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Ch 1 Econ. Dec. 2. Making Economic Decisions . Engineering economy
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1. 1 Engineering Economy: Applying Theory to Practice 3rd Chapter 1:
Making Economic Decisions
2. Ch 1 Econ. Dec. 2 Making Economic Decisions Engineering economy – define & examples
Decision-making principles
Decision-making process
Decision-making in reality
Ethics & decision-making
Role of engineering economy
Operational economics & cost definitions
3. Ch 1 Econ. Dec. 3 Engineering & Engineering Economy Engineering projects
High costs to build, buy, & produce
Benefits, revenues, reduced costs over 5 to 50+ years
Minimizing cost & maximizing value over time
Wellington (1887): engineering is the art of doing well with one dollar what any bungler can do with two after a fashion
4. Ch 1 Econ. Dec. 4 What is Engineering Economy? Time value of money
$1 today worth more than $1 next year or in 10 years
$0 ? $1 ? $1-10
Engineering economy formulas account for time value of money
P = F / (1 + i)N
5. Ch 1 Econ. Dec. 5 Example Applications Which engineering design choice?
Longer life at a higher cost
Higher cost but more benefits
Which engineering projects?
Can’t fund all projects – industrial & public
Personal
Retirement, buying a house, …
6. Ch 1 Econ. Dec. 6 Principles for Decision Making Use common measure for consequences ($s)
$0 and $20 cannot be added together
Can’t compare hours of overtime with number of items completed – unless both in $ terms
Include consequences that cannot be measured
Completing projects early, shipping products sooner, improving product quality
Estimates or engineering judgment
7. Ch 1 Econ. Dec. 7 Principles for Decision Making (cont’d.) Consider only differences between alternatives
Ignore sunk costs – past
What you paid 2 years ago for your computer
Engineering design often has only costs
Benefits of dry, warm interior do not depend on which column spacing, roof material, …
Adopt systems viewpoint
Firm’s bottom line not just a department’s
All citizens not just the ones who benefit
8. Ch 1 Econ. Dec. 8 Principles for Decision Making (cont’d.) Use common planning horizon
Different materials have different lives
Stainless steel vs. brass pump
Asphalt shingles vs. metal roofing
Must compare over same time horizon
Address uncertainty
Engineering economy is about the future
Future is unavoidably uncertain
Use sensitivity analysis & probabilities
9. Ch 1 Econ. Dec. 9 Decision-Making Process Define problem
Too broad ? too difficult
Too narrow ? better solutions missed
Choose objective
Not just cheap now
Maximize PW
Effectiveness = doing right thing
Efficiency = doing right way
10. Ch 1 Econ. Dec. 10 Decision-Making Process(cont’d.) Identify alternatives
As many as possible (brainstorming)
Better alternatives more valuable than better analysis
Evaluate consequences
All
Systems view
11. Ch 1 Econ. Dec. 11 Decision-Making Process(cont’d.) Select
Minimize life-cycle costs not first costs
Include non-quantitative objectives
Implement
Faster if involve stakeholders earlier
Audit (reward is learning)
12. Ch 1 Econ. Dec. 12 Decision Making is a Process Theory ? decision maker selects
Reality often ? analyst decides
Which alternatives considered?
What objectives measured?
What information presented?
How presented?
13. Ch 1 Econ. Dec. 13 Real World Environment for Decision Making Non-linear process: feedback loops & simultaneous activities
Iterative modeling ? spreadsheets
One decision in continuing stream
Communication skills are crucial
Analysis ? paper, action ? results
Politics matter
14. Ch 1 Econ. Dec. 14 Ethics and Decision-MakingNSPE Code of Ethics Points Engineers shall:
Hold paramount safety, health, & welfare of public
Perform services only where competent
All public statements shall be objective & truthful
Act for each employer or client as faithful agents or trustees
Avoid deceptive acts
Conduct themselves honorably, responsibly, ethically, & lawfully to enhance profession’s honor, reputation, & usefulness
15. Ch 1 Econ. Dec. 15 Example Ethical LapsesExhibit 1.7
16. Ch 1 Econ. Dec. 16 Common Situations with Ethical Concerns Gaining knowledge & building trust vs. favors for influence
Cost, quality, & functionality tradeoffs
Environmental concerns
Safety & cost
Firm’s priorities & globalization
17. Ch 1 Econ. Dec. 17 Role of Engineering Economy Doesn’t matter
$s too small
Time too short (operational economics)
Dominates decision-making
Money often key criteria & time > 1 year
One factor in decision ? Multiple objectives
Time value of money, other quantifiables, irreducibles
Money, risk, flexibility/robustness
18. Ch 1 Econ. Dec. 18 Operational Economics FedEx & bid arrives on time vs. first class stamp & not
Renting a car with limited vs. unlimited miles
Overtime vs. a 2nd shift or another hire
19. Ch 1 Econ. Dec. 19 Cost Concepts Recurring vs. non-recurring
Life cycle cost
Fixed vs. variable
Average = total cost / # units
Marginal = cost for 1 more unit
Incremental = cost for N more units
Direct = cost for labor & material
Indirect = cost for electricity, insurance, maintenance
Overhead = allocated cost for sales, admin, & mgmt.
20. Ch 1 Econ. Dec. 20 PP1.1 Average, Marginal, & Incremental Costs Cost like marginal tax table
1st 100 cost $50 each even if buy more
Purchasing 400 items
Average cost =
Marginal cost for 401st =
Incremental cost for next 200 = Average cost = (100*50 + 300*45)/400 = $46.25
Marginal cost of 401st = $45
Incremental cost of another 200 = (100*45 + 100*40) = $8500Average cost = (100*50 + 300*45)/400 = $46.25
Marginal cost of 401st = $45
Incremental cost of another 200 = (100*45 + 100*40) = $8500
21. Ch 1 Econ. Dec. 21 PP1.1 Solution Average cost
= (100*50 + 300*45)/400 = $46.25
Marginal cost of 401st
= $45
Incremental cost of next 200
= (100*45 + 100*40) = $8500
22. Ch 1 Econ. Dec. 22 Summary of Making Economic Decisions Engineering economy – define & examples
Decision-making principles
Decision-making process
Decision-making in reality
Role of engineering economy
Operational economics & cost definitions