|
Definition of Distribution cost
1. Noun. Any cost incurred by a producer or wholesaler or retailer or distributor (as for advertising and shipping etc).
Lexicographical Neighbors of Distribution Cost
Literary usage of Distribution cost
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Developing China's Natural Gas Market: The Energy Policy Challenges by International Energy Agency (2002)
"The per unit distribution cost is then added to the average market replacement
value to give the city-gate price for the distributor to negotiate with gas ..."
2. The Common Sense of Political Economy, Including a Study of the Human Basis by Philip Henry Wicksteed (1910)
"CHAPTER IX DISTRIBUTION. COST OF PRODUCTION problem of distribution is analogous
to the problem of personal expenditure of resources, inasmuch as it ..."
3. Policy Modeling of a Dual Grain Market: The Case of Wheat in India by Raj Krishna, Ajay Chhibber (1983)
"distribution cost figures made available by the FCI averaged 15.6 percent of the
procurement price between 1969/70 and 1975/76. This ratio is applied to the ..."
4. Journal of the New England Water Works Association by New England Water Works Association (1916)
"We have left for disposal the distribution cost under the second heading. A part
of the distribution cost is the fire service cost. ..."
5. Handbook of Mechanical and Electrical Cost Data: Giving Shipping Weights by Halbert Powers Gillette, Richard Turner Dana (1918)
"To the Production Cost must be added a distribution cost chargeable to all ...
The distribution cost includes all operating expenses and fixed charges that ..."
6. Principles of Marketing: A Textbook for Colleges and Schools of Business by Paul Wesley Ivey (1921)
"Thus a tax of $i on each pair of shoes, having a distribution cost of $5, would
make necessary a distribution price of $6. In this instance, the price of a ..."
7. Central-station Electric Service: Its Commercial Development and Economic by Samuel Insull (1915)
"Column 4 represents the distribution cost of the street-railway business.
So columns 5 and 6 represent, respectively, the distribution cost of the average ..."