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economically reworked

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Definition of economically reworked

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economically reworked

when the incremental revenue from the sale of reworked defective units is greater than
the incremental cost of the rework



Related Terms:

defective unit

a unit that has been rejected at a control inspection
point for failure to meet appropriate standards of
quality or designated product specifications; can be economically
reworked and sold through normal distribution channels


spoiled unit

a unit that is rejected at a control inspection
point for failure to meet appropriate standards of quality
or designated product specifications; it cannot be economically
reworked to be brought up to standard


Asian currency units (ACUs)

Dollar deposits held in Singapore or other Asian centers.


Doctrine of sovereign immunity

Doctrine that says a nation may not be tried in the courts of another country
without its consent.


European Currency Unit (ECU)

An index of foreign exchange consisting of about 10 European currencies,
originally devised in 1979.



Future investment opportunities

The options to identify additional, more valuable investment opportunities
in the future that result from a current opportunity or operation.


Growth opportunity

Opportunity to invest in profitable projects.


Economically Reworked Image 1

Net present value of growth opportunities

A model valuing a firm in which net present value of new
investment opportunities is explicitly examined.


Opportunity cost of capital

Expected return that is foregone by investing in a project rather than in
comparable financial securities.


Opportunity costs

The difference in the performance of an actual investment and a desired investment
adjusted for fixed costs and execution costs. The performance differential is a consequence of not being able
to implement all desired trades. Most valuable alternative that is given up.


Opportunity set

The possible expected return and standard deviation pairs of all portfolios that can be
constructed from a given set of assets.


Portfolio opportunity set

The expected return/standard deviation pairs of all portfolios that can be
constructed from a given set of assets.


Present value of growth opportunities (NPV)

Net present value of investments the firm is expected to make
in the future.


Unit benefit formula

Method used to determine a participant's benefits in a defined benefit plan by
multiplying years of service by the percentage of salary.


Unit investment trust

Money invested in a portfolio whose composition is fixed for the life of the fund.
Shares in a unit trust are called redeemable trust certificates, and they are sold at a premium above net asset value.


UNITS OF PRODUCTION

A depreciation method that relates a machine’s depreciation to the number of units it makes each
accounting period. The method requires that someone record the machine’s output each year.


Economically Reworked Image 2

Opportunity cost

The lost opportunity of not doing something, which may be financial or non-financial, e.g. time.


unit margin

The profit per unit sold of a product after deducting product
cost and variable expenses of selling the product from the sales price of
the product. unit margin equals profit before fixed operating expenses
are considered and before interest and income tax are deducted. unit
margin is one of the key variables in a profit model for decision-making
analysis.



unit-driven expenses

Expenses that vary in close proportion to changes
in total sales volume (total quantities of sales). Examples of these types of
expenses are delivery costs, packaging costs, and other costs that depend
mainly on the number of products sold or the number of customers
served. These expenses are one of the key factors in a profit model for
decision-making analysis. Segregating these expenses from other types
of expenses that behave differently is essential for management decisionmaking
analysis. The cost-of-goods-sold expense depends on sales volume
and is a unit-driven expense. But product cost (i.e., the cost of
goods sold) is such a dominant expense that it is treated separately from
other unit-driven operating expenses.


equivalent units of production (EUP)

an approximation of the number of whole units of output that could have been
produced during a period from the actual effort expended
during that period; used in process costing systems to assign
costs to production


opportunity cost

a potential benefit that is foregone because
one course of action is chosen over another


opportunity cost of capital

the highest rate of return that
could be earned by using capital for the most attractive alternative
project(s) available


total units to account for

the sum of the beginning inventory
units and units started during the current period


unit-level cost

a cost caused by the production or acquisition
of a single unit of product or the delivery of a single
unit of service


units started and completed

the difference between the number of units completed for the period and the units in beginning inventory; it can also be computed as the number of units started during the period minus the units in ending inventory


Opportunity cost

Lost revenue that would otherwise have been realized if a different
decision point had been selected.


opportunity cost of capital

Expected rate of return given up by investing in a project.


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opportunity cost

Benefit or cash flow forgone as a result of an action.



present value of growth opportunities (PVGO)

Net present value of a firm’s future investments.


Opportunity Cost

The forgone value of an alternative not chosen, usually the most profitable alternative.


Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act

A federal Act requiring the reporting of new hires into a national database.


Unit of measure (UOM, UofM)

The summarization unit by which an item is tracked, such as a
box of 100 or an each of 1.



 

 

 

 

 

 

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