Lecture 2
Lecture 2
1-1
Chapter 1
Foundations Of
Engineering Economy
Engineering Economy
7th edition
Leland Blank
Anthony Tarquin
1-2
LEARNING OUTCOMES
1. Role in decision
7. Economic equivalence
making
8. Simple and compound
2. Study approach
interest
3. Ethics and economics
9. Minimum attractive
4. Interest rate rate of return
5. Terms and symbols 10. Spreadsheet
6. Cash flows functions
1-3
GENERAL STEPS FOR DECISION MAKING
PROCESSES
1-4
STEPS IN
AN
ENGINEE
RING
ECONOM
Y STUDY
1-5
• DECISION MAKING IS A BROAD TOPIC, FOR IT IS A MAJOR
ASPECT OF EVERYDAY HUMAN EXISTENCE.
1) SIMPLE PROBLEMS
SHOULD I PAY OR USE CREDIT?
SHALL WE REPLACE A BURNED-OUT MOTOR?
IF WE USE THREE CRATES OF AN ITEM A WEEK, HOW MANY CRATES
SHOULD WE BUY AT A TIME?
1-6
2) Intermediate Problems (mainly economic)
Which equipment should be selected for a new assembly line?
Which materials should be used as roofing, siding, and structural
support for a new building?
Which printing press should be purchased? A low cost press
requiring three operators, or a more expensive one needing only two
operators?
1-7
EXAMPLES OF ENGINEERING
ECONOMIC ANALYSIS
Which engineering projects are worthwhile?
1-11
THE BIG PICTURE
• ENGINEERING ECONOMY IS AT THE HEART OF MAKING
DECISIONS.
• THESE DECISIONS INVOLVE THE FUNDAMENTAL ELEMENTS
OF CASH FLOWS OF MONEY, TIME AND INTEREST RATES.
• CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCES THE BASIC CONCEPTS AND
TERMINOLOGY NECESSARY FOR AN ENGINEER TO COMBINE
THESE THREE ESSENTIAL ELEMENTS IN ORGANIZED,
MATHEMATICALLY CORRECT WAYS TO SOLVE PROBLEMS
THAT WILL LEAD TO BETTER DECISIONS.
1-
12
ETHICS – DIFFERENT LEVELS
UNIVERSAL MORALS OR ETHICS – FUNDAMENTAL
BELIEFS: STEALING, LYING, HARMING OR
MURDERING ANOTHER ARE WRONG
PERSONAL MORALS OR ETHICS – BELIEFS THAT AN
INDIVIDUAL HAS AND MAINTAINS OVER TIME; HOW A
UNIVERSAL MORAL IS INTERPRETED AND USED BY
EACH PERSON
PROFESSIONAL OR ENGINEERING ETHICS – FORMAL
STANDARD OR CODE THAT GUIDES A PERSON IN
WORK ACTIVITIES AND DECISION MAKING
1-
13
CODE OF ETHICS FOR ENGINEERS
ALL DISCIPLINES HAVE A FORMAL CODE OF ETHICS. NATIONAL SOCIETY OF
PROFESSIONAL ENGINEERS (NSPE) MAINTAINS A CODE SPECIFICALLY FOR
ENGINEERS; MANY ENGINEERING PROFESSIONAL SOCIETIES HAVE THEIR OWN CODE
1-
14
INTEREST AND INTEREST RATE
• INTEREST – THE MANIFESTATION OF THE TIME
VALUE OF MONEY
• FEE THAT ONE PAYS TO USE SOMEONE ELSE’S MONEY
• DIFFERENCE BETWEEN AN ENDING AMOUNT OF MONEY AND A BEGINNING
AMOUNT OF MONEY
1-
15
RATE OF RETURN
• INTEREST EARNED OVER A PERIOD OF TIME IS
EXPRESSED AS A PERCENTAGE OF THE
ORIGINAL AMOUNT (PRINCIPAL)
1-
16
INTEREST PAID INTEREST
EARNED
1-
18
INTEREST – EXAMPLE [2]
• A COMPANY PLANS TO BORROW $20,000 FROM A
BANK FOR ONE YEAR AT 9% INTEREST FOR A NEW
RECORDING EQUIPMENT
1-
22
CASH FLOWS: TERMS
• CASH INFLOWS – REVENUES (R), RECEIPTS, INCOMES,
SAVINGS GENERATED BY PROJECTS AND ACTIVITIES THAT
FLOW IN. PLUS SIGN USED
• CASH OUTFLOWS – DISBURSEMENTS (D), COSTS, EXPENSES,
TAXES CAUSED BY PROJECTS AND ACTIVITIES THAT FLOW
OUT. MINUS SIGN USED
1-
23
PARAMETERS AND CASH FLOWS
• Parameters
• First cost (investment amounts)
• Estimates of useful or project life
• Estimated future cash flows (revenues and expenses and salvage
values)
• Interest rate
• Cash Flows
• Estimate flows of money coming into the firm – revenues,
salvage values, etc. – positive cash flows--cash inflows
• Estimates of investment costs, operating costs, taxes paid –
negative cash flows -- cash outflows
1-
24
1-
25
THE CASH FLOW DIAGRAM: CFD
1-
26
CASH FLOWS: ESTIMATING
POINT ESTIMATE – A SINGLE-VALUE ESTIMATE OF A CASH FLOW
ELEMENT OF AN ALTERNATIVE
CASH INFLOW: INCOME = $150,000 PER MONTH
Time
0 1 2 … … … n-1 n
One time
period
F = $100
Show the cash flows (to approximate scale)
0 1 2 … … … n-1 n
P = $-80 1-
Cash flows are shown as directed arrows: + (up) for inflow 28
- (down) for outflow
CASH FLOW DIAGRAM EXAMPLE
Plot observed cash flows over last 8 years and estimated sale next
year for $150.
1-
29
CASH FLOW DIAGRAM EXAMPLE
Plot observed cash flows over last 8 years and estimated sale next
year for $150.
1-
30
1-
31