48 C.F.R. § 31.205-6
(a) General. Compensation for personal services is allowable subject to the following general criteria and additional requirements contained in other parts of this cost principle:
(6)
(i) Compensation costs for certain individuals give rise to the need for special consideration. Such individuals include:
(ii) For these individuals, compensation must—
(2) Compensation not covered by labor-management agreements. Compensation for each employee or job class of employees must be reasonable for the work performed. Compensation is reasonable if the aggregate of each measurable and allowable element sums to a reasonable total. In determining the reasonableness of total compensation, consider only allowable individual elements of compensation. In addition to the provisions of 31.201-3, in testing the reasonableness of compensation for particular employees or job classes of employees, consider factors determined to be relevant by the contracting officer. Factors that may be relevant include, but are not limited to, conformity with compensation practices of other firms—
(1) Compensation for personal services includes compensation paid or to be paid in the future to employees in the form of—
(2) When compensation is paid with securities of the contractor or of an affiliate, the following additional restrictions apply:
(e) Income tax differential pay.
(f) Bonuses and incentive compensation.
(1) Bonuses and incentive compensation are allowable provided the—
(g) Severance pay.
(2) Severance pay is allowable only to the extent that, in each case, it is required by—
(4) Actual normal turnover severance payments shall be allocated to all work performed in the contractor's plant. However, if the contractor uses the accrual method to account for normal turnover severance payments, that method will be acceptable if the amount of the accrual is—
(h) Backpay. Backpay is a retroactive adjustment of prior years' salaries or wages. Backpay is unallowable except as follows:
(j) Pension costs.
(1) Pension plans are normally segregated into two types of plans: defined-benefit and defined-contribution pension plans. The contractor shall measure, assign, and allocate the costs of all defined-benefit pension plans and the costs of all defined-contribution pension plans in compliance with 48 CFR 9904.412—Cost Accounting Standard for Composition and Measurement of Pension Cost, and 48 CFR 9904.413—Adjustment and Allocation of Pension Cost. Pension costs are allowable subject to the referenced standards and the cost limitations and exclusions set forth in paragraph (j)(1)(i) and in paragraphs (j)(2) through (j)(6) of this subsection.
(2) Defined-benefit pension plans. The cost limitations and exclusions pertaining to defined-benefit plans are as follows:
(i)
(v) Increased pension costs resulting from the withdrawal of assets from a pension fund and transfer to another employee benefit plan fund, or transfer of assets to another account within the same fund, are unallowable except to the extent authorized by an advance agreement. If the withdrawal of assets from a pension fund is a plan termination under ERISA, the provisions of paragraph (j)(3) of this subsection apply. The advance agreement shall—
(3) Pension adjustments and asset reversions.
(i) For segment closings, pension plan terminations, or curtailment of benefits, the amount of the adjustment shall be—
(4) Defined-contribution pension plans. In addition to defined-contribution pension plans, this paragraph also covers profit sharing, savings plans, and other such plans, provided the plans fall within the definition of a pension plan at 31.001.
(6) Early retirement incentives. An early retirement incentive is an incentive given to an employee to retire early. For contract costing purposes, costs of early retirement incentives are allowable subject to the pension cost criteria contained in paragraphs (j)(2)(i) through (iv) of this subsection provided—
(k) Deferred compensation other than pensions. The costs of deferred compensation awards are allowable subject to the following limitations:
(l) Compensation incidental to business acquisitions. The following costs are unallowable:
(m) Fringe benefits.
(o) Postretirement benefits other than pensions (PRB).
(2) To be allowable, PRB costs shall be incurred pursuant to law, employer-employee agreement, or an established policy of the contractor, and shall comply with paragraphs (o)(2)(i), (ii), or (iii) of this subsection.
(i) Pay-as-you-go. PRB costs are not accrued during the working lives of employees. Costs are assigned to the period in which—
(ii) Terminal funding. PRB costs are not accrued during the working lives of the employees.
(iii) Accrual basis. PRB costs are accrued during the working lives of employees. Accrued PRB costs shall comply with the following:
(A) Be measured and assigned in accordance with one of the following two methods described under paragraphs (o)(2)(iii)(A)(1) or (o)(2)(iii)(A)(2) of this subsection:
(1) Generally accepted accounting principles. However, transitions from the pay-as-you-go method to the accrual accounting method must be handled according to paragraphs (o)(2)(iii)(A)(1)(i) through (iii) of this subsection.
(i) In the year of transition from the pay-as-you-go method to accrual accounting for purposes of Government contract cost accounting, the transition obligation shall be the excess of the accumulated PRB obligation over the fair value of plan assets determined in accordance with subparagraph (o)(2)(iii)(E) of this section; the fair value must be reduced by the prepayment credit as determined in accordance with subparagraph (o)(2)(iii)(F) of this subsection.
(ii) PRB cost attributable to the transition obligation assigned to the current year that is in excess of the amount assignable to accounting periods on the basis of a straight line amortization of the transition obligation over the average remaining working lives of active employees covered by the PRB plan or a 20-year period, whichever period is longer, is unallowable. However, if the plan is comprised of inactive participants only, the PRB cost attributable to the transition obligation assigned to the current year that is in excess of the amount assignable to accounting periods on a straight line amortization of the transition obligation over the average future life expectancy of the participants is unallowable.
(iii) For a plan that transitioned from pay-as-you-go to accrual accounting for Government contract cost accounting prior to July 22, 2013, the unallowable amount of PRB cost attributable to the transition obligation amortization shall continue to be based on the cost principle in effect at the time of the transition until the original transition obligation schedule is fully amortized.
(2) Contributions to a welfare benefit fund determined in accordance with applicable Internal Revenue Code. Allowable PRB costs based on such contributions shall—
(i) Be measured using reasonable actuarial assumptions, which shall include a health care inflation assumption unless prohibited by the Internal Revenue Code provisions governing welfare benefit funds;
(ii) Be assigned to accounting periods on the basis of the average working lives of active employees covered by the PRB plan or a 15 year period, whichever period is longer. However, if the plan is comprised of inactive participants only, the cost shall be spread over the average future life expectancy of the participants; and
(iii) Exclude Federal income taxes, whether incurred by the fund or the contractor (including any increase in PRB costs associated with such taxes), unless the fund holding the plan assets is tax-exempt under the provisions of 26 U.S.C 501(c).
(G) Comply with the following when changing from one accrual accounting method to another: the contractor shall—
(1) Treat the change in the unfunded actuarial liability (unfunded accumulated postretirement benefit obligation) as a gain or loss; and
(2) Present an analysis demonstrating that all costs assigned to prior periods have been accounted for in accordance with paragraphs (o)(2)(iii)(D), (E), and (F) of this section to ensure that no duplicate recovery of costs exists. Any duplicate recovery of costs due to the change from one method to another is unallowable. The analysis and new accrual accounting method may be a subject appropriate for an advance agreement in accordance with 31.109.
(p) Limitation on allowability of compensation.
| Contract award date | Applicable agencies | Covered employees | 31.205-6 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Before June 24, 2014 | Executive Agencies Other than DoD, NASA and Coast Guard | Senior Executive | (p)(2). |
| Before December 31, 2011 | DoD, NASA and Coast Guard | Senior Executive | (p)(2). |
| On/after December 31, 2011, and before June 24, 2014 | DoD, NASA, and Coast Guard | All Employees | (p)(3). |
| On/after June 24, 2014 | All Executive Agencies | All Employees | (p)(4). |
(1) Definitions. As used in this paragraph (p)—
(ii) Senior executive means—
(A) Prior to January 2, 1999—
(1) The Chief Executive Officer (CEO) or any individual acting in a similar capacity at the contractor's headquarters;
(2) The four most highly compensated employees in management positions at the contractor's headquarters, other than the CEO; and
(3) If the contractor has intermediate home offices or segments that report directly to the contractor's headquarters, the five most highly compensated employees in management positions at each such intermediate home office or segment.
(2) Senior executive compensation limit for contracts awarded before June 24, 2014—(i) Applicability. This paragraph (p)(2) applies to the following:
(3) All employee compensation limit for contracts awarded before June 24, 2014.
(4) All employee compensation limit for contracts awarded on or after June 24, 2014.
(iii) Exceptions. An agency head may establish one or more narrowly targeted exceptions for scientists, engineers, or other specialists upon a determination that such exceptions are needed to ensure that the executive agency has continued access to needed skills and capabilities. In making such a determination, the agency shall consider, at a minimum, for each contractor employee in a narrowly targeted excepted position—
(q) Employee stock ownership plans (ESOP).
(2) Costs of ESOPs are allowable subject to the following conditions:
(iv) When the contribution is in the form of cash—
(v) When the fair market value of unissued stock or stock of a closely held corporation is not readily determinable, the valuation will be made on a case-by-case basis taking into consideration the guidelines for valuation used by the IRS.
Editorial Note:For Federal Register citations affecting section 31.205-6, see the List of CFR Sections Affected, which appears in the Finding Aids section of the printed volume and at www.govinfo.gov.
[48 FR 42301, Sept. 19, 1983]