average costs method - meaning and definition. What is average costs method
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What (who) is average costs method - definition

FACTOR IN ECONOMICS
Average total cost; Average total costs; Average costs

Average cost method         
Average costing; Average Cost; Weighted Average Cost; Moving-Average Cost; Weighted average cost; Moving-average cost; Moving average cost; Moving-Average cost; Weighted-average cost; Weighted-average Cost; Weighted-Average Cost; Weighted-Average cost
Under the average cost method, it is assumed that the cost of inventory is based on the average cost of the goods available for sale during the period.
Moving average         
TYPE OF STATISTICAL MEASURE OVER SUBSETS OF A DATASET
Rolling average; Exponential Moving Average; Weighted moving average; Simple moving average; EWMA; Exponentially weighted moving average; Exponential moving average; Moving average (finance); Running average; Moving average (technical analysis); Exponential average; Moving Annual Total; Smavg; Moving annual total; Moving mean; Rolling mean; Temporal average; Temporal averaging; Time average; Time averaging; Weighted rolling average; Moving Average; 7-day rolling average
In statistics, a moving average (rolling average or running average) is a calculation to analyze data points by creating a series of averages of different subsets of the full data set. It is also called a moving mean (MM)Hydrologic Variability of the Cosumnes River Floodplain (Booth et al.
court costs         
COSTS OF HANDLING A CASE
Legal costs; Court cost; Law cost; Law costs; Law-cost; Law-costs; Court fees; Docket fee; Docket fees; Legal expenses
n. fees for expenses that the courts pass on to attorneys, who then pass them on to their clients or to the losing party. Court costs usually include: filing fees, charges for serving summons and subpenas, court reporter charges for depositions (which can be very expensive), court transcripts and copying papers and exhibits. The prevailing party in a lawsuit is usually awarded court costs. Attorneys' fees can be included as court costs only if there is a statute providing for attorneys' fee awards in a particular type of case, or if the case involved a contract which had an attorneys' fee clause (commonly found in promissory notes, mortgages and deeds of trust). If a losing party does not agree with the claimed court costs (included in a filed cost bill) he/she/it may move (ask) the judge to "tax costs" (meaning reduce or disallow the cost), resulting in a hearing at which the court determines which costs to allow and in what amount (how much). See also: cost bill prevailing party

Wikipedia

Average cost

In economics, average cost or unit cost is equal to total cost (TC) divided by the number of units of a good produced (the output Q):

A C = T C Q . {\displaystyle AC={\frac {TC}{Q}}.}

Average cost has strong implication to how firms will choose to price their commodities. Firms’ sale of commodities of certain kind is strictly related to the size of the certain market and how the rivals would choose to act.