Peer Review for the RTI Report,
       Automobile Industry Retail Price
       Equivalent and Indirect Cost Multipliers
ttrnm.
           Protection

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    Peer Review for the RTI Report,
    Automobile Industry Retail Price
Equivalent and Indirect Cost Multipliers
              Assessment and Standards Division
             Office of Transportation and Air Quality
             U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
      Protection
EPA-420-R-09-004
June 2009

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June 4, 2009

MEMORANDUM

SUBJECT:   Peer Review for RTI Report on "PASSENGER VEHICLE RETAIL PRICE
             EQUIVALENT FACTORS AND INDIRECT COST MULTIPLIERS"

FROM:      Gloria Helfand, Assessment and Standards Division
             Office of Transportation and Air Quality, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
In July 2008, US EPA contracted with RTI International to update EPA's methodology for
accounting for indirect costs associated with changes in direct manufacturing costs.  The
resulting report from RTI provides a description of the new methodology, as well as calculations
of new indirect cost multipliers. These indirect cost multipliers are intended to be used, along
with calculations of direct manufacturing costs, to provide improved estimates of the full
additional costs associated with new technologies. The RTI report is entitled "Passenger Vehicle
Retail Price Equivalent Factors and Indirect Cost Multipliers."

Prior to the release of the Final Report from RTI International, EPA provided a draft copy of the
report to three independent experts for external peer review, in accordance with EPA's peer
review guidelines. This  EPA report contains documentation of the peer review process for the
RTI study.

This document contains  three components. First is the summary of the peer reviewers'
comments and the response to those comments from EPA. Following this is the EPA charge
letter to the peer reviewers, which describes their task and what EPA requested from them in
terms of deliverables. Last is the peer reviewers' submitted biographies and their comments on
the  draft RTI report.

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DATE:       June 4, 2009

MEMORANDUM

SUBJECT:   EPA Response to Comments on RTI report entitled "Updating EPA's
             Methodology for Accounting for Indirect Costs Associated with Changes in
             Direct Manufacturing Costs," Draft Final Report by peer reviewers Morgan
             Edwards, Glenn Mercer, and Danilo Santini

FROM:      Gloria Helfand, Assessment and Standards Division
Morgan Edwards (formerly of Ford Motor Company), Glenn Mercer (formerly of McKinsey &
Company), and Danilo Santini (of Argonne National Laboratory) reviewed RTFs report entitled
"Updating EPA's Methodology for Accounting for Indirect Costs Associated with Changes in
Direct Manufacturing Costs," Draft Final Report, December 2008.

This memo includes a summary of comments and responses and actions to comments from EPA
and RTI.
Comments on General Approach
The reviewers expressed support for the concept that indirect costs should vary with
technological complexity and with time frame. Edwards:  "This is a logical and reasonable
approach."  Mercer:  "I agree with the overall approach and methodology, as it is consistent with
and an improvement upon the prior well-accepted RPE methodology." Santini: "... I like the
idea of technology complexity, and generally support the argument about its qualitative effect on
multipliers. . . ."  The concerns that they expressed centered on two major issues: the role of
profits in the multipliers, and whether the 1C multipliers developed here should approximately
average out to the RPE.

Comment:  Two reviewers asked for further explanation on the removal of profits from the
indirect cost multipliers.

Response: This issue is discussed in Section 2 of the final report.  The following discussion
elaborates on the discussion in the report.

      For regulatory analysis, it is necessary to have estimates of the costs associated with new
technologies.  In a world of complete information, EPA would have estimates of all the costs
associated with a new technology. For instance, it would be possible to calculate the changes not
only in parts and labor for the new technology, but also the effects on corporate staff and dealer
costs.  While EPA often has reasonable estimates for direct costs (the parts, labor, and utilities
associated with a new technology),  it often lacks information on some of the indirect costs
(including production overhead, corporate overhead, and dealer and selling costs).

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       Since complete information does not exist, multipliers are an approximation to estimate
the missing information, based on company average data.  The use of the RPE multiplier in
particular includes the implicit assumption that indirect costs are constant across all technologies
and processes in a company. This is not likely to be a good assumption: some new technologies,
for instance, are likely to require more new tooling than others; some technologies may affect the
way a vehicle is marketed, while others are of little interest to consumers. Any multiplier,
including the RPE, is thus only an approximation based on averaging over all the activities of the
company. It is a proxy when it is not possible to estimate actual costs.

       Whether profit should be included in a multiplier depends on whether they  are considered
a cost of doing business.  The arguments for including profits in the multiplier include:
   •   Profit is the return necessary to keep investment in the industry; as such, it is a cost of
       production. While a business, for short periods, can lose money, over time it has to earn
       enough money to keep investors from taking their money out of the company.  Thus,
       profit is a cost of doing business.
   •   In a market supply-demand model, profit per unit can stay  constant even though total
       profits decrease in market adjustment.  Cost increases due to a regulation will lead
       consumers to buy fewer vehicles. In the short run, companies will reduce their
       production in response to the reduction in consumer purchases.  This initial new level of
       production may or may not produce profits for the industry. If profits are negative, over
       time, producers will adjust the level of investment in the industry to reduce their costs of
       production, and they will be able to maintain reasonable profits. Thus, including profits
       is necessary to identify the long-run equilibrium in the market.

The argument against including profits include:
   •   Multipliers are intended to estimate costs, not retail price.  Not all  cost changes will affect
       indirect costs, even if they  affect profit.  For instance, if a regulation causes the price of
       an input to increase with no production adjustments, it will cause costs to increase and
       profits to decrease, but there is no effect on indirect costs.  Profits are therefore not the
       same as indirect costs.
   •   Profit comes from interactions of supply and demand curves, not from including it in a
       multiplier. When the cost of a good increases, the price increases; in response, though,
       consumers buy less of it. As a result, the full cost may not be passed along to consumers.
       Whether the companies profit with the new level of costs depends on the market price
       after the market adjustments.
   •   If producers were guaranteed a profit when costs increased, why would they object to
       cost increases? In fact, cost increases do typically lead to reductions in profit, and
       companies object to the rules based on those losses. In regulatory analyses, these losses
       in markets are compared to the benefits of the rule (the values resulting from improved
       air quality, for instance).

       The report concludes that profits should not be included in the indirect cost multipliers
and does not include them in the calculation.  The report uses 5% as the profit share of direct
costs in its calculation of the RPEs for individual automakers whose profits were negative in
2007. If this  5% value were included in the indirect cost multipliers, the new values would all
increase by 0.05, as shown in the table below.

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       Indirect Cost Multipliers Including 5% Profit.
                                                  Technology Complexity
Time Frame
Short-term effects
Long-term effects
Low
1.10
1.07
Medium
1.25
1.10
High
1.50
1.31
Comment:  One reviewer asked whether negative profits should be removed from the calculation
oftheRPE.

Response: In recent years, as the Appendix indicates, some automakers have made negative
profits, after having achieved positive profits in past years. Profit should reflect the return on
capital.  Because owners of capital receive both positive and negative returns, the negative
profits should not be ignored; instead, some long-term average that reflects all returns is
appropriate. For the RPE calculation in Table 3-3, which uses data only for 2007 (2006 for
DaimlerChrysler), actual profit was used for the automakers for whom it was positive; for
negative profits (for Ford and GM), the 5% value noted by McKinsey (2003) was substituted for
the negative value.

Comment:  Several comments asked whether the 1C multipliers should include all indirect costs
in the long run. One reviewer questioned whether the adjustment factors discussed in Section 4
of the report should all be 1 in the long run. "After all, the RPEs incorporate for the long-term
all the various actions and changes made by the companies, whether from regulation or market
forces. In other words, in the long-run, the total costs are the only relevant costs." Another
reviewer asked whether "every component would have to be allocated selling and some
corporate overhead costs." A third comment asked whether 1C multipliers should increase with
decreases in production,  since all indirect costs had to be spread over a smaller number of units
produced.

Response: This issue is discussed in Sections 2 and 4 of the final report.
       The 1C multipliers derived here are intended to be used for changes in costs due to
changes in technologies. That is, they are assumed to apply only to costs due to the rulemaking.
Some industry costs are sunk—that is, that automakers will have to pay regardless of the
rulemaking—while others will change with the  rule.  Sunk costs, such as pensions for retirees, by
definition will not change with incorporation of the new technologies. For the purpose of
estimating the incremental indirect costs of a new regulation, new components should be
allocated the additional selling and corporate overhead (and other indirect) costs for which the
new components are responsible; the pre-existing costs are unrelated to the rule.  The adjustment
factors presented in Section 4 serve to identify those additional indirect costs.

      Whether the multipliers will change with the volume of production depends on how the
ratio of indirect costs to direct costs changes with production.  The values developed in this
report are averaged over a number of automakers with a wide  range of production volumes.  The

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indirect cost multipliers for these companies all fell in a small range (see Table 3-3).  There is
therefore little basis on which to adjust the multipliers for sales volume.

       Whether the 1C multipliers developed in this study should average out, in the long run, to
the RPE for the company depends on whether the kinds of technologies considered for the 1C
multipliers create indirect costs similar to those for the companies as a whole.  While the
reviewers all agreed with the principle that 1C multipliers should vary with the complexity of the
technology, there is no public information to estimate how indirect costs vary with different
technologies. Reasons that the 1C multipliers might average out to the RPE multiplier include:
   •   The RPE is the result of many long-run activities. Even though activities differ in the
       indirect  costs, they average to the RPE.  The technologies to which the 1C multipliers are
       applied are no  different than the technologies that the companies undertake voluntarily.

Reasons that the multipliers might not average out to the RPE multiplier include:
   •   The activities likely to be proposed in rulemakings are not average OEM activities, so
       they need not average to the same level. For instance, regulatory requirements are
       typically of smaller scale and require less overhead than developing an entirely new
       vehicle or redesigning an existing one. If high-complexity technologies are roughly
       typical of average OEM non-regulatory activities, then low- and medium-complexity
       technologies will have lower multipliers.

   The report concludes that the 1C multipliers for the three specific example technologies
evaluated (low rolling resistance tires, dual clutch automated manual transmission, and gasoline-
hybrid electric vehicles) are lower than the RPE.

Comment: A number  of the cost contributors are given weights of 0 in the development of the
1C multipliers in the short run, and that number increases for the long-run analysis, "implying
that the cumulative effect of numerous regulatory changes will be a withering away of indirect
costs."

Response:  The zero factors for many of the cost contributors, primarily for the low- and
medium-complexity technologies, indicate that the engineers who developed the factors thought
that those contributors would not change due to the new technology. For instance, the
adjustment factors for G&A, Retirement, and Health Care are all zero for low- and medium-
complexity technologies,  in the short and long runs, because the engineers argued that no
additional corporate staff (nor their associated benefits) would be necessary for these
technologies.

       Even though the multipliers for the new technologies may be low, the average multiplier
for the companies overall will in fact not change very much. The following example, presented
in the table below, demonstrates that these multipliers affect the indirect costs only of the new
technologies; the indirect costs associated with the rest of the vehicle remain.

       Consider a baseline vehicle with  a transaction price to the consumer of $25,000.  The
RPE for the base vehicle is the company  average, 1.46 (1.4 is the indirect cost component, and
1.06 is the profit component). These proportions allow breaking the base price into direct

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manufacturing cost ($17,123), indirect cost (40% of $17,123, or $6,850), and profit (6% of
$17,123, or $1,027).
                              Base Vehicle     Dual-Clutch Transmission      Total Cost
Direct Manufacturing Cost       $17,123                  $500                 $17,623
Indirect Cost (40% for base
vehicle, 20% for engine)           $6,850                  $100                  $6,950
Profit (6% for base vehicle)        $1,027                   0                    $1,027
Total                           $25,000                  $600                 $25,600
Ratio of Indirect Cost to
Direct Manufacturing Cost         0.4                     0.2                   0.394

       In this example, a dual-clutch transmission will be required for the vehicle, and it is
considered a medium-complexity technology, with direct manufacturing cost of $500.  The
indirect cost, according to Table 4-5 in the final report, is 20% of direct manufacturing cost, or
$100, in the short run. The short-run multiplier does not include profit. The total cost for the
new transmission, then, is estimated to be $600.

       The third column  sums the direct and indirect costs and profits for the base vehicle with
the new transmission; costs increase $600. The ratio of indirect cost to direct manufacturing cost
is 0.394, almost the same as the ratio of indirect cost to direct manufacturing cost for the base
vehicle.  Because the new transmission is a small portion of the cost of the vehicle, the effect of
the new transmission on the indirect cost multiplier for the entire vehicle is small.

       A similar comparison using the long-run multiplier indicates that the indirect cost of the
new transmission is expected to fall to 5% of its cost, or $25.  Adding 6% profit as an estimate of
capital costs of the transmission ($30) yields a total cost of $555 for the transmission. The ratio
of total cost to direct manufacturing cost would therefore be $25,555/17,623 = 1.45, slightly less
than the RPE multiplier.

       A high-complexity technology, such as a hybrid powertrain, has a short-run multiplier
virtually the same as  the RPE and will thus not noticeably affect the ratio of indirect cost to
direct cost.

       The cumulative effect of many  regulatory changes might reduce the multiplier over time,
if the base vehicle remains unchanged.  The redesign of a vehicle, as periodically occurs, is
likely to involve a multiplier at least as large as the high-complexity multipliers developed here.
Since those redesigns are the choice of the automakers, and not required by regulatory action, the
multipliers for new technologies required by regulation do not need to account for the indirect
costs associated with the redesigns.

Comment: Neither RPE multipliers nor 1C multipliers by themselves estimate the effect of
technology changes on final market price and quantity.

Response:  This issue is discussed in Section 2 of the report.
       We agree with this point.  The 1C multipliers are a more accurate way to estimate the
shift in producer costs than are the RPE multipliers, because the 1C multipliers estimate the

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effects on marginal costs of production, and the supply curve reflects marginal costs. In
regulatory impact analysis, the shift in the supply curve will be paired with a demand curve to
calculate market impacts of a technology  change.

Adjustments to Calculations
Comment:  One reviewer sought greater clarity and consistency in the development of the RPE
multipliers. In particular, it should be clear and more consistent when values from the McKinsey
study are included in the analysis.

Response:  The Appendix tables now provide more detail about adjustments made for each
company. The McKinsey study as well as a study by Sierra Research were used to improve
estimates of cost allocations when company report information did not align with  the categories
used in this study.

Comment:  Two reviewers questioned the way that dealer costs are included in the draft analysis.
They point out that dealer costs are not included in the  auto manufacturers' accounting
statements, since most dealers are independent. As a result, the dealer values reported for the
manufacturers do not include all dealer costs.

Response:  This issue is discussed in Section 3 and, in depth, in Appendix A.2.
       The 1C multipliers should include all cost adjustments that affect the market price of
vehicles. For the final report, data from the National Automobile Dealers Association were used
to estimate dealers' increased costs from new technologies. (This information was not included
in the draft.) These increased costs were added to manufacturers'  costs in the development of
the estimated RPE, and were considered in the development of the ICMs.

Comment:  Two reviewers expressed concern that health care for retired workers and other
"legacy" costs are handled  appropriately.

Response:  This issue is discussed in Section 3.2.2.
       The report uses the  best available information to estimate the share of health care and
other costs for workers who are no longer employed by the manufacturers, and to  exclude those
costs from the calculations. These costs will not change as the result of new technologies and
should be considered fixed costs.

Comment:  One reviewer asked about the "other expenses" mentioned in Section 2 of this report.

Response:  This issue is discussed in the Appendix tables for each auto manufacturer.
These expenses typically include interest  expenses and, for U.S. auto manufacturers, the portion
of health care costs associated with retirees. The Appendix tables identify their sources for each
manufacturer.

Comment:  Two reviewers questioned the use of the McKinsey estimate of the RPE multiplier
and its constituents. One reviewer questions its use as  a basis for comparison when its method is
not explained, and when other studies are not given the same prominence.

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Response: This issue is discussed in Section 3.2.2 and Appendix A-l.
       The McKinsey study provided a breakdown of costs into categories used in this report.  It
does not include a discussion of data sources or methods. Because automakers' annual reports
do not follow a standardized approach, it was not always possible to identify cost categories for
each automaker.  When categories were missing, the first draft of this report (the draft reviewed
by the peer reviewers) added the percent contributions identified in the McKinsey report, to
ensure that all categories were included.  In the final draft,  after more careful assessment of the
auto manufacturers' annual reports, it was determined that  the costs in the annual reports
included all the costs that this report sought to include, but that costs were not reported in the
format presented here.  In the final report, the McKinsey study, as well as a study by Sierra
Research, were used to reallocate costs among categories.  In some cases, the reallocation
occurred among indirect cost contributors; in other cases, the reallocation occurred between
direct costs and indirect costs. The  Appendix tables for individual auto manufacturers describe
their specific use.

Comment: The Vyas et al. study included two multipliers:  one for outsourced parts, and the
other for expenses incurred by the automakers.  One reviewer noted the similarity between the
Vyas et al. multiplier for outsourced parts (1.5) and the RPE multiplier derived in this report; he
wondered whether the outsourcing of a large share of auto  parts production may have contributed
to this similarity.
Response: This issue is discussed in Section 3.1.
       The study now notes this change in production practices and suggests that  1.5 may  serve
as a preliminary estimate of the RPE multiplier. Instead of explicitly  distinguishing between
outsourced and internal technologies, this report used different levels  of technology. The low-
and medium-complexity technologies are assumed to rely primarily on outsourced parts, while
the high-complexity technology (hybrid electric vehicle is the motivating case) is estimated to
rely more heavily on components developed internally to the automakers.

Comment: One reviewer suggested that the report use sales rather than revenues to develop the
weighted average RPE multiplier.

Response: This issue is discussed in Section 3.3.
       The final report uses sales weights.

Comment: Two reviewers noted that the annual reports that provided the basis for the RPE
multipliers "have the virtue of being published public numbers presented according to standards
of the Financial Accounting Standard Board (FASB). On the other hand,  within the FASB
standards there is considerable leeway on aggregation of indirect cost categories and amount of
detail provided." In addition, they "reflect corporate strategies rather than fundamental
engineering realities," and "the adherence to FASB standards differs among U.S.,  German,
Japanese, and Korean companies."  One reviewer wondered whether it might be possible to get
proprietary information, as the Federal Trade Commission  can during investigations of dumping.

Response: This issue is discussed in Section 3.2.1.
       This report uses publicly available data to facilitate the replicability and the transparency
of the analysis.  Additionally, as the reviewers note, while the data may not be precise, they are

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likely to be broadly accurate, especially when averaged over companies. For these reasons, the
report continues to use publicly available financial statements.

Comments on Clarity
Comment:  Two reviewers requested that the report provide a detailed explanation of the link
between the RPE multiplier and the final 1C multipliers.

Response:  This issue is discussed in Section 4.4.
       Table 4-5 shows the calculation involved in using the RPE multiplier and the adjustment
factors to get the final 1C multipliers.

Comment:  One reviewer suggested that the discussion of the reason for revisiting the RPE
approach be moved earlier in the report.

Response:  What was Section 4 in the draft, which places the role of indirect costs into a
supply/demand framework, is now Section 2 of the report.

Comment:  Reviewers asked for further background on the engineers that provided the
adjustment factors in for the 1C multipliers.

Response:  This issue is discussed in Section 4.3.
       The backgrounds of the engineers are now summarized in the report.

Comment:  Reviewers asked for further clarification of the scope of the analysis - whether it
included foreign as well as domestic sales, and heavy duty as well as light duty vehicles.

Response:  The annual reports for the automakers cover their worldwide automotive operations.
The dealer costs and profits available are for the U.S.  As discussed in Appendix A-2, the ratios
for U.S. dealers are then adjusted to worldwide levels.

Comment:  Two reviewers asked  for clarification on the relationship between the historic RPE
multipliers  (that is, the multipliers developed for 2002-2006) and the RPE multipliers for 2007.
One reviewer asked why the manufacturing costs for 2007 were different for the historic RPE
multiplier and the RPE multiplier estimated in the study.  Another reviewer asked whether a
perceived downward trend in the multipliers might reflect the outsourcing of components
between the 1990s and 2000s.

Response: This issue is discussed in the Appendix.
       The historic multipliers (the multipliers developed for 2002-2006) are now presented
only as shares of direct manufacturing costs. They are developed using unadjusted information
from the annual reports; they are not directly comparable to the multipliers developed for 2007
(2006 for Daimler Chrysler). The Appendices give detailed information on the adjustments
made for the 2007 RPE multipliers (for instance, removing maintenance, repair, and operations
costs from Cost of Sales and allocating it to indirect costs).
       A downward trend is not unambiguous in the historic RPE multipliers if they are plotted
over time:  most differences are small, and they show both increases and decreases.  Whether a

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trend in the multipliers is associated with outsourcing is an intriguing idea but beyond the scope
of this study.

Comment:  Two reviewers made a number of specific recommendations for clarifying the
Executive Summary and the Introduction.

Response:  These sections have been rewritten to increase clarity.

Comment:  Two reviewers suggested consistent rounding and formatting for the multipliers.

Response:  The report now uses consistent formatting. The report chose multipliers as numbers
rather than percents for incrementally easier replication of the calculations.

Comment:  The reviewers provided a number of general and specific editorial comments,
corrections to typographical errors, and recommendations for improving the report's structure
and clarity.

Response: Most of these suggestions were accepted and are reflected in the final report.

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Charge Letter Example

Dear Peer Reviewer:

Thank you for agreeing to review the document, Estimating Indirect Cost Multipliers for
Individual Domestic and Foreign Automobile Manufacturers. This report describes a method to
account for the indirect costs associated with changes in direct manufacturing costs for the
automobile industry, by calculating multipliers derived from financial statements, and it applies
that method to the major automakers. We are submitting this document to you for a peer review
of the methodology and the validity of the data and assumptions that go into it.

Our goal for this peer review is to seek  your expert input on the data and methodology we used
to conduct the analysis.  Toward that end, we ask that your review discuss:
       1) in general, the overall approach and methodology;
       2) the appropriateness of the datasets and other inputs;
       3) the data analysis conducted;
       4) the appropriateness of the conclusions;
       5) recommendations for any alternate data and/or analyses; and
       6) clarity of the presentation.
For this review, no independent data analysis is required, nor is it required that you duplicate the
results.

In making comments, you should distinguish between recommendations for clearly defined
improvements that can be readily made based on data or literature reasonably available to EPA,
and improvements that are more exploratory  or dependent on information not available to EPA.
The comments should be sufficiently clear and detailed to allow a thorough understanding by
EPA or other parties familiar with the work.

Your comments should be provided as an enclosure to a cover letter that clearly states your
name, the name and address of your organization, what material was reviewed, a summary of
your expertise and qualifications, and a statement of any real or perceived conflicts of interest.
Please also  send an electronic file with your comments, either via e-mail or on a diskette, so that
we can create a document that lists both your comments and our responses to those comments.
The comments should be sent in care of Gloria Helfand (helfand.gloria @epa.gov) to the
following address:

       U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
       Assessment and Standards Division
       Office of Transportation and Air Quality
       2000 Traverwood Drive
       Ann Arbor, MI 48105

When it is finalized, we will include your comments as an attachment to the report.  We would
appreciate your not providing the peer review materials or your comments to anyone else until
we make them public.

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We would also like to receive the results of this review in the shortest time frame possible, no
later than January 9, 2009.  If you have any questions about what is required in order to complete
this review, or if you need additional background material, please contact Gloria Helfand by
phone (734-214-4688) or e-mail (helfand.gloria@epa.gov). If you have any questions about the
EPA peer review process itself, please direct them to Ms. Ruth Schenk in the office of our
Deputy Office Director by phone (734-214-4017) or e-mail (schenk.ruth@epa.gov).

As Gloria Helfand has discussed with you, you will be paid a flat fee of $1,500 for this peer
review.  This fee was calculated based on an estimated  15 hours of review time at a rate of $100
per hour. In your cover letter please indicate the number of hours spent on the review; spending
fewer or more hours than our estimate will not affect the fee paid for this work, but it will help us
improve our future estimates. A purchase order form is also included showing payment
information. You may expect to receive payment in full within forty-five (45) days of
submitting your comments and  a copy of your invoice to Dr. Helfand.  Please send your invoice
directly to:

      RTF Finance
      Mail Drop MC-D143-02
       109 T.W. Alexander Drive
      Research Triangle Park, NC 27711

Thank you again for your time and consideration.

Sincerely,
Gloria Helfand, Ph.D.
Assessment and Standards Division
Office of Transportation and Air Quality

Enclosure
cc (w/o enclosures):
G. Helfand, ASD
G. Janssen, ASD

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Reviewer Bio:
                                                              January 6, 2009

To:

Gloria Helfand
US EPA, Assessment and Standards Division (OTAQ)
2000 Traverwood Drive
Ann Arbor, Michigan 48105

From:

Glenn Mercer
3294 Enderby Road
Shaker Heights, Ohio 44120
            G. Mercer Cover Letter to Accompany My Review of:
  "Estimating Indirect Cost Multipliers for Individual  Domestic and Foreign
                        Automobile Manufacturers"

Greetings. This letter is in response to the cover letter instructions in the  Peer Review
Charge (PRC) Letter (relating to review of "Estimating Indirect Cost Multipliers for
Individual Domestic and Foreign Automobile Manufacturers"). In that PRC Letter I was
asked to provide herein:

o  My name and the name and address of my organization
o  What material I reviewed
o  A summary  of my expertise and qualifications
o  A statement of any real or perceived conflicts of interest
o  Number of hours I spent on this review
My name and the name and address of my organization

I am an independent consultant, Glenn Mercer, dba as an LLC, Glenn Mercer
Automotive LLC, located at 3294 Enderby Road, Shaker Heights, Ohio 44120.
Material reviewed

I reviewed a document titled "Updating EPA's Methodology for Accounting for Indirect
Costs Associated with Changes in Direct Manufacturing Costs," RTI Project Number

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0211577.002.004.  Note that this document's title does not match the title given in the
PRC Letter, which is reprinted at the top of this page.
Summary of expertise and qualifications

I spent 21 years with the consulting firm McKinsey & Company, the last 10 of which
wholly on automotive projects, which included various automotive manufacturer
benchmarking projects, leading to high familiarity with their financial statements. I
have also worked for several years in private equity in the automotive sphere, including
further review of car maker P&Ls.   Finally, lama Director of the International Motor
Vehicle Program (IMVP), which performs comparative studies of car makers around the
world on a regular basis. More data on my expertise and qualifications can  be found in
my resume, separately attached.
Statement of any real or perceived conflicts of interest

I believe there are no such conflicts involved in my participation in this project. I am
not affiliated (nor is any member of my immediate or extended family) with EPA,  the
University of Michigan Transportation Research Institute, RTI International, or any
automaker named in the report.  I do hold shares in several OEMs, but only through
aggregated mutual funds. I have no interest in any company which might directly
benefit from changes in regulatory calculations to which this report might lead. I did
work for McKinsey & Company for many years, as noted, and some McKinsey work is
used in the report, but this was without my foreknowledge, and in fact in my
recommendations I suggest deleting the McKinsey work from the report, so I cannot be
charged with using my reviewer status to  promote McKinsey's interests or reputation.  I
am personally acquainted with David Ganss, an EPA employee, who I believed
suggested my name as a reviewer of this document, but I have no professional or
financial relationship with David.
Number of hours I spent on this review

I have spent roughly eleven hours on this review. This breaks down into one for a
detailed read of the document, two for writing down my initial notes and reactions, and
eight for writing these comments into the formal language and specific structure as
required in the Peer Review Charge letter.  This eight hour block includes two drafts of
my review letter, as I refined my perspectives and checked my results.

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                             G.  Mercer Review of:
  "Estimating Indirect Cost Multipliers for Individual Domestic and  Foreign
                         Automobile Manufacturers"

This memo represents my review of the document,  Estimating Indirect Cost Multipliers
for Individual Domestic and Foreign Automobile Manufacturers (hereinafter referred to
as "Estimating"}. My review is split into two parts.  In the first part, I directly address
the six questions posed in the Peer Review Charge (PRC) letter I received alongside my
copy of Estimating. This part will be brief and make general points.  In the second
part, I will go into much more detail, on a page-by-page basis, of my review of
Estimating. Throughout this document I will flag in bold font, and then recapitulate in
my conclusions, areas I consider problematic as regards understanding Estimating's
results.

(Preliminary point: the Peer Review Charge letter titles the document "Estimating
Indirect Cost Multipliers for Individual Domestic and Foreign Automobile
Manufacturers," which I find misleading. I much prefer the (different) title on the
document itself, "Updating EPA's Methodology for Accounting for Indirect Costs
Associated with Changes in Direct Manufacturing Costs," which I consider a much more
accurate description of the report's contents.)
Part I: The Six Questions

The PRC letter asked me to discuss six top-level questions.  I include them below, with
my brief reply to each.

   1.  Overall approach and methodology?  I agree with the overall approach and
      methodology, as it is consistent with and an improvement upon the prior well-
      accepted RPE methodology. The improvements of varying the enhanced RPE
      factors (in Estimating labeled ICMs) by technology complexity and time period
      make good sense to me. I do not know of a better method of estimating the
      indirect cost impact of regulated changes to vehicle technologies than the one
      proposed, short of actually tracking every single indirect cost related to each
      specific technology, across a range of OEMs, which I would assume is an
      unreasonably slow, difficult, and costly approach. As a method for getting a
      good first approximation without in-depth engineering work, the approach
      Estimating lays out looks sound to me.

   2.  Appropriateness of data sets and other inputs? There are two main sets of
      inputs in Estimating.  First, public financial statements of the car companies are
      obtained. These statements have the great advantages of being both free and
      easily available, and the great disadvantages of being accounting statements

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      that do not reliably tie to actual engineering cost equations.  (For example,
      depreciation of tooling is an accounting convention that is easily divorced from
      actual tooling life.) Additionally, the statements reflect corporate strategies
      rather than fundamental engineering realities.  (For example, a car maker may
      decide for marketing reasons to not "charge" its cars with the full cost of
      technology work, while another may "mark up" its R&D work when transferred to
      vehicle divisions.) However, on the one hand I know of no better data set
      reasonably available to EPA1, and on the other  hand one  expects that the various
      problems with these data wash out in the averaging of multiple OEMs' results
      across multiple years. The second data set is the opinions collected from "a
      team of engineers" that are translated into the  technology-complexity and time-
      dimension adjustment factors.  I  completely concur with the approach of asking
      experienced engineers for their input in order to derive these factors.  However,
      the report gives no data as to how many engineers were employed in
      this work, or their qualifications. I think Estimating would benefit greatly
      from revealing this information, even if each engineer's name and employer were
      disguised for confidentiality purposes.

   3. Data analysis conducted. The  analysis of the data seems sound to  me, in that
      most of the arithmetical steps followed were described, and I trust  the authors to
      have gotten the calculations right.  If I were to make a suggestion, however, on
      page 3-10 the authors do make quite a leap, from the adjustment factors
      detailed in Tables 3-3 and 3-4, to the "final ICMs" shown  in Table 3-5. It might
      be helpful to walk the reader through the calculations used in one  of those
      final ICMs, just for transparency's sake.

   4. Appropriateness  of the conclusions.  I am not sure how to address  this question
      since Estimating does not really have explicit conclusions: rather, it presents an
      improved methodology for calculating the indirect cost impact on a  car maker of
      adopting newly-regulated technologies (presumably with  reverse engineering
      techniques used  to estimate the directcost impacts, in terms of materials and
      labor). To the extent the paper implicitly concludes that  ICMs are a superior
      method, then I find the conclusions appropriate.

   5. Recommendations for any alternative data and/or analyses.  See point #2 above.
      For the raw financial data sets, I  do not see any alternative that would not
      involve very deep dives into specific car makers' books, which would be both
      hard to do and problematic in terms of permissions.  For  the engineering
      opinions, I would be more comfortable that this "dataset" is solid if I knew how
      many engineers, with what qualifications, were involved.
1A better solution would be to ask individual car companies for internal cost accountings for numerous
technology samples, which I am assuming is unreasonably slow, costly, and difficult for the current
purposes of EPA.

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   6.  Clarity of the presentation.  Here I must say, candidly, lies Estimating's weakest
      performance.  The text is rife with what I would consider confusing
      statements, critical omissions, and inconsistencies. Most of Part II of my
      review will focus on page-by-page identification of these. While what I have just
      said may seem harsh, I will point out that it is much better to have a sound
      methodology in a weak presentation (as I consider Estimating'to be), than a
      superb presentation of a weak method, as no amount of editing will improve a
      fundamentally-flawed approach. Estimating needs some editing, but the
      underlying work is very good, and  a welcome addition to the field (which  to my
      knowledge has not been updated since Vyas et al. in 2000; I do not have access
      to the Sierra Research report of 2007).

Summary: My overall opinion is that Estimating does good solid methodologically-sound
work in improving and updating the RPE methodology, within the constraint of using
only reasonably-available datasets, but presents its results in a way that undermines
confidence in those results.  A round of rigorous editing would correct this, to me, the
only significant flaw in the  report.

(The Peer Review Charge letter also asked that reviewers flag which of their comments
relate to document improvements that can be readily made based on data or literature
reasonably available to EPA, and which would require information not available to EPA.
I would assert that none of my suggestions would fall into the second category:  my
comments are wholly related to either reorganizing or clarifying the data already in the
document, or acquiring modest amounts of readily-available new data.)
Part II: Detailed Comments
Sect/on 1: Executive Summary and Introduction

Generally, I think the Introduction (and Executive Summary) "start in the
middle" and so fail to offer the reader any context for the report, leading to
more confusion later on.  It launches into a discussion of the failings of RPE, and
proceeds into a description of how the authors will improve RPE, but gives very short
shrift to: a) motivation, and b) definitions of terms. As regards both issues, I think a
statement along these lines would be very welcome:

o  When devising regulations for car technology the regulator must trade off costs and
   benefits
o  Costs of new regulated auto technology fall into two categories, direct and indirect
   costs (defined as: ....)
o  Direct costs include the materials and labor required to make the components, and
   these can be estimated via reverse engineering

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o  But indirect costs include corporate overheads and other costs which are very hard
   to estimate
o  Past approaches to do so include the RPE method, defined as x, y, z...
o  Flaws in this RPE method include a, b, and c...
o  Thus this current document attempts to fix these flaws via the ICM method, defined
   as....

That is my general point for the Introduction.  Specific points include:

o  The second paragraph on 1-1 mentions the ANL analysis: it would help to show in a
   table the three "very similar" estimates, just to enlighten the reader
o  This paragraph also mentions different levels for outsourced and insourced parts:
   one short sentence explaining why these levels would be expected to be different
   would be helpful.  And if the rest of Estimating is going to focus on one versus the
   other (outsourced or made internally), or assume a blend of the two, it should be
   made clear here, perhaps in a footnote.

The Executive Summary does a slightly better job of explaining than does the
Introduction, but my same critique applies.  For example, on page ES-1 the first
paragraph helpfully lays out what RPEs are used for... but then there is a leap to the
second paragraph which starts into what the authors did. There is no intervening
discussion of w/7/there was any need at all to revise the RPE  methodology:  we have to
wait until Section 4 to find that out.
Section 2: Conventional Approach

Generally I thought this section was sound throughout.  So I have only specific detailed
points mostly, and one small methodological question:

o  On page 2-1, in the first paragraph, the phrase "all domestic automotive production"
   is used. This raises several small and large issues. First, definitional: where is
   "domestic?" USA?  USA and Canada? If one of those, then why is VW in the mix?
   Is "domestic" for Hyundai only production in Korea? &tc. More broadly, if (as it
   seems from looking at the financial statements the authors have chosen) the data
   being used are global, then we have the challenge of deciding whether RPEs/ICMs
   based on global production are right for cars made in the USA.  I would presume
   they are (since the regulator will require the same technologies of call cars,
   regardless where produced), but this should be made clear.  Generally, I would
   suggest deleting the word "domestic" unless it has a special meaning here
   that is not revealed.
o  In the second and third paragraphs on this  page similar phrases about expanding
   the indirect cost categories from ANL are used within a few lines of each other.

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   These two paragraphs could be combined and cleaned up to eliminate the possibly
   confusing redundancy.
o  Footnote 1 on this page mentions that "other expenses" are excluded, presumably
   because they are too small to matter? In any case, the rationale for such exclusion
   should be provided.  When in doubt, please explain the reasoning behind all
   methodological decisions, providing numerical evidence if possible.
o  Footnote 5 on the page defines selling costs as the salaries of salespeople, etc.
   Later on the definition is expanded and  made clearer but here it rings oddly to an
   automotive person, as very few car makers employ their own salespeople:
   overwhelmingly they use independent dealers. I would suggest this footnote read
   more as: "includes salaries of marketing staff, advertising costs, dealer support
   costs, etc." Also, I would imagine "travel" is hardly material to this analysis.
o  On page 2-3, in the possessive Forbes should be Forbes's, I believe.
o  The active/legacy health  care cost  issue raised on pages 2-3 and 2-4 is an
   important one. I believe  you have  treated it fairly, but if I were to
   suggest you have another set of eyes look at any part of this report, it
   would be here, possibly by recruiting a seasoned Wall Street equity
   analyst, such as John Casesa, to review these assumptions, as these
   analysts spend a lot of time on this issue.
o  In the second paragraph of page 2-3  the authors mention that corporate overhead
   varies greatly.  Rather than just letting that statement stand (which raises questions
   in the reader's mind), I would suggest inserting one sentence explaining why this
   might be the case (e.g.  differences in accounting definitions, etc.).

My methodological question regards the  McKinsey numbers used for comparison
purposes.  Since the reader is not told McKinsey's methodology in any great depth (it is
mentioned briefly in the Appendix), and since the reader can see the  McKinsey numbers
vary significantly from the authors', and since the authors make no adjustment to their
own numbers based on differences from  the McKinsey data, and since no attempt is
made to explain why the McKinsey results are different - why include the McKinsey
case at all? It seems only to muddy the waters, by performing no explanatory role.  I
have no axe to grind as regards McKinsey (I used to work there!), but I cannot see how
its data advances the cause of Estimating.  Just saying that the results are included "for
comparison" is not enough, in my view.   (As an analogy, one might imagine a sports
article whose authors calculate that the best team in college football is USC, then
mention that the BCS system  believes it is actually Florida... and then end the article
without discussing how or why the two choices are different!)
Section 3: Proposed Approach

Here again I thought the section was strong, so I have detailed comments only:

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o  The explanation in the first paragraph of page 3-1 is illustrative of the kind of
   explanation that I think the authors would do well to include in the Introduction.
o  It might be helpful somewhere on page 3-2 to comment on why the 1.454 in Table
   3-1 is so similar in magnitude to, but different conceptually, from the 1.494 in Table
   2-4.
o  The last two paragraphs on page 3-4 start to blur the definitional clarity
   that is crucial to readers trying to understand the authors' thinking.  The
   sentence that begins "For operations we have considered three areas	" would be
   clearer if rewritten as "For operations, we  have considered three areas of indirect
   costs that are likely to be affected by change in a part or technology: R&D and
   retooling (through...etc.), indirect labor costs (through...etc.), and indirect costs
   linked to materials used (due to...etc.)." In addition, the authors might want to
   make the example cost categories linked to labor here (health care, retirement,
   corporate overhead) similar or identical to those  linked to labor in Table 3-2, where
   only training is mentioned. Finally, the last paragraph on page 3-4 jumps into direct
   costs in the middle of a paper that mostly  discusses indirect costs (additional labor
   due to a new technology would be additional DIRECT labor cost, yes?), and Table 3-
   2 blurs both direct and indirect costs. I think it would  be very good practice to
   include perhaps at the very outset of the report a single pie chart showing direct
   costs of a new regulated part (materials, labor) and then the indirect costs (e.g.
   labor retraining costs, higher warranty costs due  to use of a new material), and then
   also avoid conflating the two categories in the middle of the report. My guess is this
   confusion results from the authors' being so close to the indirect-cost work that they
   might not have stepped back and started with an introduction to the total cost
   situation.
o  I found the complexity-level adjustments clear, compelling, and well laid out.
o  As mentioned in my Part 1,1 think it would be helpful  to show a sample calculation
   of at least one of the numbers in Table 3-5 on page 3-10.
Section 4: Comparing RPE Multiplier and Indirect Cost Multiplier
Approaches

I have only three comments on this short section (besides a nit to pick: if in the
Section's title RPE is not spelled out, why is ICM?).

As mentioned early on in this letter, an explanation up front of what issues the paper is
trying to address would be quite helpful, and in fact a lot of material in this section (on
page 4-1) addresses those issues,  and could be replicated in shorter form in the
Introduction.

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On page 4-2 I admit I became totally lost. An economist (or someone who
remembered his college Econ 101 class better!) might find this explanation as to why
profits must be left out of the multiplier quite clear, but I could not follow it at all. This
entire section in fact seems a bit rushed.  Could one page be spent walking the reader
through the profit topic in more detail? And could the actual impact on the ICMs of
leaving profits out be shown, so, if the effect was small, a reader might be able to
conclude "Even though I did not understand why profits are left out, I can see doing so
does not change the final answer much, and so I am  happy with this methodological
choice."

Finally, building on my feeling that this section is rushed, I would suggest one small and
one larger change.  The small change is to point out on page 4-2 that a decrease in
quantity might indeed reduce social costs... but wouldn't it also INCREASE indirect
costs, as amortization of tooling, etc., would go up per unit of output? Frankly, I could
see deleting the whole social cost paragraph on page 4-2, as it raises a whole new topic
outside the scope of Estimating.

The larger change I suggest is to wrap up the whole paper with an
illustration of the implications of the report. That is,  one could lay out:

o  Typical RPEs that would be used if this paper had  not been written
o  Typical ICMs that now will be used, thanks to this paper
o  An example of the impact on the cost calculation of a hypothetical regulated
   technology X: first, under the RPE regime; then, as a low, medium, and high ICM
   item, showing both (unchanging) direct costs and  (changing) indirect costs,  at the
   three ICM levels and then over time.  (Thus if I am counting right, seven cost
   figures would be shown, each a total cost per unit assuming X volumes, broken into
   direct and indirect costs.)  This would give the  reader a  sense as to whether the
   new ICM methodology will raise or lower the expected costs of a new regulated
   component or system.
Appendix A

I went through the Appendix and, other than repeating my suggestion to remove the
unhelpful (in my opinion) McKinsey case, I have no comments: the reasoning as laid
out makes sense, though it does reinforce my view that taking a closer look at the
health care issue for the GM and Ford numbers might be valuable.
Part III: Conclusion

In summary, I think the report is methodologically sound but less soundly written.  To
improve the weak presentation of strong results, I suggest that the authors:

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   o  Provide data on the number and qualifications of engineers consulted
   o  Show calculations for one of the final ICMs, so the reader can follow along
   o  Provide much more information as to context, motives, and goals "up front," in
      the Introduction and Executive Summary
   o  Clarify what is meant by "domestic production," or else delete the phrase
   o  Consider having an equity analyst take a look at the assumptions made around
      the treatment of active versus legacy healthcare costs
   o  Remove the McKinsey results, as unhelpful and possibly confusing
   o  Be vigilant in  not confusing direct and indirect costs
   o  Clarify the reasoning behind the decision to leave out profits
   o  Include at the end of the report a numerical illustration of how the improved
      method would yield dynamic and complexity-differentiated ICMs of different
      magnitudes than static and undifferentiated  RPEs; make sure to include in this
      example direct costs as well, so the reader can see the impact of the new
      methodology  (which acts only on indirect costs) on the total costs of a
      technology (e.g. a new airbag type)

I congratulate the authors on the improved ICM methodology, and hope that my
remarks as to the clarity of the report will be taken in the same spirit of good faith  in
which I offer them.

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Reviewer Bio:
                                                                May 14, 2009
                                                            364 Julianna Circle
                                                            Franklin TN 37064
Dr. Gloria Helfand
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
Assessment and Standards Division
Office of Transportation and Air Quality
2000 Traverwood Drive
Ann Arbor, MI  48105

Dear Dr. Helfand;

I  provide herewith another copy of my comments on the draft report Estimating
Indirect  Cost  Multipliers  for  Individual   Domestic  and  Foreign  Automobile
Manufacturers,  previously e-mailed to you,  Byron Bunker, William  Charmley and
Kathryn Sargeant on January 20, 2009. I also include a listing of my qualifications to
provide a review, and a discussion of conflicts of interest.  I provide my comments as
a private citizen and  not as a representative of  my employer, Argonne  National
Laboratory.  Nevertheless, I enclose a discussion of relevant education, experience
at Argonne, and other services to transportation research that qualify me to provide
this review. The address provided is my home address.

Qualifications:

Danilo J. Santini obtained his Ph.D. in Urban Systems Engineering and  Policy Analysis
from  Northwestern  University in 1976.  He also holds a Bachelor of Architecture
from the Massachusetts Institute  of Technology (1968) and a Masters in  Business
and Economics from the Illinois Institute of Technology (1972). From  1992-2004 Dr.
Santini was section leader of the Technology Assessments Section within the Center
for Transportation Research at Argonne National Laboratory, and until October 2008
was leader of the Technology Analysis section.  These sections specialized  in the
comparative  assessments of transportation  technologies, considering technical
attributes,  vehicle  and operations  costs,  emissions and oil  use, and  market
preferences.  In 2003 he was awarded the title senior economist.  In the late 1990s
he  supervised  and/or participated  in several  studies  of comparative  costs of
conventional  vehicles versus  hybrids and plug-in  hybrids.  A  study  of lithium  ion
battery costs  was conducted  by members of his section at that time. He is currently
participating  in  a study of battery costs for four other lithium ion chemistries.  He
served as chair of the Alternative  Fuels Committee of the National Research
Council's Transportation Research Board from 1996-2002. Since May of 2001 he has
been  the Department of Energy's technical representative for the  U.S. to the

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International  Energy  Agency  Implementing  Agreement  on  Electric  and  Hybrid
Vehicles.   From 2003 to 2006 he was a member of the  American Transportation
Research  Institute's Research  Advisory Committee.  At the  present time he is  a
member of the Transportation Research Board's Committee  on Land Use, Vehicle
Miles of Travel, and Energy.  Dr. Santini has authored, co-authored or edited over
150 articles, reports, and conference papers.


Concerning conflicts of interest -
The study  of costs of light duty motor vehicles documented in the 2000 study "Comparison of
Indirect Cost Multipliers for Manufacturing"  by Vyas, Santini and Cuenca, cited in Estimating
Indirect Cost Multipliers for Individual Domestic and Foreign Automobile Manufacturers, was
done in support of a subsequent 2001 study, Hybrid Electric  Vehicle Technology Assessment:
Methodology, Analytical Issues,  and Interim Results, by Plotkin, Santini, Vyas,  and  others.
Analytical  techniques used in the latter two studies were also used in  one of four cost estimate
Cases in the 2001 Electric Power Research Institute  Study Comparing the Benefits and Impacts of Hybrid
Electric Vehicle Options.  Funding for the  first two studies, and Argonne staff participation in the third, came from the U.S.
Department of Energy.  Since completion of those studies, Dr. Santini's analysis often involved evaluation and/or manipulation
of other studies of advanced and alternatively fueled vehicles, including cost estimates. However, since the 2001 studies, he has
not participated in, nor supervised any original whole vehicle cost modeling and analysis.  He is not presently conducting any
such analysis,  aside from the battery cost modeling mentioned above. However, a study that he leads, being done jointly with the
Electric Power Research Institute, probably  will make use of a vehicle cost model developed  by a staff member of the Electric
Power Research Institute.
Implementing  plans to phase into retirement over a couple of years after completing existing commitments, Dr. Santini moved to
Franklin TN in October of 2008, resigned his section leader position (consistent with Argonne National Laboratory policy), and
began working part-time as a project manager/principal investigator on remaining projects for which he has such responsibility.
Given his part-time status, he was easily able to complete this review without interference with his remaining Argonne research
responsibilities.


Best regards;
Danilo J. Santini, Ph.D.

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January 20, 2009 Comments by Dr. Danilo John Santini on:

Updating EPA's Methodology for Accounting for Indirect Costs Associated with Changes in Direct
Manufacturing Costs, by A. Rogozhin, M. Gallaher, and W. McManus.

There are many positive things to say about the Rogozhin et al report draft. However, the primary purpose of
the review is to make constructive suggestions about possible errors and or ambiguities of
interpretations/exposition. I  have some major issues I would like to see addressed.

First, I would prefer that the authors  cited the Vyas et al report, rather than the ANL report. For example
Table 2-1 title would read "Contributors in the Vyas et al Methodology". Individual scientists are responsible
for their work.  However, if you prefer that we refer to the Rogozhin et al as the "EPA report" in our future
work, feel free to stick with the "ANL report".

(1)  The authors fail to mention that the Vyas et al report includes results from three different methodologies,
demonstrating a fair degree of consistency as  of the mid 1990s.

(2) The dates of the work in the Vyas et al report (mid 1990s) vs. the Rogozhin et al report (more than a
decade later) are quite important. Note that the auto industry aggressively outsourced over that period.
Visteon was spun-off by Ford in 1997 and Delphi by GM in 1999.  Possibly this was a trend across the board,
but is just more obvious and dramatic in the case of Ford and GM (I did not look any further).

The Vyas et al report contains two multipliers, a point not acknowledged in the Rogozhin et al report draft.
The outsourced components  multiplier in Vyas et al is 1.50, much the same as estimated over a decade later
in the Rogozhin et al report draft, after a period where  major automakers made a concerted effort to shift to
outsourcing of component manufacture and focus primarily on final assembly. It seems to me this must be
discussed.

(3) There appears to be a big  difference in the area of fraction of selling costs. The McKinsey passenger car
report (Table A-2) results appear to be consistent with the three studies cited by Vyas et al in the mid 1990s
(percentages in the low 20s).  The big question is whether the cited auto companies have driven selling costs
down sharply (Table 2-3), or there is an error in the  Rogozhin et al methodology.  My hypothesis is that it is
the latter. What I think is missing is dealer costs.  The auto industry financial reports cited should have
reported the finances of the auto companies themselves, but not the dealers.  What I think the Rogozhin et al
numbers represent are what  I would call corporate revenue equivalents (CREs), not retail price equivalents
(RPEs). In order to get from CREs to RPEs using financial records of the corporations involved in selling
vehicles, one would have to pore over the annual reports of at least a few mega dealers to get an idea of the
cost per vehicle sold, and add that estimate to the CRE.  I suspect that if that were done, it would be possible
to reconcile the big differences in selling fractions under the methods cited in Vyas et al, and in the McKinsey
report, with the Rogozhin et al estimates.

I note in several cases that values from the McKinsey report are used when similar data is not available. This
implies a degree of respect for the numbers in the McKinsey et al report. However, the lack of discussion of
why the selling costs from the McKinsey report are higher than for the selling costs used in the Rogazin et al
estimates is inconsistent with a respect for the numbers in that report.

Another reality that needs to be considered is that the corporate reports provide information on sales of all
types of vehicles produced by the corporation. Heavy vehicles probably do not require the same share of
advertizing expenditures as light duty vehicles. Is the McKinsey report really for "passenger  cars" only, and
not light trucks?  In any case,  the corporate reports, to varying degrees, may not separately detail light duty

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automotive operations from commercial (heavy) vehicle operations. A closely related issue is the question of
retail sales vs. fleet sales. The corporate reports are likely a mix of the two. The question is whether the
McKinsey report actually addresses retail sales of one vehicle per customer, while the corporate reports fold
fleet sales and retail sales together, pulling the average sales price down and thus misleadingly pulling the
estimated RPE multiplier down.

(4) The different numbers for "manufacturing cost" in 2006 between tables A-3 and A-4, A-5 and A-6, A-8 and
A-9 etc are troubling, particularly for the domestic manufacturers, where the differences are large and
inconsistent in direction. Perhaps the label "RPE" should be dropped from the 2002-2007 historical trends
tables, since it appears that the report is not using these low estimates. Perhaps it would be better to simply
report that the bundle of costs listed  (selling ..., operating ..., depreciation, profit, other...) amounts to a
certain percentage of total corporate costs (or is it percentage of manufacturing cost?).

(5) In perusing the time series tables, it appears to me that all of the companies aside from DaimlerChrysler
had a  downward trend in the estimated "RPE multiplier" (a term than should be changed in these tables)
over time. This  is consistent with my hypothesis about the existence of an outsourcing trend in the auto
industry. It is inconsistent with the claim that the multipliers stayed constant over time (page 2-4). One
might plot these values on a chart and fit trend  lines to them, then construct estimates of what the values
might have been in the mid 1990s if these trends are backcasted.  Since losses by some companies pull down
values later in the period, perhaps profit should not be included in the bundle of non manufacturing costs.
When large losses are booked in a single year, it seems appropriate to discuss what the automaker says
caused the losses.  It would make a difference if the losses are due to one-time charges (special
circumstances),  or recurring problems. The claim on  p. 2-4 that it was ensured that 2007 was not an outlier
year seems to be a false claim for the GM case  (Table A-. 9)  The major 2007  losses for GM suggest that a
different year's  report be used for the GM estimates.

While I like the idea of technology complexity, and generally support the argument about its qualitative
effect on multipliers, I nevertheless think that the low end multipliers are too  low. My line of thought is that
if a component supplier does all product development, and the component is a long standardized part of
vehicles, then - as the report contends - this would result in the lowest multiplier.

However, in my opinion, every component would have to be allocated selling  and some corporate overhead
costs.  This gets  us back to the issue of whether or not selling costs, including dealer costs, have been
properly included in the Rogozhin et al methodology. If I am correct that selling costs are underestimated
and the shares listed in Vyas et al remain roughly valid, then the lowest plausible multiplier would add profit,
selling cost, and a portion of corporate overhead. Based on the Vyas et al estimates, this would mean that
the lowest multiplier I would come up with would be in the neighborhood of about 1.4 (~ 3.0% corporate
overhead, 23.5% selling, 2.5% profit = 29%, then 100%/71% = 1.41). If you do not change your selling costs
share, the same logic would lead to a considerably lower number than  1.4, but still would not be as low as
1.06 or 1.03.

One possible counterargument is that some regulations may simply force refurbishing of existing production
lines, while others (such as hybrid components) might require completely new factories.  This logic relates to
needed  depreciation and amortization charges.

Regardless,  I praise the effort to make this distinction. I agree that all new powertrains could have a high
short-term multiplier, for many reasons.  Supporting arguments made  in the report, electric vehicles were
reportedly hard  to sell, taking a lot more of the  salesman's time with the customer to complete the sale.
Similarly for early hybrids. Parts supply at dealers to assure reliability of low volume products should be
more costly. Anyway, it is good that the  conceptual issue has been discussed  in the report.

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I like the greater detail in the report than could be found in the three methodologies cited in Vyas et al.  The
Appendix A tables estimating the 2007 multipliers, by corporation, seem to be the anchor of the report.

Looking at the Vyas et al report, a major question is the proportion of warranty, R&D, and depreciation and
amortization absorbed by the final vehicle assembler (the corporations for which the multipliers are
estimated) vs. the components suppliers.  It is a shame that the time series values (2002-2007) provide no
insight on  the trend in these costs.  I am not familiar with the corporate reports, but it seems that there are
problems in translating the information. Is it possible that there are different corporate report tables used
for the 2007 estimates and 2002-2007 historical tables?  Could the authors identify  the page number(s)  of the
report that they used to compile the information for each table?

The references do not consistently seem to be adequately documented. Typically the city and state or
country where a publisher is headquartered is included in a reference.  A web address should be provided if
the material is available on the web, instead of in hard copy from a business location. Argonne, IL is our
location.

It would be appreciated if the rounding in the tables was consistent.

The purpose of our original report was simply to assure that when cost was evaluated by DOE sponsors,
those evaluating such costs would be explicit with regard to whether it was manufacturing cost or retail price
equivalent. Our work was not directed at regulatory questions.

I am refraining from commenting on the positions of the Rogozhin et al team with regard to the proper
method of accounting for costs of regulation.  My comments are simply directed primarily at the effort to
properly execute and update the RPE method as our analytical team came to understand it in the 1990s.

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Reviewer Bio:
                             ABOUT CONSULTING, INC.
                                  3805 Penberton Court
                               Ann Arbor, MI 48105-3039
January 16, 2009

Ms. Gloria Helfand
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
Assessment and Standards Division
Office of Transportation and Air Quality
2000 Traverwood Drive
Ann Arbor, MI 48105

Dear Ms. Helfand:

My comments on the document Estimating Indirect Cost Multipliers for Individual Domestic and
Foreign Automobile Manufacturers is enclosed as an attachment to this letter.

My name is Morgan H. Edwards, doing business as About Consulting, Inc., which is a
Subchapter S corporation incorporated in the State of Michigan, of which I am the sole owner
and president. My address is 3805 Penberton Court, Ann Arbor, MI 48105-3039.

The material reviewed consists of the document listed in the previous paragraph, which also is
titled Updating EPA 's Methodology for Accounting for Indirect Costs Associatedwith Changes
in Direct Manufacturing Costs,  as well as excerpts from the Annual Reports cited in the
document, which I have accessed on line, using the References list provided in the document.

My expertise and qualifications are summarized as follows: I am a graduate of Carnegie Mellon
University, having received a Bachelor of Science degree with a major in industrial management
and a Master of Science degree  in industrial administration with a major in finance. I was
employed by Ford Motor Company for 35 years in the financial analysis organizations (i.e.,
controller's offices) of aerospace, automotive manufacturing, and automotive marketing
divisions, as well as in Ford's finance  and corporate strategy staffs. I was not an accounting
major nor am I a Certified Public Accountant, although during my years at Ford in financial
analysis and corporate strategy,  I frequently worked on analyses that required the basic
understanding and application of cost accounting principles to a variety of automotive situations,
including profit planning, budgeting, financial reporting, vehicle and option pricing. Since
retirement in 1995,1 worked briefly as the full-time chief financial officer of a small
manufacturing company in England and subsequently as a part-time consultant at the Center for
Automotive Research and the University of Michigan Transportation Research Institute on a
variety of automotive industry studies. I am presently engaged part-time in a study for the latter
organization, under the direction of Dr. Walter McManus.

                                          -2-

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As to any real or perceived conflicts of interest, I would point out that I left Ford Motor
Company's employment fourteen years ago and have had little contact with my former
colleagues during that period. My consulting work has involved broad analyses of industry data
and trends relating to both original equipment manufacturers and the automotive supplier
industry. I believe that none of these activities represent a conflict of interest.

My comments include an Appendix A, which is being forwarded to you as a separate file.

As we discussed by telephone, I have made a list of certain errata in the document, none of
which are pertinent to a substantive review and therefore are not included in my comments. This
list is attached as a separate file.

This review has required approximately 32 hours of my time.

I have sent an invoice for the work to RTF Finance, as you directed in your letter. A copy of the
invoice is attached as a separate file for your information.

Yours very truly,

Morgan H. Edwards

Attachments (as e-mail attachment files):
1. Review of EPA Document - Microsoft Word 2003 file
2. Appendix A, an attachment to my review - Microsoft Excel 2003 file
3. Errata List - Microsoft Word 2003 file
4. Invoice - Microsoft Excel 2003 file

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                              REVIEW OF EPA DOCUMENT
    ESTIMATING INDIRECT COST MULTIPLIERS FOR INDIVIDUAL DOMESTIC AND FOREIGN
                            AUTOMOBILE MANUFACTURERS
Overall Approach and Methodology
The stated objective of the report is to develop methodologies for evaluating the effect of
potential regulatory actions on indirect costs of manufacturers, recognizing different levels of
technical complexity inherent in the regulatory actions and recognizing that cost effects
observed in the short-run may differ from those observed in the long-run. The report presents
and explores past efforts 1) to identify incremental indirect costs relative to regulation-induced
increments of direct manufacturing cost and 2) to express these relationships through the use
of Retail Price Equivalent (RPE) multipliers. The report further develops its own set of weighted
industry average  RPE multipliers, using data for eight global automobile manufacturers, largely
drawn from 2007 Annual Reports. As a background foundation for further discussion and
refinement, this approach is appropriate and useful.

The report then advocates development of a range of Indirect Cost Multipliers (ICMs) to reflect
1) differences in technical complexity and  2) changes in indirect costs over time as regulatory
actions are adopted and integrated into production. The result is six ICMs representing the
intersection of three levels of technical complexity (low, medium, and high) and two levels of
time passage (short-run and long-run). This is a logical and reasonable approach. The report
purports to base  the new ICMs on the previously developed RPE multipliers, and it describes
the ICMs as scalar factors to be multiplied by the baseline RPEs. In concept, this again appears a
reasonable approach, but the methodology for evaluating the magnitude of the scalar
multipliers and their combination into overall ICMs are inadequately explained and must be
questioned in terms of concept, method of development, and the mechanics of combination
and application.

In a final section,  the report enters into a discussion of supply and demand curves as a means of
comparing the validity of RPE multipliers and ICMs. The approach is promising, but the principle
conclusion does not follow from the analysis (more on this in the section of Appropriateness of
Conclusions).

Appropriateness of the Datasets and Other Inputs
The data used in  the report consist of three principal data sets:
1. Income statement data from the 2007 Annual Reports of eight principal automotive
manufacturers with worldwide manufacturing operations: General Motors, Ford,
DaimlerChrysler,  VW, Toyota, Honda, Nissan, and  Hyundai.

2. Annual dollar sales data for the eight companies is used to compute a weighted  industry
average of the eight separately calculated RPEs.

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3. A set of scalar factors for the short-term and long-term effects of technical complexity, based
on the subjective evaluations of a "team of engineers."

In the first data set, Annual Report data have the virtue of being published public numbers
presented according to standards of the Financial Accounting Standard Board (FASB). On the
other hand, within the FASB standards there is considerable leeway on aggregation of indirect
cost categories and amount of detail provided. Further, the adherence to FASB standards
differs among U.S., German, Japanese, and Korean companies. As a result, numerous
adjustments must be made to the data, introducing many possibilities for errors in
interpretation and calculation.

2006 Annual Report data from Daimler-Chrysler are used because with the 2007 sale of
Chrysler to Cerberus, published statements are no longer available for Chrysler. Although fiscal
year 2007 is defined differently among the companies (year ended 12/31/2007 for GM, Ford,
VW, and Hyundai; year ended 12/31/2006 for DaimlerChrysler; year ended 3/31/07 for Toyota
and Nissan; year ended 3/31/2008 for Honda), all data span a full twelve-month year and may
be assumed to represent comparable operating conditions across the eight companies.

For the second data set, not all the annual sales data covered the same scope of operations.
The appropriate weighting factor would be global automotive sales. Inspection of the Annual
Reports reveals that sales data for Ford, GM Honda, and VW are for the automotive sector only.
Sales data for DaimlerChrysler, Hyundai, Nissan, and Toyota are world-wide consolidated
corporate sales, including revenue from financial services and other businesses. This gives
excessive weight to these companies in the weighted industry average. As a result, Toyota is
given  a weight 70% greater than General Motors, which is out of proportion to their respective
sizes.  Despite the report's reliance on global sales and costs throughout, it is curious that the
text (page 2-1) states that domestic automotive  production is reflected in the analysis.

For the third data set, the report gives only the sketchiest explanation for the rationale for the
subjective scalar factors, and no objective data are provided in support of the assumptions.

Data Analysis Conducted
While it would be desirable to measure indirect  costs against a common set of consistent
accounting definitions, it is unlikely that any of the companies would consent to supply data in
conformity with an EPA-specified set of accounting categories, given the competitive nature of
the industry. Accordingly, the report makes adjustments to fill  in certain indirect cost categories
not explicitly revealed in the Annual Reports, using information in Notes to Financial
Statements where appropriate. In concept, this is not objectionable, but the adjustments
should be handled more consistently across indirect cost categories. For example, none of the
companies separately identified plant maintenance, repairs, and operating costs, but buried
this category in larger aggregations. The McKinsey study, however, stated that this cost
category  represents 14.1% of direct manufacturing cost; so the report assigns 14.1% to all
companies for these costs (except VW, for an unexplained reason). In the case of transportation
cost and dealer support and markup costs, a similar adjustment was not made for missing data,

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with "NA" being assigned to the empty cells. Further, where assumed costs are added in one
category, it is assumed that the same magnitude of cost is subtracted from another category, so
that total costs remain valid, but the compensating entry is seldom explained in the report,
depriving the reader of the opportunity to test the validity of the adjustment.

In the development of ICMs in Section 3, a scalar value of "1" is assigned to indirect cost
categories where "the average level is expected," causing the indirect cost RPE level previously
determined to be retained, while a scalar value of "0" is assigned when "there is no expected
change," thereby wiping out the indirect cost increment entirely. Of the total of thirty cells in
Tables 3-3 (short-term effects), twelve are assigned a scalar of "0," meaning that in the short-
term no incremental indirect costs would be incurred in their respective cost categories for an
increase in manufacturing cost of any magnitude. Of the thirty cells in Table 3-4 (long-term
effects), nineteen are assigned a subjective scalar of "0," implying that the cumulative effect of
numerous regulatory changes  will be a withering away of indirect costs.

Incremental cost analysis is often tricky. As a general principle, transient aberrations from
steady state costs (the on-going actual  indirect costs) may occur (up or down) with any change
in production, but the transient aberrations generally converge over time to a new steady state.
The report's analysis of the long-term effects of regulatory changes does not appear to
acknowledge this principle.

Appropriateness of the Conclusions
There is a serious argument to be made concerning the appropriateness and validity of the
long-term portion of the ICM analysis. In the Appendix, the report shows that the RPEs for the
eight companies have been remarkably stable over the last six years, a period in which
numerous regulatory requirements in safety, emissions, and fuel consumption have been
implemented. If the long-term effects of regulation on indirect costs relative to direct
manufacturing costs were disproportionately lower than the earlier cost levels, as argued in the
report, why are not the historical RPEs dropping year by year. Indeed, it may be argued that the
RPE values are the  long-term values. After all, the RPEs incorporate for the long-term all the
various actions and changes made by the companies, whether from regulation or market
forces. In other words, in the long-run, the total costs are the only relevant costs. On  the other
hand, in the short-term, when regulatory change produces dislocations  and a steep learning
curve, it may be argued that ICMs substantially great than "1" should be applied for several
years, and therefore that most of the twelve "0" scalars in Table 3-3 should be at least "1."

In Section 4, an argument is advanced  that RPE multipliers are defective because 1) they do not
recognize that indirect cost effects or regulatory changes may vary according to the technical
complexity of the changes, 2) they include profits in the multiplier, and 3) they do not recognize
that the increased cost of regulatory changes may affect both the price that may be charged in
the market place and the quantity sold, depending on the elasticity of the demand curve. It is
stated that the ICM approach does not suffer from these defects.

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The ICM approach solves the first defect by applying scalar adjustments to certain indirect cost
categories in certain circumstances. It solves the second defect by arbitrarily excluding the
manufacturer's (assembler's) profit. (But note that it does not exclude the dealer's profit
(discount/markup) nor the parts suppliers' profits, all of which ultimately factor into an
economic supply and demand analysis).

The ICM approach, however, does not solve - or even address - the third defect. ICMs would
be used the same as RPE multipliers are used, as point estimates of indirect cost effects without
reference to ultimate selling price or quantity. The assumed shape and slope of the demand
and supply "curves"  in  Figure 4-1 are arbitrary and independent of whether RPEs or "ICMs are
used to estimate Point B on the supply curve. Therefore, the final conclusion ("The ICM is
preferred because it models the direct and indirect costs as a shift in the supply curve, which
then leads to a new equilibrium price and quantity.") is not valid.  Neither the RPE multipliers
nor the ICMs by themselves do that.

Recommendations for Any Alternate Data and/or Analysis
As mentioned previously, obtaining direct and indirect cost data from all the automotive
manufacturers in consistent  and comparable  cost categories would be desirable,  but is unlikely
to be achieved. It is possible  that company Form 10K filings with the SEC might contain more
detail on  direct and indirect costs in more comparable format, but that has not been explored
as part of this review It may  be noted that when the automobile industry or a company within
the industry brings suit with  the Federal Trade Commission in an anti-dumping action, the
Federal Trade Commission is able to specify consistent data formats across companies as well
as rigorous adherence to specified classifications, and the suing and sued companies must
comply. Of course, in this instance, the companies are the supplicants, giving the  FTC the upper
hand in demanding compliance; the EPA may not enjoy such authority. Further, one could
speculate whether, in the present financial crisis, an "auto czar" could achieve greater
uniformity in automotive cost accounting as part of his mandate,  as well as whether that would
be useful in achieving improved understanding of regulatory costs.

Clarity of the Presentation
Clarity  of presentation  in the report presents  some challenges. In general, the background
material on Retail Price Equivalent (RPE) multipliers in Sections 1 and 2 is adequate in detail and
clarity, but information on the step-by-step development Indirect Cost Multipliers (ICMs) in
Section 3 leaves gaps in clarity, and as a result, the Executive Summary and Introduction
sections,  in so far as  they deal with ICMs, also lack clarity.

In the Executive summary, because of inadequate definition of ICMs (a new concept), the
reader is  left to wonder why the RPEs are expressed as percentages of direct manufacturing
costs and the ICMs are expressed as absolute multipliers of some undefined  base. The
appearance is given that the ICMs are but minor adjustments of the RPEs, when a full
understanding of the concept reveals they are a  major modification of the RPEs. The clarity of
the Executive Summary (and the report as a whole) would be improved by converting the ICMs
to percentages, for direct comparison with the RPEs in the adjoining table on page E-2, and by

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specifying that the percentages are to be applied to the same base of incremental direct
manufacturing cost, not to the RPEs themselves. It would then be evident to the reader that the
ICMs drastically discount the incremental indirect costs to be associated with incremental direct
manufacturing costs for changes of low or medium technical complexity. For example, in the
case of the long-term effect of regulatory changes of medium technical complexity, $4 of
incremental indirect cost for each $100 of incremental direct manufacturing cost would be
imputed under the ICM method, compared with $49.40 under the RPE method.

The same  clarity problem occurs in the next to last paragraph of the Introduction, where the
exposition glides seamlessly from "(we) calculate an industry average RPE multiplier. We then
calculated the share of that multiplier, which should be used as a multiplicative adjustment
factor..." to "...this multiplier is called an indirect cost multiplier or ICM" (my added emphasis)
without revealing the shift in the underlying base for the multiplier from historical indirect cost
to incremental direct manufacturing cost. A restatement of the last sentence in the paragraph
to "We estimated that the values of the  ICMs range from 103% to 153% of incremental direct
manufacturing cost for regulations with different levels of technical complexity" would greatly
clarify the report.

The confusion engendered by the poorly defined concept of ICMs can be seen dramatically in a
table that I developed while attempting to understand the concept. The table  is included in
Appendix A of this review. My initial interpretation of the meaning of the ICMs (Interpretation
A), derived from a careful reading of the text, was untenable. Interpretation B, derived after
much wrestling with the subject, turns out to map closely to the result presented in the report.
My point in mentioning this is that clarity demands that the average reader not be subjected to
the same struggle. An explanatory bridge between the scalar factors in Tables 3-3 and 3-4 and
the ICMs in Table 3-5 is needed. Consideration might be given to including in the report a table
similar to my Appendix A (but abbreviated) to illustrate the differences  in deriving RPEs and
ICMs.

Several other less significant points needing clarificiation should be mentioned. One is the
omission of the McKinsey study in the review of past studies in the second paragraph of the
Introduction, in spite of the prominence given it as a source of data later in the both Section 2
and the Appendix. The first mention of "a McKinsey study" occurs parenthetically in the last
paragraph of the Introduction, but it deserves a  more prominent place as well as a description
of its origin (date and sponsorship) and significance.

Additional clarity is needed in the Executive summary and the Introduction about the scope of
the data. The reader only later learns indirectly that the scope includes global  operations, sales,
and costs, not just North American or U.S. operations.

In Section 2, confusion exists concerning health  care benefits, retirement benefits, and legacy
costs. Legacy costs include more than health care benefits. They also include supplemental
pension ("buy-out") costs for early retirees (which GM, Ford, and Chrysler have incurred in
major downsizing actions over the last 10-15 years) and life insurance premiums for salaried

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retirees. It also is confusing to state that "foreign manufacturers' health care benefits for
retired workers are largely covered by the government of the country in which they are
headquartered."  National health plans in the "headquarters" country cover only employees in
that country, not the rest of the world. The statement about GM phasing out legacy costs by
2010 is questionable because the costs continue beyond 2010 and the DAW fund that will pay
them is being underwritten by GM.
Morgan H. Edwards
January 16, 2009

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                            ERRATA LIST FOR EPA DOCUMENT
      Estimating Indirect Cost Multipliers for Individual Domestic and Foreign Automobile
                                    Manufacturers

Page 1-2: "Chrysler" should be "DaimlerChrysler."

Pages 2-1 and 2-2:  In the context of MSRP, dealer discount and dealer markup are two names
for the same thing and therefore are redundant.

Page 2-1, footnote 6: In accepted economic and automotive terminology, the definition should
read "...the difference between the total of all the vehicle revenue and the total of all the
vehicle expenditures..." "Revenue income"  is redundant and "revenue expenditures" is
contradictory.

Page 3-1: The reference to Table 2-1 should be to Table 2-3.

Page 3-6: The first paragraph should end with "are described in more detail in Section 3.3.1,
3.3.2, and 3.3.3."

Page 3-6, Section 3.3.2: The second sentence would more accurately read "...combines the high
mechanical efficiency of a manual transmission with the shift control of an automatic
transmission."

Pages 3-7, 3-8, and  3-9: The tables on each page contain apparently random horizontal lines
where they do not belong. They should be  removed for clarity.

Page 3-10:  The last sentence references "Table 2-7." There is no Table 2-7 in the report.

Page 3-10:  The first sentence in Section 3.5 cites a "range from 1.06 to 1.52," whereas Table 3-
5 immediately above it shows 1.06 and 1.53.

Page R-l and R-2: The references contain much duplication that should be eliminated.
(Duplicate references occur in the Ford, Honda, Hyundai, Nissan, and Toyota citations.) Each
citation should contain one document only. In addition, the GM citation should read "General
Motors Corporation 2008. Annual Report 2007..." The Volkswagen citation should read "Annual
Report 2007," not 2003.

Page A-5, table A-5: In the left column containing Cost Contributors, the alignment of "Sum of
Indirect Costs" and  "Net Income" does not agree with the corresponding values in the other
columns, and "Other Expense (not included in RPE multiplier)" is missing altogether. The
intended order and spacing are clearly seen in Tables A-3, A-6, A-8, etc. Also, the "value" shown
for Distribution on page A-5 should read "Incl. in G&A," not "Incl. in R&D."

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Pages A-6, A-7, A-8, and A-9: At several points, the text is written as if General Motors were the
first company to appear in the Appendix instead of the third. The general descriptions that
pertain to all companies (for example, "... in the remainder of this appendix..." on page A-8)
should be moved to Section A.2 DaimlerChrysler, the first company discussed.

Page A-ll, Section A.6: "Table A-12 presents relevant RPEcost contributors..."

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                           APPLICATION OF RPE MULTIPLIERS AND INDIRECT COST MULTIPLIERS (ICM)
                                      An Example Highlighting Conflicting Results from ICMs
                                                                                                                                              Appendix A

Indirect
Costs
Example Illustrating Application of RPE Multipliers and Indirect Cost Multiplierss ICMs)
Relative to RPE Approach
Manuf. Cost Increm. Indirect
(Weighted
Costs for
Industry Incremental
Average- $100 Direct
ICM Approach - Incremental Indirect Costs Incurred for
Incremental $100 in Direct Manufacturing Cost Using ICM Scale Factors
Short -Term Effects
Low Tech. Medium Tech.
Complexity Complexity
Cost Contributor Table 2-3) Manuf. Cost ICM
Manufacturing
Manufacturing Cost 100.0%
Production Overhead
Warranty 2.6%
R&D (Product Development) 5.3%
Depreciation & Amortization 7.0%
Maint, Repair, Operating Costs 15.2%
Total Production Overhead 29.1%
CflWXaaSeifcSjerhead
General & Administrative 10.0%
Retirement 0.4%
Health Care 0.3%
Total Corporate Overhead 1 °- 6%
^{j^Jditive)
Transportation (Distribution) 3.7%
Marketing 3.7%
Dealer Support & Discount 2.5%
Total Selling Cost (non-additive) 6-1%
45.4%
Total Indirect Costs Before Profit
Corporate Profit 4.1%
Total Retail Price Equivalent 149.4%
$100.00
$2.60
$5.30
$7.00
$15.20
$29.10
$10.01
$0.40
$0.30
$10.60
$3.70
$3.70
$2.50
$6.10
$45.40
$4.10
$149.40
1.2
0.2
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.5
0.1
Cost ICM Cost
$100.00
$3.12
$1.06
$0.00
$0.00
$4.18
$0.00
$0.00
$0.00
$0.00
$0.00
$1.85
$0.25
$2.10
$6.28
$100.00
1.4 $3.64
1.1 $5.83
0 $0.00
0 $0.00
$9.47
0 $0.00
0 $0.00
0 $0.00
$0.00
0 $0.00
1 $3.70
1 $2.50
$6.20
$15.67
Interpretation A- Apply the ICMs from Table 3-5 to the RPE-developed Indirect Costs*
$45.40 1.06 $48.12 1.16 $52.66
Total Indirect Cost Before Profit
Interpretation B - Apply the decimal part of ICMs from Table 3-5 to the Manufacturing Cost Base
$100.00 0.06 $6.00 0.16 $16.00






High Tech.
Complexity
ICM Cost
$100.00
1.6 $4.16
2 $10.60
1 $7.00
1 $15.20
$36.96
0.5 $5.01
0.5 $0.20
0.5 $0.15
$5.36
0.3 $1.11
1.5 $5.55
1.5 $3.75
$10.41
$52.73
1.53 $69.46
0.53 $53.00

Long-Term Effects
Low Tech.
Complexity
ICM
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1.03
0.03

Cost
$100.00
$2.60
$0.00
$0.00
$0.00
$2.60
$0.00
$0.00
$0.00
$0.00
$0.00
$0.00
$0.00
$0.00
$2.60
$46.76
$3.00

Medium Tech.
Complexity
ICM
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.3
1.04
0.04

Cost
$100.00
$2.60
$0.00
$0.00
$0.00
$2.60
$0.00
$0.00
$0.00
$0.00
$0.00
$0.00
$0.75
$0.75
$3.35
$47.22
$4.00

High Tech.
Complexity
ICM Cost
$100.00
1 $2.60
0.3 $1.59
1 $7.00
1 $15.20
$26.39
0.5 $5.01
0.5 $0.20
0.5 $0.15
$5.36
0 $0.00
0 $0.00
1 $2.50
$2.50
$34.25
1.34 $60.84
0.34 $34.00

*ln the same way that the scalar multipliers (which are presented as ICMs) were applied to indirect cost categories in Tables 3-3 and 3-4 and in the body of the table above.

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