Dairy Industry Data Pricing




15 JUNE 2007 NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE, No. 66 1757

In many situations, however, applications for data are likely to require both core and
value added data. In these situations, LIC provides a price for the combination of
core and value added data. The price of the core data contained in this combination
would be set as if only the core data were being provided, and in accordance with
this methodology. The Applicant can either accept LIC’s implied price for the value
added data contained in this combination, or be provided with an extract of core data
at a price determined in accordance with this pricing methodology and carry out any
processes it chooses itself to generate its own value added data.

The method for setting the price of core data parallels that which LIC would carry out
for allocating costs to a service it sells itself. In setting prices for core data,
processes that add value are omitted. Where processes handle both value added
and core data, their costs allocated to core data are reduced so that they only reflect
the share of the cost relating to the core data.

Capital Costs

The costs include capital costs (e.g. computers, furniture etc; but not the inherent
capital value of the core database). The capital costs are calculated on a capital cost
recovery basis over the estimated lives of the assets employed in collecting,
verifying, correcting, storing and extracting core data at LIC’s weighted average cost
of capital. This calculation gives an annual cost covering both the depreciation of the
asset over its life and a return on the capital employed, also over its life.

Pricing Method

Processing Applications

There are significant costs in processing each application. With regard to the Panel,
costs include Panel members’ time. From LIC’s perspective, an application entails
significant amounts of management time in preparing the documentation required
and carrying out the investigations needed to advise and service the Panel and/or the
Applicant. LIC must, among other things, specify the outputs required, prepare an
agreement with the Applicant, and make the necessary arrangements to extract the
data.

The costs of the Panel are (partially) met through the application fee prescribed
under the Regulations, although at $200 (including GST) the revenue from the
application fees will be a small fraction of the costs of the process.

Similarly, LIC will be charging an administration fee for its work in processing
applications, but again this fee represents only a small fraction of the costs incurred
by LIC in carrying out this work.

In the event the Applicant and LIC come to a separate agreement where LIC
undertakes administrative tasks for an applicant in relation to data delivery, that
separate agreement will provide for LIC to be engaged in accordance with LIC’s
(Business Information Unit) standard terms and conditions, including standard
charges.



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Online Sources for this page:

VUW Te Waharoa PDF NZ Gazette 2007, No 66


Gazette.govt.nz PDF NZ Gazette 2007, No 66





✨ LLM interpretation of page content

🌾 Pricing Methodology for Access to Core Data (continued from previous page)

🌾 Primary Industries & Resources
Dairy Industry, Core Data, Pricing Methodology, Access Charges, Database Management, Value Added Data, Capital Costs, Application Processing