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CTC 475 Review Inflation Inflation rate f is the rate of change in the value of currency (inflation/deflation) Inflation-free rate i represents a gain.

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Presentation on theme: "CTC 475 Review Inflation Inflation rate f is the rate of change in the value of currency (inflation/deflation) Inflation-free rate i represents a gain."— Presentation transcript:

1 CTC 475 Review Inflation Inflation rate f is the rate of change in the value of currency (inflation/deflation) Inflation-free rate i represents a gain in purchasing power Inflation adjusted rate if is a combination of the above two rates

2 Cost Estimates & Accounting Principles
CTC 475 Cost Estimates & Accounting Principles

3 Objectives Know the different types of cost estimates
Understand balance sheets Understand income statements

4 Cost Estimates Many times costs for a project must be estimated
Three general types Order-of-Magnitude (+/-50%) Preliminary Estimates (+/-20%) Detailed Estimates (+/-5%) As the precision of the estimate improves, the cost of making the estimate increases

5 Estimating Cash Flows Should be an organized approach:
Work breakdown structure (tasks, subtasks) Cost and Revenue (life-cycle)

6 Estimating Models Cost Indices Unit Factor (index by year, area, etc.)
(sq ft, LF of retaining wall, etc) Factor (sum of units; detailed breakdown)

7 Index Example Index for New York City is 1.26
Construction costs are 26% higher than upstate NY

8 Unit Technique House approximately 2000 sq ft
Price approximately $55/sq ft Estimated Price=$110,000

9 Factor Technique-More detailed
2x4 Faucets Lights Plywood Shingles Etc.

10 Other ideas Bottom-up estimating Top down estimating (design to cost)
Value Engineering-get input in design process for better design at lower cost

11 Estimate Example (Factor)
Item numbers & Description Unit (CM, EA, LS) Quantity & Price Specifications describe how item is to be paid

12

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14 Estimate Example Historical Costs can be found in company records or govt. documents (ex. Bid Price Book) Other Sources for prices (Means, manufacturer’s data, etc)

15 Estimate Example When project goes out to bid, each contractor creates an estimate The contractor with the lowest bid usually gets the job

16

17 Accounting Principles
Primary function is recording, classifying, summarizing and interpreting the financial data of an organization

18 Two Basic Financial Reports
Balance Sheet (Statement of Financial Conditions) Income Statement (Profit and Loss Statement)

19 Balance Sheet As of a particular date (snapshot in time): Tally Assets
Tally Liabilities Assets – Liabilities = Net Worth Goal is to increase net worth over time

20 Your Personal Balance Sheet
Handout Your Personal Balance Sheet

21 Assets Current – Can be converted easily into cash (<1 year)
Work in progress Finished goods inventory Fixed – Cannot easily be converted into cash Land Building

22 Liabilities Current – Debts due and payable (<1 year)
Account payable Notes payable Interest payable Fixed – Long term debt Bonds payable

23 Balance Sheet Assets – Liabilities = Net Worth or

24 Net Worth Also known as equity

25 Company Example Balance Sheet
Balance Statement Company Example Balance Sheet

26 Depreciation / Book Value
Depreciation Reserve: Funds held to repurchase an asset (building, machinery) when its useful life terminates Book Value (asset): First cost – depreciation reserve Many assets lose value over time

27 Income Statement The income statement is usually more useful of the two reports since: The annual revenues/costs for various elements are identified

28 Income Statement-Basic Format
Sales Less Cost of Goods Sold= Gross Profit Less “All other expenses”= Net Profit (Before Taxes) Less Income Taxes = Net Profit (After Taxes)

29 Income Statement Over a particular time period (ex. year):
Tally Income Tally Expenses Income – Expenses = Net Profit (loss)

30 Handout Your Household Budget

31 Company Example Income Statement

32 Cost Capacity (power law; sizing model)
C2=C1*(Q2/Q1)^n C1 is cost at capacity Q1 C2 is cost at capacity Q2 n-an exponent (typical 0.6)

33 Learning Curve Used at the beginning of production when learning results in a savings of time (example-5% savings for every doubling of production is a 95% learning rate) TN=T1Ns s=log (learning rate)/log 2 (will be a negative number)

34 Activity-Based Cost Allocation-(ABC)
Based on activities and cost drivers. Developed when labor costs reduced (automation) but indirect costs increased. Identify each activity and its total cost. Identify the cost drivers and their usage volumes. Calculate the indirect cost for each activity.

35 Next lecture Job Quotes Present Economy Problems


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