raise its prices to compensate for the cost
in-creasesat least until the next price review,
which may be several years away. -
58price cap and rate of return pricing-comparison
ctd
- Under rate of return regulation, however, the
business would seekand typically be granted
within a year or soa compensating price rise, so
its profits would not change much. - But if the firms costs fall, price cap
regulation is more advantageous to the firm than
rate of return regulation, because it would
retain more of the resulting benefits as profits.
59price cap and rate of return pricing ctd..
- Under rate of return regulation, consumers bear
some of the risk that firms bear in price cap
systems. This difference means that firms subject
to price cap regulation have a stronger incentive
to lower their costs because they keep more of
the cost savings than they would if they were
subject to rate of return regulation. But the
increased risk they bear tends to raise their
cost of capital.
60price cap and rate of return pricing ctd..
- Unlike ROR regulation, the formula does not
permit the operator to increase rates to recover
all costs. The formula also requires the operator
to lower its prices regularly to reflect
productivity increases that an efficient operator
would be expected to experience.
61Other Pricing Methodologies
- 1) Prices based on costs Prices may be based on
short run marginal (or variable) costs, long-run
incremental costs (which include investment
costs), and fully allocated costs have been
considered for specifying prices based on costs. - All cost-based pricing requires considerable
information and monitoring, and a number of
conceptual and practical problems arise in
properly measuring and assigning costs to the
various telecom services.
62Other Pricing Methodologies ctd..
- A firms prices must ensure that it is
profitable, or at least that it covers its costs.
Cost-based pricing focuses on this consideration.
Unfortunately, a fundamental difficulty in
defining cost-based prices is that services are
usually produced jointly. A large part of the
total cost is a common cost, which can be
difficult to apportion rationally amongst the
different services.
63Other Pricing Methodologies ctd..
- The issue for the Mark-up
- A mark-up is required to cover the deficit that
would arise if an efficient cost-based price were
determined. Different methods for ascertaining
the mark-up include mark-up varying inversely
with elasticity of demand of different users or
services (Ramsey rule) applying a rule-of-thumb,
such as a risk-adjusted reasonable commercial
return and applying different price slabs to
different units of usage, or obtaining the
requisite revenue through rentals.
64Other Pricing Methodologies ctd..
- The rule-of-thumb is the most straightforward of
the mark-up methodologies. Since demand is not
easy to estimate, Ramsey rule provides at best a
rough guide on the nature of the mark-up.
65The advantages of cost-plus pricing
- They offer a means by which plausible prices can
be found with ease and speed, no matter how many
products the firm handles. They are easier to
develop since they are based on linear relations
with the actual cost information and are easier
to understand by accountants - They are based on accounting data that are
retrieved and kept any way in the information
system of the firm and they are also easy to
audit by regulators.
66Limitations of Cost-plus pricing
- Demand is ignored the price is set by adding a
mark-up to the cost. - They do not provide incentives for improving the
efficiency of the provider and deploying newer
technologies since they cover his full historic
cost. - They are not always based on causal relations but
depend on arbitrarily chosen coefficients for
sharing the non-directly attributable cost hence
these do not reflect the actual cost of services.
672) Subsidized pricing
- Subsidies to price are given normally for
achieving social objectives such as promoting the
provision of universal service in telecom or
providing preferential telecom access to specific
users such as hospitals or those living in remote
areas. The subsidy could be given, for example,
in terms of access charges, rentals or price of
the calls made.
68 3) Demand-based pricing
- Under this methodology, prices reflect
willingness to pay for the use of a product, or
the value given to a particular product. These
prices are shown by the demand curve. In
assessing the social value from a demand-price,
it would be necessary to specify the social value
of consumption of the service by different
customer groups. Demand-based prices are not easy
to determine on account of the difficulty of
determining the demand curve.
694) Price floors and ceilings
- They can be used for providing flexibility, and
to limit an operator from abusing its dominant
market position.
704.0 Challenges in costing and pricing regulation
- Cost models deliver a number of benefits to a
regulator willing to apply them, but they also
ask for something in advance Information.
Without this vital element, one can hardly rely
on the models. -
- A main concern in most reforming developing
countries is the limited access to data. A
careful assessment of data capacity of a
regulator is probably the first stage in
development of a toolkit for any regulator. In
general, however,reliable and detailed
information (as required by cost modules) is a
scarce good in developing countries.
71Challenges in costing and pricing regulation ctd..
- The accounting approach is based exclusively on
information provided by the firms, sometimes with
no independent checking. This is typically all
the information that the license or the regulator
himself asks the companies for, and it is of
course not enough, if the regulator wants to
minimize the asymmetric information problem and
the informational rents the firms can earn. So to
improve regulation, more information is needed. -
72Challenges in costing and pricing regulation ctd..
- The main challenges of price regulation involve
the design and implementation of low-cost and
effective regulatory approaches that induce the
regulated operator to achieve the socially
desirable objective. - Regulation imposes a burden on the economy in the
form of direct costs to telecom operators for
enforcement and compliance.
73Challenges in costing and pricing regulation ctd..
- Another complication with comparing prices to
costs is that firms are operating in a dynamic
environment. Their pricing decisions, as with
their investment decisions, will be set to
optimize profits over a period of time rather
than at a single point in time. -
74Challenges in costing and pricing regulation ctd..
- To insist on prices equal to costs at all dates
would be to deter investments in new
technologies. The prospect of earning profits in
the future on an investment is necessary for the
firm to invest in the first place and risk making
a loss.
75GROUP ACTIVITIES
- The participants will be organized into groups
and given the following questions - Which costing models/methods are used in Telecom
Companies in your country and what is the impact
in regulation? - Which pricing models are used by Telecom in your
country and how you Regulate them? - What costing and pricing challenges do you meet
in your countries and propose solutions -
-