Engineering Costs Estimation Ch2
Engineering Costs Estimation Ch2
Engineering Costs Estimation Ch2
Variable costs:
operating costs that vary in total with the quantity of output or other measures of activity level.
Direct Costs:
cost that can be reasonably measured and allocated to a specific output or work activity.
Indirect/Overhead Cost:
cost that it is difficult to attribute or allocate to a specific output or work activity.
Item Bus Rental Gas Expense Other Fuel Costs Bus Driver Total Costs
Total Costs
$20.00
Which of the above are fixed and which are variable costs? How do we compute DKs total cost if he takes n people to City?
n
6 ECIV 5245 Engineering Economy Dr. Khaled Hamad
Suppose DKs ticket cost drops to $10 per person if he brings 20 or more people. What is the total cost equation? What is the total cost if number of people exceeds capacity of 1 bus (bus capacity= 40)? What is the marginal cost in this case?
Question:
How many people does DK need to break even?
(not lose money on his venture)
Total Cost
($200) ($400)
10
15
20
Number of People
10
15
20
Sunk Costs
A sunk cost is money already spent due to a past decision. As engineering economists we deal with present and future opportunities We must be careful not to be influenced by the past Disregard sunk costs in engineering economic analysis Example: Suppose that three years ago your parents bought you a laptop PC for $2000. How likely is it that you can sell it today for what it cost? Suppose you can sell the laptop today for $400. Does the $2000 purchase cost have any effect on the selling price today? The $2000 is a sunk cost. It has no influence on the present opportunity to sell the laptop for $400.
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Opportunity Cost
An opportunity cost is the benefit that is foregone by engaging a business resource in a chosen activity instead of engaging that same resource in the foregone activity. Example: Suppose your wealthy uncle gives you $75,000 when you graduate from high school. It is enough to put you through college (5 years at $15,000 per year). It is also enough for you to open a business making web pages for small companies instead of going to college. You estimate you would make $20,000 per year with this business.
If you decide to go to college you give up the opportunity to make $20,000 per year Your opportunity cost is $20,000 Your total cost per year is $35,000
ECIV 5245 Engineering Economy Dr. Khaled Hamad
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Type of Costs Sunk cost Sunk cost Can be used to help determine what the lot is worth today. A foregone opportunity Actual market value today
$5,000 $3,000
Dr. Khaled Hamad
Incremental Cost
Incremental Cost is the additional cost that results from: Increasing the output of a system by one or more units Selecting one alternative over another Example 22-4. Philip can choose between model A or model B. The following information is available.
Cost Items
Purchase price Installation cost Annual maintenance cost Annual utility expense Disposal cost after useful life
Model A
$10,000 $3,500 $2,500 $1,200 $700
Model B
$17,500 $5,000 $750 $2,000 $500
Incremental Cost of B
$7,500 $1,500 $-1,750/yr $800/yr $-200
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Life-Cycle Costs
Life-cycle costs are the summation of all costs, both recurring and Lifenonrecurring, related to a product, structure, system, or service during its life span Products go through a life cycle, just like people Assessment & Justification Phase Conceptual or Preliminary Design Phase Detailed Design Phase Production or Construction Phase Operational Use Phase Decline and Retirement Phase
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Life-Cycle Costs
Comments:
The later design changes are made in the life-cycle, the higher the costs. Decisions made early in the life-cycle tend to lock in costs incurred later in the life cycle: Nearly 70 to 90% of all costs are set during the design phases, while only 10 to 30% of the cumulative life-cycle costs have been spent. Question. When is the best time to consider all life-cycle effects, and make design changes? Bottom Line. Engineers should consider all life-cycle costs when designing products and the systems that produce them.
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Cost Indices
The U.S. federal government publishes cost index data through the Department of Commerce Bureau of Statistics. The Statistical Abstract of the United States publishes cost indexes for labor, construction, and materials. The best-known example is the consumer price index (CPI), a measure of inflation. The measure is scaled, so it is only the relative values of any two measures that are meaningful. For example, in 1920, the measure was about 20; in 1997 it was about 160. The conclusion is that one would have to spend 160/20, or 8 times as much in 1997 as in 1920 for the same consumables. Cost indices work in the same way as price indices. Cost indices are dimensionless.
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Cost Indices
Example 22-7. Miriam needs to estimate material cost for a new plant. For a similar facility built 3 yrs ago, annual labor cost was $2,455,000. CPI was at 544 3 yrs ago but it is 715 today.
Index value today Annual cost today = Annual cost 3 yrs ago Index value 3 yrs ago
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Per-Unit Cost
Uses per unit factor to develop estimate Very simple yet useful technique for rough estimates Commonly used in construction industry Examples:
Service cost per costumer Safety per employee Gasoline cost per mile Maintenance cost per window Mileage cost per vehicle Utility cost per square foot of floor space
Example: Contractor gave you a quote to build you a house for $250 per square meter. Whats your cost to build a 200 sq. meterhouse?
Ans. Cost = 250 x 200 = $50,000
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Estimating Benefits
For the most part, we can use exactly the same approach to estimate benefits as to estimate costs:
Fixed and variable benefits Recurring and non-recurring benefits Incremental benefits Life-cycle benefits Rough, semi-detailed, and detailed benefit estimates Difficulties in estimation Segmentation and index models
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Size of Cash Flow Receive $100 (positive CF) Pay $100 (negative CF) Positive CF of $100 Negative CF of $150 Negative CF of $150 Positive CF of $50
Tomorrow
100
100 50
1 100
Today
150
150