Engineering Economic Analysis - Ninth Edition Newna/Eschenbach/Lavelle Copyright 2004 by Oxford University Press, Inc.1 Engineering Economic Analysis 9th.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Copyright Oxford University Press 2011 Chapter 2 Engineering Costs and Cost Estimating.
Advertisements

APK: WHO IS MORE IMPORTANT?
Financial and Managerial Accounting Wild, Shaw, and Chiappetta Fourth Edition Wild, Shaw, and Chiappetta Fourth Edition McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2011.
Engineering Economic Analysis - Ninth Edition Newnan/Eschenbach/Lavelle Copyright 2004 by Oxford Unversity Press, Inc.1 Engineering Economic Analysis 9th.
(c) 2002 Contemporary Engineering Economics 1 Chapter 3 Cost Concepts and Behaviors General Cost Terms Classifying Costs for Financial Statements Cost.
Understanding Cost Structures at Child Care Centers Workshop Presented by Good Work Network Funded by Louisiana Department of Social Services Child Care.
Classification of Costs
Cost Terminology and Concepts. Basic Cost Terminology Cost – resource sacrificed to achieve a specific objective Actual cost – a cost that has occurred.
(c) 2002 Contemporary Engineering Economics 1 Chapter 3 Cost Concepts and Behaviors General Cost Terms Classifying Costs for Financial Statements Cost.
1. Cost Concepts & Design Economics
Money Management Strategy: Financial Statements and Budgeting
CHAPTER 1: Accounting in Action
Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin Chapter 4 How Businesses Work.
Tax Accounting.
1 Engineering Economics Engineering Costs and Cost Estimating William Loendorf, P.E.
Time Value of Money Chapter 5.
Chapter 6 Cost of Production.
1 Understanding Project Cost Elements Lecture No. 22 Chapter 9 Fundamentals of Engineering Economics Copyright © 2008.
Review Basic Accounting. Fundamentals Assets are anything the business owns that has a dollar value (debit balance on the “T-accounts”) Liabilities are.
Chapter 4 How Businesses Work McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Binghamton University Thomas J. Watson School of Engineering and Applied Science State University of New York.
CTC 475 Review  Course Requirements  Applications  Multiple Decision Criteria  Selling The Project  PSP.
Section 36.2 Financial Aspects of a Business Plan
1 EGGC4214 Systems Engineering & Economy Lecture 2 Cost Concepts and Economic Environment.
Copyright © 2006, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.McGraw-Hill/Irwin 11 th Edition Chapter 2.
ACCOUNTING EQUATION LEVEL 7 Omar + Salem = Group B.
1 Accounting 100 Chapter 2 Analyzing Business Transactions.
Financial Reporting. Lecture Outline Statement of Financial Position Defined Purpose Elements Statement of Financial Position Equation Example Statement.
State University of New York WARNING All rights reserved. No part of the course materials used in the instruction of this course may be reproduced in any.
1 ECGD3110 Systems Engineering & Economy Lecture 3 Interest and Equivalence.
Money Management Skills
Engineering Economic Analysis Canadian Edition
0 Glencoe Accounting Unit 2 Chapter 3 Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Unit 2 The Basic Accounting Cycle Chapter 3 Business.
System Engineering & Economy Analysis
Engineering Costs and Cost Estimating Chapter 2: Newnan, Eschenbach, and Lavelle Dr. Hurley’s AGB 555 Course.
1 ECGD4214 Systems Engineering & Economy. 2 Lecture 1 Part 1 Introduction to Engineering Economics.
Business Transactions and The Accounting Equation
Copyright ©2009 by Pearson Education, Inc. Upper Saddle River, New Jersey All rights reserved. Engineering Economy, Fourteenth Edition By William.
Contemporary Engineering Economics, 6 th edition Park Copyright © 2016 by Pearson Education, Inc. All Rights Reserved Classification of Costs Lecture No.
5.2 Costs and Revenues Chapter 31. Management Decisions and Cost Business decisions cannot be made without cost information. Why?  Profit or loss cannot.
Cost Terminology and Concepts. Basic Cost Terminology Cost – resource sacrificed to achieve a specific objective Actual cost – a cost that has occurred.
1 Introduction of Accounting and Principles Chapter No 2.
Contemporary Engineering Economics Contemporary Engineering Economics, 5 th edition, © 2010.
money you have in a bank either in checking (where you can use the money with an ATM card or by writing a check) or savings (where you earn interest)
Ch 9-1 © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Pearson Prentice Hall, Pearson Education, Upper Saddle River, NJ Ostwald and McLaren / Cost Analysis and Estimating.
The Nature of Costs Chapter Two Copyright © 2014 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin Chapter 29 Relevant Costing for Managerial Decisions.
Cost Terms, Concepts, and Classifications Chapter 2.
Cash Basis Accounting. Accrual Accounting Matching Principle.
Financial Analysis of a Business
1/26/2016rdcw2a-1 Engineering Economic Analysis Chapter 2  Engineering Costs and Cost Estimating.
Engineering Economic Analysis Canadian Edition
Chapter 3 Accrual Accounting Concepts. Why is Accrual Accounting Needed? Cash received or paid Revenue earned Expense incurred.
1. »Are vital because a business cannot exist without cash flow »Focus on the following: –creating up-to-date, accurate financial statements –making a.
Making a Budget Independent Living October 27, 2015.
What is Economics? Chapter 18 (Part 2). Trade Offs  Economic problems are surprisingly simple in that there are few terms/rules to consider  Complex.
Chapter 36 Financing the Business Section 36.1 Preparing Financial Documents Section 36.2 Financial Aspect of a Business Plan Section 36.1 Preparing Financial.
Faculty of Applied Engineering and Urban Planning Civil Engineering Department Engineering Economy Lecture 1 Week 1 2 nd Semester 20015/2016 Chapter 2.
Understanding the Economics of One Unit  One way to analyze profitability is to look at how much profit the business makes every time a customer buys.
The Total Costs Curve TOTAL COSTS FIXED COSTS Revenue $$$ SALES VOLUME BREAKEVEN VOLUME VARIABLE COSTS.
Classification of Costs
انوش نوری اسفندیاری دانشکده فنی- دوره 1390
Engineering Economics Engineering Costs and Cost Estimating
Cost Accounting & Management Accounting
Chapter 24: Budgeting, Saving, and Investing Money
Fixed cost: such as rent, utility cost, administration costs
Accounting and Reporting on an Accrual Accounting Basis
Accounting and Reporting on an Accrual Accounting Basis
CTC 475 Review Course Requirements Applications
Economics and Project Management
Presentation transcript:

Engineering Economic Analysis - Ninth Edition Newna/Eschenbach/Lavelle Copyright 2004 by Oxford University Press, Inc.1 Engineering Economic Analysis 9th Edition Chapter 2 ENGINEERING COSTS AND COST ESTIMATING

Engineering Economic Analysis - Ninth Edition Newna/Eschenbach/Lavelle Copyright 2004 by Oxford University Press, Inc.2 Engineering Costs Classifications of costs Fixed - constant, unchanging Rent is constant (single, married, children) Variable - depend on activity level Food depends on the number of occupants Marginal - variable cost for the next unit Depends on the next unit (adult, child, baby) Average - total cost/number of units Rent+ food+…+n/number of units

Engineering Economic Analysis - Ninth Edition Newna/Eschenbach/Lavelle Copyright 2004 by Oxford University Press, Inc.3 Fixed, Variable, and Total Costs Example 2-1

Engineering Economic Analysis - Ninth Edition Newna/Eschenbach/Lavelle Copyright 2004 by Oxford University Press, Inc.4 Profit and Loss Terms Breakeven: total revenue = total costs Just getting by Profit region: total revenue > total costs Putting money in the bank Loss region: total revenue < total costs Going into debt

Engineering Economic Analysis - Ninth Edition Newna/Eschenbach/Lavelle Copyright 2004 by Oxford University Press, Inc.5 Breakeven Charts Example 2-2

Engineering Economic Analysis - Ninth Edition Newna/Eschenbach/Lavelle Copyright 2004 by Oxford University Press, Inc.6 Past (Sunk) Costs and Future (Opportunity) Costs Sunk cost: money spent due to a past decision. We cannot do anything about these costs. Purchase price paid for a car two years ago Opportunity cost: a benefit that is foregone by engaging a resource in a chosen activity instead of engaging that same resource in some foregone activity. We make a choice or decision. Buying lunch instead of gas

Engineering Economic Analysis - Ninth Edition Newna/Eschenbach/Lavelle Copyright 2004 by Oxford University Press, Inc.7 Which amount is the value at present? Example 2-3

Engineering Economic Analysis - Ninth Edition Newna/Eschenbach/Lavelle Copyright 2004 by Oxford University Press, Inc.8 Expense Types Recurring expense: anticipated and occur at regular intervals. Purchasing food, paying rent Non-recurring expense: one-of-a-kind event that occurs at an irregular interval. Illness, accident, death Sometimes we attempt to plan for large non- recurring costs by buying insurance. Paying the periodic insurance premium turns this expense into a recurring cost.

Engineering Economic Analysis - Ninth Edition Newna/Eschenbach/Lavelle Copyright 2004 by Oxford University Press, Inc.9 Incremental Costs An incremental cost is the difference between the costs of two alternatives. Example 2-4

Engineering Economic Analysis - Ninth Edition Newna/Eschenbach/Lavelle Copyright 2004 by Oxford University Press, Inc.10 Cash vs. Book Costs Cash costs: movement of money from one owner to another - also known as a cash flow. Payment this month on an auto loan Book cost: cost of a past transaction that is recorded in a book. Down payment recorded in your checkbook from last year’s automobile purchase

Engineering Economic Analysis - Ninth Edition Newna/Eschenbach/Lavelle Copyright 2004 by Oxford University Press, Inc.11 Life-cycle Costs Life-cycle: all the time from conception to death of a product (process). Life-cycle costs: sum total of all the costs incurred during the life cycle. Life-cycle costing: designing with an understanding of all the costs associated with a product during its life-cycle.

Engineering Economic Analysis - Ninth Edition Newna/Eschenbach/Lavelle Copyright 2004 by Oxford University Press, Inc.12 Cost Estimating Economic analysis is future based. Costs and benefits in the future require estimating. Estimated costs are not known with certainty. The more accurate the estimate, the more reliable the decision.

Engineering Economic Analysis - Ninth Edition Newna/Eschenbach/Lavelle Copyright 2004 by Oxford University Press, Inc.13 Types of Estimates Rough: gut level, inaccurate -30% to +60%. Semi-detailed: based on historical records, reasonably sophisticated and accurate -15% to +20%. Detailed: based on detailed specifications and cost models, very accurate -3% to +5%.

Engineering Economic Analysis - Ninth Edition Newna/Eschenbach/Lavelle Copyright 2004 by Oxford University Press, Inc.14 Estimating Models ModelExplanation Per UnitUses a “per unit” factor $/sq ft, Benefits/employee SegmentingDivide problem into items, estimate each & sum Cost IndexesIndex number based on history Power SizingScaling previous known costs up or down TriangulationLooking at costs from several perspectives Learning CurveTracking cost improvements Examples US CPI

Engineering Economic Analysis - Ninth Edition Newna/Eschenbach/Lavelle Copyright 2004 by Oxford University Press, Inc.15 Cash Flow Diagrams Summarizes the flow of money over time Can be represented using a spreadsheet