Notes 5b - Gradient
Notes 5b - Gradient
Gradient
Uniform Arithmetic Gradient
An arithmetic gradient series is a cash flow series that either
increases or decreases by a constant amount each period.
The amount of change is called the gradient
In certain cases, economic analysis problems involve receipts
or disbursements that increase or decrease by a uniform
amount each period.
For example, maintenance and repair expenses on specific
equipment or property may increase by relatively constant
amount each period.
Uniform Arithmetic Gradient
Illustrative example:
A manufacturing engineer predicts that the cost of maintaining
a robot will increase by $200 per year until the machine is
retired. The cash flow series of maintenance costs involves a
constant gradient, which is $200 per year
The Cash flow could be divided into two cash flows, the Annuity (BaseValue) and the Gradient)
Uniform Arithmetic Gradient
Present Worth equivalent of Arithmetic Gradient
G 2G 3G (n 2)G (n 1)G
P ... ( n 1)
.......eqn(1)
(1 i) (1 i) (1 i)
2 3 4
(1 i) (1 i) n
The term inside the parenthesis except the last term constitute a geometric progression.
The sum of geometric progression can be computed as…
1 1 1
a1 ; a2 ; r
(1 i) (1 i) 2 (1 i)
a1(1 r n ) 1 (1 i) n
S ;S ....eqn(4)
(1 r ) i
Substituting equation 4 to equation 3 yields:
G 1 (1 i) n n
P
i i (1 i) n
Uniform Arithmetic Gradient
Future Worth equivalent of gradient:
Just convert the Present worth by multiplying the factor
(1+i)^n
n
G 1 (1 i ) n
P (( ( ))
i i (1 i ) n
F P(1 i ) n
G (1 i ) 1 n
F n
i i
Uniform Arithmetic Gradient
Annuity Equivalent of a Gradient
To solve for the equivalent annuity of a gradient, we need to
equate their present worth equivalent and solve A in terms of G.
PW(G)= PW(A)
G 1 (1 i) n n A (1 i) n 1
n
n
i i (1 i) i (1 i)
Simplify the equation will result to:
1 n
A G
i (1 i) 1
n
Example: Arithmetic Gradient
Find the present worth of all the cash disbursement using
gradient interest formulas if money is worth 15% per
annum. Annual cash disbursements increases by 1000 every
year thereafter until the end of the fourth year. The first cash
disbursement amounts to 5000.
Given:
Gradient - 1000
First payment – 5000
Period – 4
Required: find PW
Example: Arithmetic Gradient
Find the present worth of all the cash disbursement using
gradient interest formulas if money is worth 15% per
annum. Annual cash disbursements increases by 1000 every
year thereafter until the end of the fourth year. The first cash
disbursement amounts to 5000.
Possible methods to use:
Divide the cash flow into two ( annuity cash flow and Gradient
cash flow), then sum the PW of each cash flow
Convert the Gradient cash flow into its equivalent annuity then
add to the base annuity. Solve for the PW of the total annuity.
Ans:18,061
Example: Arithmetic Gradient
Find the equivalent annual payment of the following
obligations at 20% interest.
End of Year Payment
1 8,000
2 7,000
3 6,000
4 5,000
Solution:
The series of payments could be converted to a combination of
annuity and gradient. (positive annuity and negative gradient)
The PW of both these cash flows will be subtracted, then the
resulting PW will converted to A using (A/P,i%,n)
Ans: 6,725.77