H
Handling
Costs: The cost involved in moving,
transferring, preparing, and otherwise handling inventory.
Harmonized Commodity Description & Coding System
(Harmonized Code): An international classification
system that assigns identification numbers to specific products. The coding
system ensures that all parties in int'l. trade use a consistent classification
for the purposes of documentation, statistical control, and duty assessment.
Haulage: The inland transport service which is offered by the carrier under the terms and conditions of the tariff and of the relative transport document.
Hawthorne
Effect: From a study conducted at the
Hawthorne Plant of Western Electric Company from 1927-1932 which found that the
act of showing people that you are concerned usually results in better job
performance. Studying and monitoring of activities are typically seen as being
concerned and results in improved productivity.
Hazardous
Goods: Articles or substances capable of
posing a significant risk to health, safety, or property, and that ordinarily
require special attention when transported. Also called Dangerous Goods.
Hazardous
Material: A substance or material which the
Department of Transportation has determined to be capable of posing a risk to
health, safety, and property when stored or transported in commerce.
Heijunka: In the just-in-time philosophy, an approach to level
production throughout the supply chain to match the planned rate of end product
sales.
Hierarchy of Cost Assignability: In cost accounting, an approach to group activity costs at
the level of an organization where they are incurred, or can be directly
related to. Examples are the level where individual units are identified (unit
level), where batches of units are organized or processed (batch level), where
a process is operated or supported (process level), or where costs cannot be
objectively assigned to lower level activities or processes (facility level).
This approach is used to better understand the nature of the costs, including
the level in the organization at which they are incurred, the level to which
they can be initially assigned (attached), and the degree to which they are
assignable to other activity and/or cost object levels, i.e., activity or cost
object cost, or sustaining costs.
Highway
Trust Fund: A fund into which highway users
(carriers and automobile operators) pay; the fund pays for federal government's
highway construction share.
Highway
Use Taxes: Taxes that federal and state
governments assess against highway users (the fuel tax is an example). The
government uses the use tax money to pay for the construction, maintenance, and
policing of highways.
Home
Page: The starting point for a web site.
It's the page that's retrieved and displayed by default when a user visits a
web site. The default home-page name for a server depends on the server's
configuration. On many web servers, it is index.html or default.htm. Some web
servers support multiple home pages.
Hopper
Cars: Railcars that permit top loading
and bottom unloading of bulk commodities; some hopper cars have permanent tops
with hatches to provide protection against the elements.
Horizontal Play/Horizontal Hub: This is a term for a function that cuts across many
industries and usually defines a facility or organization that is providing a
common service.
Hostler: An individual employed to move trucks and trailers within a
terminal or warehouse yard area.
House Air Waybill (HAWB):
A bill of lading issued by a forwarder to a shipper as a receipt for goods that
the forwarder will consolidate with cargo from other shippers for transport.
1) A large retailer or manufacturer
having many trading partners.
2) A reference for a transportation
network as a "hub and spoke" which is common in the airline and
trucking industry. For example, a hub airport serves as the focal point for the
origin and termination of long-distance flights where flights from outlying
areas are fed into the hub airport for connecting flights.
3) A common connection point for
devices in a network.
4) A web "hub" is one of the
initial names for what is now known as a "portal." It came from the
creative idea of producing a web site which would contain many different
"portal spots" (small boxes that looked like ads with links to
different, yet related content). This content, combined with Internet
technology, made the idea a milestone in the development and appearance of web
sites, primarily due to the ability to display a lot of useful content and
store one's preferred information on a secured server. The web term
"hub" was replaced with portal.
5)
An Internet web site that provides a central repository for data or a central
planning capability in an industry or supply network.
Hub
Airport: An airport that serves as the focal
point for the origin and termination of long-distance flights; flights from
outlying areas meet connecting flights at the hub airport.
Human Resources (HR):
The function broadly responsible for personnel policies and practices within an
organization.
Hundredweight (CWT): a
pricing unit used in transportation (equal to 100 pounds).
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