Engineering Economic Analysis

(Chris Devlin) #1

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Problems 165


  1. Present sumsPare beginning of period and all series receipts or disbursementsA
    and future sumsFoccur at the end of the interest period. The compound interest
    tables were derived on this basis.

  2. In industrial economic analyses, the appropriate point of reference from which to
    compute the consequences of alternatives is the total firm. Taking a narrower view
    of the consequences can result in suboptimal solutions.

  3. Only the differences between the alternatives are relevant. Past costs are sunk costs
    and generally do not affect present or future costs. For this reason they are ignored.

  4. The investment problem is isolated from the financing problem. We generally
    assume that all required money is borrowed at interest ratei.

  5. For now, stable prices are assumed. The inflation-deflation problem is deferred to
    Chapter 14. Similarly, our discussion of income taxes is deferred to Chapter 12.

  6. Often uniform cash flowsor arithmetic gradients are reasonable assumptions. How-
    ever, spreadsheets simplify the finding of PW in more complicated problems.


Problems


Jl


Most problems could be solved with a spreadsheet, but
calculators and tabulated factors are often easier. The
icon indicates that a spreadsheet is recommended.

5-1 ComputePfor the following diagram.


5-3 What is the valueofPfor the situation diagrammed?

200

r I


300

I


200

r


100

5; t
0-1-2-3-4

1

i=10%


100

t 0
0-1-2-3-4

1

i=12%


p p

5-2 Compute the value ofPthat is equivalent to the four


cash flows in the following diagram. (Answer: P=$498.50)


30 5-4 Compute the value ofQin the following diagram.

r t t
0-1-2-3

1

30

r 50 50 50 50 50 50
t t t t t t
0-1-2-3-4-5

1
Q

i= 15%
i= 12%

p

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