D
Deleted member 126639
Guest
I think EP should be depreciated along with direct and indirect costs. As the building ages, or other forms of obsolescence appear, it makes no sense to keep EP constant. The OP indicates $130,000 in EP as new. If a building is now 50 percent depreciated, how can there still be $130,000 EP? Make it more extreme, with 80 percent physical, functional and external depreciation/obsolescence due to neglect and changed market conditions. Do you still think there is $130k in EP? I say as the property ages, the neighborhood changes or standard designs change, the EP needs to be depreciated the same as the cost estimate.
The problem is that same argument can be applied to labor, which is a substantial component of the overall cost.
Let us think of other more common examples of deprecation: cars.
The new price of a car includes the parts, labor, and profit to the company that manufactured the car. Do we separate those costs? No.
Why should be any different for real estate?