Topic 3
Topic 3
There are numerous general economic concepts that must be taken into account in engineering
studies. In broad terms, economics deals with the interactions between people and wealth, and engineering is
concerned with the cost-effective use of scientific knowledge to benefit humankind.
– those products and services that are directly used by people to satisfy their wants.
The producers of consumer goods and services must be aware of, and are subject to the changing wants of
the people to whom their products are sold.
Ultimately, the producer goods serve to satisfy human wants, but only as a means for the end.
Thus, the amount of producer goods needed is determined indirectly by the amount of consumer goods or
services that are demanded by people.
Goods and services are produced and desired because they have utility.
UTILITY - the power to satisfy human wants and needs. Thus, they may be used or consumed directly, or they
may be used to produce other goods or services.
PRICE – the amount that must be paid in terms of some medium of exchange to obtain the particular product.
Much of our business activity, including engineering, focuses on increasing the utility (value) of materials and
products by changing their form or location. Thus, iron ore, worth only a few dollars per ton, significantly
increases in value by being processed, combined with suitable alloying elements, and converted into razor
blades. Similarly, snow, worth almost nothing when found high in distant mountains, becomes quite valuable
when it is delivered in melted form several hundred miles away to dry southern California.
1. Necessities
2. Luxuries.
Example:
A person living in one community may find that an automobile is a necessity to get to and from work. If the
same person lived and worked in a different city, adequate public transportation might be available, and an
automobile would be a luxury.
For all goods and services, there is a relationship between the price that must be paid and the quantity that will
be demanded or purchased.
As the selling price per unit (p) is increased, there will be less demand (D) for the product, and as the selling
price is decreased, the demand will increase.
The relationship between price and demand can be expressed as the linear function:
Where:
a = the intercept on the price axis
b = the slope.
Thus, b is the amount by which demand increases for each unit decrease in p. Both a and b are constants.
C. Competition
Because economic laws are general statements regarding the interaction of people and wealth, they are
affected by the economic environment in which people and wealth exist.
Perfect competition
- occurs in a situation in which any given product is supplied by a large number of vendors and there is
no restriction on additional suppliers entering the market. Under such conditions, there is assurance of complete
freedom on the part of both buyer and seller.
- may never occur in actual practice, because of a multitude of factors that impose some degree of
limitation upon the actions of buyers or sellers, or both. However, with conditions of perfect competition assumed,
it is easier to formulate general economic laws.
Substitute,
From Differential calculus under the topic of maxima, the demand, Dˆ, that will produce maximum total
revenue can be obtained by solving:
Thus,
It must be emphasized that, because of cost–volume relationships, most businesses would not obtain
maximum profits by maximizing revenue.
Accordingly, the cost–volume relationship must be considered and related to revenue, because cost reductions
provide a key motivation for many engineering process improvements.
Where:
CF = fixed cost
CV = variable costs
Where:
cv = variable cost per unit
Scenario 1:
When total revenue, as depicted in Figure 2-3, and total cost are combined, the typical results as a function
of demand are depicted in Figure 2-4. At breakeven point D′1, total revenue is equal to total cost, and an
increase in demand will result in a profit for the operation.
In order for a profit to occur and to achieve the typical results depicted in Figure 2-4, two conditions must be
met:
1. (a - cv) > 0; that is, the price per unit that will result in no demand has to be greater than the variable cost
per unit. (This avoids negative demand.)
2. Total revenue (TR) must exceed total cost (CT) for the period involved.
Profit
To ensure that we have maximized profit (rather than minimized it), the sign of the second derivative must be
negative. Checking this, we find that:
An economic breakeven point for an operation occurs when total revenue equals total cost. Then for total
revenue and total cost, as used in the development and at any demand D,
Because Equation is a quadratic equation with one unknown (D), we can solve for the breakeven points D′1
and D′2 (the roots of the equation):
Solution:
Then, under the assumption that demand is immediately met, total revenue (TR) = p · D. If the linear
relationship for costs also used in the model, the typical situation is depicted in Figure 2-6.
Thus, the breakeven point is more sensitive to a reduction in variable cost per hour than to the same
percentage reduction in the fixed cost. Furthermore, notice that the breakeven point in this example is highly
sensitive to the selling price per unit, p.
Market competition
-often creates pressure to lower the breakeven point of an operation;
The lower the breakeven point, the less likely that a loss will occur during market fluctuations.
Also, if the selling price remains constant (or increases), a larger profit will be achieved at any level of
operation above the reduced breakeven point.