Transcript
Page 1: Time and the Discount Rate Project flows of costs and benefits are not even over time

Time and the Discount Rate

• Project flows of costs and benefits are not even over time.

Page 2: Time and the Discount Rate Project flows of costs and benefits are not even over time

Flow of Costs and Benefits

Option1

Year Cost Benefit Net

1 100 0 -100

2 10 0 -10

3 10 150 140

Sum 120 150 30

Option 2

Year Cost Benefit Net

1 40 50 10

2 40 50 10

3 40 50 10

Sum 120 150 30

Consider 2 Investment Options

Page 3: Time and the Discount Rate Project flows of costs and benefits are not even over time

Flow of Costs and BenefitsNet Benefits by Year

-150

-100

-50

0

50

100

150

200

1 2 3

Year

Ne

t B

en

efi

ts Option 1 Option 2

Page 4: Time and the Discount Rate Project flows of costs and benefits are not even over time

Flow of Costs and Benefits

• These two options have very different flows of costs and benefits over time.

• Is there any difference between these two options?

• Which is preferred?

Page 5: Time and the Discount Rate Project flows of costs and benefits are not even over time

Flow of Costs and Benefits

• In order to address this question, need to understand how the future is valued relative to the present:– Intertemporal time preferences– The interest rate

Page 6: Time and the Discount Rate Project flows of costs and benefits are not even over time

Time Preference of Consumers

• Consider consumers have a stock of wealth today, and must choose to consume between today and tomorrow.

• Intertemporal indifference map– Time indifference– Intertemporal indifference curve

Page 7: Time and the Discount Rate Project flows of costs and benefits are not even over time

Intertemporal Consumption Choice

Consumption T0

Con

sum

ptio

n T

1

C0

S0

S1

I0 (Intertemporal Indifference Curve)

C1

x

x

Page 8: Time and the Discount Rate Project flows of costs and benefits are not even over time

Intertemporal Consumption Choice

Consumption T0

Con

sum

ptio

n T

1A Family of Indifference Curves

Page 9: Time and the Discount Rate Project flows of costs and benefits are not even over time

Time Preference of Consumers

• Expect consumers to have “positive time preference” :– prefer consumption today rather than in the future

• Why?– There is a chance that will not be able to consume in

the future • (in the long run we are all dead)

– Expectation that income will be higher in the future (economy will grow)

• (Goods and services will be more abundant in the future as a result of economic growth)

Page 10: Time and the Discount Rate Project flows of costs and benefits are not even over time

Intertemporal Consumption Choice

Consumption T0

Con

sum

ptio

n T

1

“PPF” (Slope=-1)

C0

S0 = C0

Ce

Se < Ce

450

Zero time preference

Positive time preference

Page 11: Time and the Discount Rate Project flows of costs and benefits are not even over time

The price of current consumption

• Income or wealth that is consumed today is not available to be saved for consumption in the future.

• What is the price of consuming today?

• Interest rate: amount that savings today can be increased in the future, through investment.

Page 12: Time and the Discount Rate Project flows of costs and benefits are not even over time

Interest Rate

• The price (or opportunity cost) of consuming a dollar of income or wealth today rather than saving for consumption in the future

• Expressed as a percentage increase:– (K1/K0)-1} * 100

K0 money invested in time 0

K1 money obtained from investment in time 1

Page 13: Time and the Discount Rate Project flows of costs and benefits are not even over time

Interest Rate

• Example:

• Invest $100 in time 0

• Return = $112 in time 1

• Interest rate=(112/100-1) * 100

= 12%

• A unit-free measure, expressed as a ratio

Page 14: Time and the Discount Rate Project flows of costs and benefits are not even over time

Interest Rate

Consumption T0

Con

sum

ptio

n T

1

100

100

i = 0%

112

150

i = 12%

i = 50%

Page 15: Time and the Discount Rate Project flows of costs and benefits are not even over time

Time Preference of Consumers

• From consumers’ time preferences, derive the supply of savings.

Determine amount of income and wealth that households will save for the future at different interest rates.

Page 16: Time and the Discount Rate Project flows of costs and benefits are not even over time

Response to change in interest rate

Consumption T0

Con

sum

ptio

n T

1

S0

S1

S2

i0

i1

i2

Page 17: Time and the Discount Rate Project flows of costs and benefits are not even over time

Response to change in interest rate

i0

Interest Rate

Savings ($)S0

x

i1

S1

i2

S2

x

x

Ssavings

Page 18: Time and the Discount Rate Project flows of costs and benefits are not even over time

Investment opportunities

• Investment opportunities generate the demand for savings (capital)– Intertemporal production possibility frontier

Page 19: Time and the Discount Rate Project flows of costs and benefits are not even over time

Intertemporal production possibility frontier

Production0

Pro

duct

ion 1

P0P1

I1

I0

PPF

Page 20: Time and the Discount Rate Project flows of costs and benefits are not even over time

Demand for Investment

• Rank potential investments according to the rate of return, from highest to lowest.

• This will give the derived demand schedule for savings

Page 21: Time and the Discount Rate Project flows of costs and benefits are not even over time

Demand for Investment

Production0

Pro

duct

ion 1

PPF

i0

i1

i2

I0

I1

i2

Page 22: Time and the Discount Rate Project flows of costs and benefits are not even over time

Response to change in Interest Rate

Interest Rate

Investment Demand ($)

i0

I0

x

i1

I1

i2

I2

x

x

Demand for Invesment

Page 23: Time and the Discount Rate Project flows of costs and benefits are not even over time

Capital Market

i Supplyof

Savings

Demandfor

Investment

Quantity ($)

ieq

Qeq

Page 24: Time and the Discount Rate Project flows of costs and benefits are not even over time

Interest rate

• In market equilibrium

• interest rate (r) = MRS = MRT

• In reality: transactions costs associated with matching up suppliers and demanders of savings:– Financial intermediation (banks)– Spread between savings and borrowing rate– Risk premia


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