Engineering Economics Lecture 3 PDF
Engineering Economics Lecture 3 PDF
Lecture 3
Er. Sushant Raj Giri
B.E. (Industrial Engineering), MBA
Lecturer
Department of Industrial Engineering
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Mrs. Rosalind Setchfield’s Decision Problem
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Take or Not to Take the Offer
Year Installment Year Installment Reduced
Payment
1988 $65,277 1995 $65,277 $32,639
1989 65,277 1996 65,277 32,639
1990 65,277 1997 65,277 32,639
1991 65,277 1998 65,277 32,639
1992 65,277 1999 65,277 32,639
1993 65,277 2000 65,277 32,639
1994 65,277 2001 65,277 32,639
2002 65,277 32,639 $140,000 lump
2003 65,277 32,639 sum payment
2004 65,277 now
2005 65,277
2006 65,277
2007 65,277
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What Do We Need to Know?
• To make such comparisons (Ms. Rosalind
Setchfield’s decision problem), we must be able to
compare the value of money at different point in
time.
• To do this, we need to develop a method for
reducing a sequence of benefits and costs to a
single point in time. Then, we will make our
comparisons on that basis.
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Time Value of Money
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Repayment Plans
End of Year Receipts Payments
Plan 1 Plan 2
Year 0 $20,000.00 $200.00 $200.00
Year 1 5,141.85 0
Year 2 5,141.85 0
Year 3 5,141.85 0
Year 4 5,141.85 0
Year 5 5,141.85 30,772.48
P = $20,000, A = $5,141.85, F = $30,772.48
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Cash Flow Diagram
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Methods of Calculating Interest
• Simple interest: the practice of charging an
interest rate only to an initial sum (principal
amount).
• Compound interest: the practice of charging
an interest rate to an initial sum and to any
previously accumulated interest that has not
been withdrawn.
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Simple Interest
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Compound Interest
End of Beginnin Interest Ending
Year g Balance earned Balance
• P = Principal amount
• i = Interest rate 0 $1,000
• N = Number of
interest periods 1 $1,000 $80 $1,080
• Example:
– P = $1,000 2 $1,080 $86.40 $1,166.4
– i = 8% 0
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Comparing Simple to Compound Interest
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Economic Equivalence
• What do we mean by “economic
equivalence?”
• Why do we need to establish an economic
equivalence?
• How do we establish an economic
equivalence?
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Economic Equivalence
• Economic equivalence
exists between cash
flows that have the
same economic effect
and could therefore be
traded for one another.
• Even though the
amounts and timing of
the cash flows may
differ, the appropriate
interest rate makes
them equal.
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Typical Repayment Plans for a Bank
Loan of $20,000
Repayments
F = P(1 + i)
today for N periods at N
i, you will have F
dollars at the end of
period N. 0
period N is equal to a
−N
single sum P dollars P = F (1 + i )
now, if your earning
power is measured in
terms of interest rate i. P
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Equivalence Between Two Cash Flows
Various dollar
amounts that will
be economically
equivalent to
$3,000 in 5 years,
given an interest
rate of 8%
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Equivalent Cash Flows are Equivalent at Any
Common Point In Time
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Example 4.5 Equivalence Calculations with Multiple
Payments
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Single Cash Flow Formula
• Single payment F
compound amount F = P(1 + i) N
N = 8 years N
P = $2,000
• Soln:
P
F = $2,000(1 + 010
. )8
= $2,000( F / P,10%,8)
= $4,28718
.
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Single Cash Flow Formula
• Single payment P = F(1 + i) − N F
P1 = $25,000( P / F,10%,1)
P2 = $3,000( P / F,10%,2)
P4 = $5,000( P / F,10%,4)
P = P1 + P2 + P4
= $28,622
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Example 4.12 Calculating the Actual Worth of a Long-Term Contract
0 1 2 3 4 5 N-1 N
F
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Equal Payment Series Compound Amount Factor
(1 + i ) N − 1
0 1 2 3 F=A
N i
A
= A( F / A, i , N )
Example 4.13:
• Given: A = $3,000, N = 10 years, and i = 7%
• Find: F
• Solution: F = $3,000(F/A,7%,10) = $41,449.20
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Sinking Fund Factor
F
i
A= F
0 1 2 3 (1 + i ) − 1
N
N
A = F ( A / F ,i, N )
Example 4.15:
• Given: F = $5,000, N = 5 years, and i = 7%
• Find: A
• Solution: A = $5,000(A/F,7%,5) = $869.50
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Capital Recovery Factor
P
i (1 + i )N
A= P
1 2 3 (1 + i ) − 1
N
0 N
A
= P( A / P, i , N )
Example 4.16:
• Given: P = $250,000, N = 6 years, and i = 8%
• Find: A
• Solution: A = $250,000(A/P,8%,6) = $54,075
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Equal Payment Series Present Worth Factor
P
(1 + i ) N − 1
P= A
1 2 3 i (1 + i ) N
0 N
A = A( P / A, i , N )
Example 4.18:
• Given: A = $32,639, N = 9 years, and i = 8%
• Find: P
• Solution: P = $32,639(P/A,8%,9) = $203,893
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Linear Gradient Series
i (1 + i ) − iN − 1
N
P=G
i (1 + i )
2 N
= G( P / G, i, N )
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Gradient Series as a Composite Series
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Example 4.20 $2,000
$1,750
$1,500
$1,250
$1,000
0
1 2 3 4 5
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Method 1: $2,000
$1,750
$1,500
$1,250
$1,000
0
1 2 3 4 5
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Method 2:
P1 = $1,000( P / A,12%,5)
= $3,604.80
P2 = $250( P / G,12%,5)
= $1,599.20
P = $3,604.08 + $1,599.20
= $5,204
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Geometric Gradient Series
1 − (1 + g ) N (1 + i ) − N
A1 , if i ≠ g
P= i−g
NA1 / (1 + i ), if i = g
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Example 4.24 Geometric Gradient:
Find P, Given A1,g,i,N
• Given:
g = 7%
i = 12%
N = 5 years
A1 = $54,440
• Find: P
. ) −5
1 − (1 + 0.07) 5 (1 + 012
P = $54,440
. − 0.07
012
= $151,109
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Unconventional Equivalence Calculations
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Unconventional Equivalence Calculations
• Situation 2:
What value of A
would make the two
cash flow
transactions
equivalent if i =
10%?
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40
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Summary
• Money has a time value because it can earn more
money over time.
• Economic equivalence exists between individual
cash flows and/or patterns of cash flows that have
the same value. Even though the amounts and
timing of the cash flows may differ, the
appropriate interest rate makes them equal.
• The purpose of developing various interest
formulas was to facilitate the economic
equivalence computation.
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Assignment 1
• Chapter 2: 2.1, 2.3
• Chapter 3: 3.3, 3.5
• Chapter 4: 4.1, 4.5, 4.7, 4.9, 4.13, 4.19, 4.22, 4.26,
4.35, 4.40, 4.45, 4.49, 4.52
End of Lecture 3