Lecture 1 PDF
Lecture 1 PDF
Lecture 1 PDF
• Lecture 1: Introduction
• Lecture 2: Demand
• Lecture 3: Forecasting
• Lecture 4: Production
• Lecture 5: Cost
Methods of reliability
• assessment
Lecture 6: Pricing and optimization
and Output Decision of
• components
Lecture 7: Pricing and Decision
and Output systems for
energy applications
• Lecture 8: Organizational Architecture and Regulation
Text book
• Economics for Managers, international student edition, McGuigan/
Moyar/ Harris, eleventh edition
Methods of reliability
assessment and optimization of
components and systems for
energy applications
Grade
• 60% Final Exam
• 30% Project
• 10% Presence
Methods of reliability
assessment and optimization of
components and systems for
energy applications
Course Introduction
• Introduction and Goals of the Firm
What is Managerial Economics?
The Decision-Making Model
The Role of Profits
Objective of the Firm
Principle-Agent Problem
Implications of Shareholder Wealth Maximization
• Fundamental Economic Concepts
Demand and Supply
Marginal Analysis
The Net Present Value Concept
Meaning and Measurement of Risk
The Relationship between Risk and Return
5
Chapter 1 Introduction and
Goals of the Firm
What is Managerial Economics?
Honda and Toyota case
• Honda and Toyota are attempting to expand their already substantial
assembly operations in North America.
• Two strategies: S1. Increase production of existing plants
S2. Purchase and upgrade GM plants
Methods of reliability
• Decision making:
To identifyassessment and
the alternative optimization
means of given
of achieving
components and systems for
objective(s)
energy applications
To select an alternative that accomplishes the objective(s) in
the most resource-efficient manner, taking into account the
constraints and the likely actions and reactions of rival
decision makers.
Methods of reliability
The Decision-Making Model
assessment and optimization of
components and systems for
energy applications
Market
The Decision-Making Model characteristics,
economic situation,
Pricing errors, government
declining labor relations, natural
environment…
productivity, the
Consider
The profit use of outdated societal
margin on sales retailing concepts constraints
is decreasing
MethodsExamine
of reliabilityAnalyze
Perform a Implement
Establish Identify the possible alternatives
objectives
assessment
problem
and optimization
alternative and select the of
sensitivity and monitor
components
solutions
and systems
best
for analysis the decision
energy applications
Market Consider Measure the
segmenting, scale organizational influence of the
and input variation of each key
production, constraints
technical upgrade factor on the value
of the company
Maximize ……
the PV Scale of the
company, Standardization,
organizational improve the
structure, human regulations,
resource, IT appropriate grading,
infrastructure,… training,…
The Role of Profits
Methods of reliability
assessment and optimization of
components and systems for
energy applications
The Role of Profits
• Economic profit = total revenue - total economic cost.
• Total revenue = price × quantity sold.
• The economic cost (i.e. opportunity cost), the cost of attracting
a resource from its next best alternative.
• labor, capital, intellectual property, land, and materials.
Methods of reliability
assessment and optimization of
Tires Management, environment and taxes
components and systems for
Operation
energy applications
Fuel
Labor
Repair
Tolls
The factors to profit: theories
• Risk-bearing theory of profit
• Compensated for the risk in the form of a higher rate of return.
• Normal profits (the relative risk of alternative investments)
Methods of reliability
assessment and optimization of
components and systems for
energy applications
22.9%→8.4% 11.2%→14.8%
Theories of Profit
• Temporary disequilibrium theory of profit
• Objective: a long-run equilibrium normal rate of profit
(adjusted for risk).
• Higher and lower returns (compared to the long-run normal
return level) can occur because of temporary dislocations
Methods
(shocks) in various of reliability
sectors of the economy.
assessment and optimization of
components and systems for
energy applications
The invasion of Kuwait in Iraq in 1990
Methods of reliability
assessment and optimization of
components and systems for
energy applications
Theories of Profit
• Managerial efficiency theory of profit
• Above-normal profits can arise because of the exceptional
managerial skills of well-managed firms.
Methods of reliability
assessment and optimization of
components and systems for
Staff training
energy applications
𝑉0 ∙ 𝑆ℎ𝑎𝑟𝑒𝑠 𝑂𝑢𝑡𝑠𝑡𝑎𝑛𝑑𝑖𝑛𝑔
Methods
𝜋1 𝜋of
2 reliability
𝜋3 𝜋∞
= + + + ⋯ +
1+ 𝑘𝑒 1 1 + 𝑘𝑒 2and1 optimization
assessment + 𝑘𝑒 3 1+
of𝑘𝑒 ∞
∞
components and= systems 𝜋𝑖 for
1 + 𝑘𝑒 𝑖
energy applications
𝑖=1
𝜋𝑡 = 𝑇𝑅𝑡 − 𝑇𝐶𝑡
Methods
• Similarly, total revenueofinreliability
period 𝑡 equals price per unit (𝑃𝑡 )
assessment
times quantity sold (𝑄𝑡 ), orand optimization of
components and systems for
𝑇𝑅𝑡 = 𝑃𝑡 ∙ 𝑄𝑡
energy applications
• Total cost in period 𝑡 equals variable cost per unit (𝑉𝑡 ) times
the number of units of output (𝑄𝑡 ) plus fixed costs in period 𝑡,
𝐹𝑡 , or
𝑇𝐶𝑡 = 𝑉𝑡 ∙ 𝑄𝑡 + 𝐹𝑡
The Shareholder Wealth-Maximization Model of the Firm
Limited by
Value of a firm Internal (resource) and
external regulatory
Methods of reliability
constraints
assessment and optimization of
∞
components and
𝑃𝑡 ∙ 𝑄𝑡 − 𝑉𝑡 ∙ 𝑄𝑡 − 𝐹𝑡 systems for
energy (1 + 𝑘𝑒 )𝑡
applications
𝑡=1
Methods of reliability
assessment and optimization of
components and systems for
energy applications
Apple’s 147th retail store
on Fifth Avenue in New
York City
Methods of reliability
Principle-Agent Problem
assessment and optimization of
components and systems for
energy applications
Principal-agent Problem
• As business grows, the owners (the principals) frequently
delegate decision-making authority to professional managers
(the agents).
• The agents often seek acceptable levels (rather than a
maximum) of profit and shareholder wealth while pursuing
Methods of reliability
their own self-interests.
• This issue is assessment and optimization
known as a principal-agent of or “agency
problem
conflict”. components and systems for
energy applications
Complete markets.
Methods of reliability
assessment and optimization of
components and systems for
energy applications
No significant asymmetric
information.
Methods of reliability
assessment and optimization of
components and systems for
energy applications
The Efficiency Objective in NFP Organizations
• By cost-benefit analysis, the goals used to evaluate
expenditures for any public purpose can be any one of the
following:
• Maximize the benefits for given costs.
• Maximize the costs while achieving a fixed level of benefits.
• Maximize theMethods of reliability
net benefits (benefits minus costs).
assessment and optimization of
components and systems for
energy applications
Exercise
• Specific Electric Co. asks you to implement a pay-for-performance
incentive contract for its new CEO. The CEO can either work hard
with a personal opportunity cost $200,000 or reduce her effort, there
by avoiding the personal cost. The shareholder value under different
CEO efforts and conditions is listed in the table. The initial
shareholder value of the company is $650 million.
Methods of reliability
assessment and optimization of
components and systems for
Shareholder Value (in $millions)
energy applications
Good luck (30%) Medium luck (40%) Bad luck (30%)
$300 million
Exercise
• If you decide to pay 1% of this amount as a cash bonus, what
performance level in the table (what shareholder value) should
trigger the bonus?
Price (𝑃)
($/unit)
10
Methods
8 of reliability
assessment
6 and optimization of
components and systems for
4
energy applications
2
Methods of reliability
assessment and optimization of
components and systems for
energy applications
The Demand Function
𝑄𝐷 = 𝑓(𝑃, 𝑃𝑆 , 𝑃𝐶 , 𝑌, 𝐴, 𝐴𝐶 , 𝑁, 𝐶𝑃 , 𝑃𝐸 , 𝑇𝐴 , 𝑇 𝑆 ⋯ )
𝑄𝐷 = quantity demanded of
𝑃 = price of the good or service
𝑁 = size of the potential target marker
Methods
𝑃𝑆 = price of substitute goods of reliability
or services
𝐶𝑃 = consumer tastes and preferences for the
assessment andgood
𝑃𝐶 = price of complementry goods or optimization
or service of
services
𝑌 = income of consumers
components and𝑃𝐸 systems forprice appreciation or
= expected future
depreciation
energy
𝐴 = advertising and promotion applications
expenditures
𝑇𝐴 = adjustment time period
𝐴𝐶 = competitors’ advertising and promotion
expenditures 𝑇 𝑆 = taxes or subsidies
The Demand Function
𝑄𝑠 = quantity supplied
𝑃 = price of autos
Methods of reliabilityF= accidental supply interruptions from fires,
𝑃𝐼 = price of inputs floods, etc.
assessment
𝑃𝑈𝐼 = price of unused substitute inputs and optimization of
𝑅𝐶 = costs of regulatory compliance
components and
𝑇 = technological improvements systems for
𝑃𝐸 = expected future changes in price
𝐸𝐸 = entry or exist of otherenergy
auto sellers applications
𝑇𝐴 = adjustment time period
𝑇 𝑆 = taxes or subsidies
The Supply Function
• Changes in the price (P) of the good or service will result only in
movement along the given supply curve, whereas changes in any of
the other independent variables in the function shift the supply curve.
• A movement along a supply curve is referred to as a change in the
quantity supplied, while holding constant other determinants of
supply. A shiftMethods of reliability
of the entire supply curve is often referred to as a
assessment
change in supply and is alwaysand optimization
caused of determinant
by some supply
components and systems for
other than price.
energy applications
Equilibrium Market Price
0
𝑄𝑡𝑑 = 𝑄𝑡𝑠
Quantity (units/time)
The Diamond-Water Paradox and the Marginal Revolution
• The diamond-water paradox
“Why should consumers bid low offer prices for something as
essential as water while bidding high offer prices for something
as frivolous as diamonds?”
• Marginal use value vs. total use value.
Methods of reliability
assessment and optimization of
• Marginal utility: the maximum offer price consumers are
components and systems for
willing to pay for each additional unit of consumption on the
energy applications
demand side of the market.
𝑒𝑞
𝑃𝑤
𝐷𝑤𝑎𝑡𝑒𝑟
2 carats 90 gallons
Quantity
(gallons/day)
(carats/lifetime)
Methods of reliability
Marginal Analysis
assessment and optimization of
components and systems for
energy applications
Marginal Analysis
• One most useful concept in microeconomics
• Marginal equilibrium condition
• Profit-maximization rule:
Methods of reliability
assessment and optimization of
marginal cost =
components andmarginal
systems forrevenue
energy applications
Example
Break-even
point
Methods of reliability
assessment and optimization Unitsof
of output (𝑄)
components and systems for
Average profit
(𝜋𝐴 (𝑄)) energy applications
Maximum marginal profit point
Marginal profit
(∆𝜋(𝑄)) Maximum average profit point
($/unit)
0 1 2 3 4 5 t
$300
Determine the Net Present Value of an Investment
• A present value interest factor (PVIF)
1
𝑃𝑉𝐼𝐹 =
1+𝑖
where 𝑖 is the compensation for postponing receipt of a cash return
for one year.
Methods of reliability
assessment
• The present value andreceived
of an amount optimization
one yearof
in the future is
components and systems for
𝑃𝑉0 = 𝐹𝑉1 × (𝑃𝑉𝐼𝐹)
energy applications
The NPV of an investment is equal to
Methods of reliability
assessment and optimization of
1
𝑃𝑉0 = 𝐹𝑉1 ×components
𝑃𝑉𝐼𝐹 = $1.2and systems for = $1,142,857
𝑚𝑖𝑙𝑙𝑖𝑜𝑛
energy applications 1 + 0.05
NPV = Present value of future returns − Initial outlay
= $1,142,857 − $1,000,000 = $142,857
Meaning and Measurement
Methods of reliability
of
Risk
assessment and optimization of
components and systems for
energy applications
Meaning and Measurement of Risk
• Risk refers to the chance that you will encounter an outcome that
differs from the expected outcome.
• Risk refers to the potential variability of outcomes from a decision.
Methods of reliability
assessment andriskoptimization of
components and systems for
energy applications Forecasted
Actual cash flow
cash flow
Probability Distributions
• Probability is the percentage chance that a particular outcome will
occur.
• An example of probability distributions of the annual net cash flows
(NCF) from two investments
Methods
Investmentof reliability
1 Investment 2
assessment
Possible NCF Probabilityand optimization
Possible NCF ofProbability
$200 components0.2 and systems
$100 for 0.2
300 energy applications
0.6 300 0.6
400 0.2 500 0.2
1.0 1.0
Expected Value and Standard Deviation
𝑟= 𝑟𝑗 𝑝𝑗
𝑗=1
𝜎= (𝑟𝑗 − 𝑟)2 𝑝𝑗
𝑗=1
Expected Value and Standard Deviation
Investment Ⅰ
𝜎 = $63.25
Probability of occurrence
Methods of reliability
assessment and optimization of
components and systems forInvestment Ⅱ
energy applications 𝜎′ = $126.49
A probability of 0.1587
Probability of occurrence of a value occurs that is
greater than +1𝜎 from
the mean.
Methods of reliability
68.26%
99.74%
Standard deviations
𝜎
𝑣=
𝑟
Required
Methods = Risk-free
returnof return + Risk premium
reliability
assessment and optimization of
components and systems for
Relationship Between Default Risk and Required Returns
energy applications
Security Yield
U.S. Treasury bonds (25-year+) 5.06%
Aaa-rated corporate bonds 6.49
Aa-rated bonds 6.93
A-rated bonds 7.18
Baa-rated corporate bonds 7.80
Exercise 1
The demand for MICHTEC’s products is related to the state of the economy. If
the economy is expanding next year, the company expects sales to be $90
million. If a recession occurs next year, the company expects sales to be $75
million. If next year is normal, the company expects sales to be $85 million.
The probability estimated that the economy will be either expanding, normal,
or in a recession is 0.2,0.5,and 0.3 respectively.
Methods of reliability
Questions: assessment and optimization of
• Compute expected
components
annual sales. and systems for
• Compute the standard
energy applications
deviation of annual sales.
• Compute the coefficient of variation of annual sales.
Exercise 1
Solutions:
The expected annual sales is
𝑟 = 90 × 0.2 + 85 × 0.5 + 75 × 0.3 = 83