Topic 1 Introduction To Economics
Topic 1 Introduction To Economics
Textbook:
• Riggs, J.L., Bedworth, D.D., Randhawa, S.U., and Khan, A.M., Engineering
Economics, 2nd Canadian Edition, McGraw Hill, 1997, Chapter 1.
Supplementary Readings:
• Blank, L., and Tarquin, A., Engineering Economy, 6th Edition, McGraw Hill, 2005,
Chapter 1.
• Park, C.S., Pelot, R., Porteous, K.C., and Zuo, M.J., Contemporary Engineering
Economics, 2nd Canadian Edition, Addison Wesley Longman, 2001, Chapter 1.
• Steiner, H.M., Engineering Economic Principles, 2nd Edition, McGraw Hill, 1996,
Chapters 1, 2.
• C.L. Fish (1923) formulated an investment model related to the bond market.
[Engineering Economics, 2nd edition, McGraw-Hill, New York, 1923]
• J. Dean (1951) set up the base for modern engineering economics through
approaches to discounted cash flow and capital rationing for analysing the effects of
supply and demand for investment funds in allocating resources [Capital Budgeting,
Columbia, New York, 1951].
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• How many units of production have to be sold before a profit can be made?
• Among several proposals for funding that yield substantially equivalent worthwhile
results but have different cash flow patterns, which is preferable?
• Are the benefits expected from a public service project large enough to make its
implementation costs acceptable?
d. Mutually interdependent investments: They are the ones which have to be jointly
considered in economic analysis.
e. Externality: any costs or benefits which are not counted directly on the books of
accounts, e.g. benefits from public investments (such as road systems), pollution
cost, etc.
g. Cost of capital:
• opportunity cost.
• financial cost, e.g. interest or mortgage.
b. Decision procedure
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c. Viewpoint
• Institutional position: Different analysts may view differently on an investment due
to their different servicing organisations. The word: “Institutional” here is a term in
social science. It means an entity in the society in which the analyst is located.
• Different viewpoints result in different evaluations.
• Avoid the cross-eyed view, the short-sighted view and tunnel vision view.
d. System analysis
It means the investigation of an interrelated entity whose interdependent parts and
their effects on each other must be studied as a whole. To buy a new machine (say a
CNC milling machine), for example, besides the direct economic evaluation on this
investment (such as cost of the machine, expected annual return, etc.), also need to
consider its influence on the whole production system and company’s finance
situation.
f. Differential-consequences principle
Only the different elements of alternatives are considered for decision making. We
evaluate two computer systems just by their different added features and ignore their
common system configurations.
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k. Incremental analysis
To compare the marginal cost against its marginal benefit (e.g. revenue) of an
alternative over another. The incremental analysis is in fact the application of the
standard rule of classical microeconomics to engineering economy.
b. Problem 1
You want to compare two possible places for spending your 3 months of leave. You
prepare the following table, showing your estimate of what you and your family will
spend while renting a house in Mexico or passing the time at your home in the
United States. The amounts are in dollars for the three months period.
Mexico United States
Rent $2,400 $0
Utilities $100 $300
Travel $1,200 $0
Food $750 $1,500
Entertainment $300 $600
Clothes $500 $500
Dentist $80 $240
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c. Problem 2
You have an opportunity to purchase a part interest in a small firm for $3,000. You
will be a silent partner, going no work and collecting profits at the rate of $850 per
year for as long as you wish to do so. Should you join the firm in this way, you
intend to pass on the rights to your children. In other words, the profits may be
considered to be perpetual. A friend to whom you have told your good fortune
offers you $2,000 now to turn over your opportunity to him. Your wife, who has
been reading your engineering economy book over your shoulder, recommends that
you take this offer immediately since it represents an infinite rate of return on your
investment to date (which is zero). Your personal minimum attractive rate of return,
which you can receive any time for any amount, is 20 percent. Should you follow
her advice? Why or Why not?
d. Problem 3
Your company has spent $700,000 in developing a new electric toothbrush that will
result in a total profit (total revenue minus total costs) to the company of
$1,100,000 over the life of the venture. (The $700,000 has already been included in
the total costs.) You are absolutely certain that the expenditure of $600,000 more,
that is, over and above the $700,000 already spent, will ensure the predicted total
income. On the other hand, if the extra money is not invested, you are equally sure
that the venture will have to be abandoned. Should you recommend the expenditure
of $600,000? Defend your decision.
Answers to tutorial questions
a. Qualitative Questions:
1) Annual rate of return = 24,333%
2) In mutually exclusive investments, only one of the alternatives proposed will be
built. In mutually independent investments, no technical relation exists between the
projects under consideration.
3)
(i) Independent.
(ii) Mutually exclusive.
(iii) The 15 projects are mutually independent, but the three that involve
alternative solutions are, insofar as the solutions are concerned, mutually
exclusive.
4) This is an extremely controversial question. Depending on one’s politics, the answer
can range from “Nothing should be built or controlled by government,” which is an
anarchist’s answer, to “Everything should be built or controlled by government,”
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