The MBA Decision NPV Options for Ben: 1. Keep Working Salary = $60‚000‚ tax rate = 26%‚ because of tax rate‚ c = $44‚400 R (discount rate) = 6.5% G (growth rate) = 3% T (the number of period working) = 40 So : Present Value (PV) of Growing Annuity. PVW = C ((1 – ( (1+g)/(1+r))t)/ r – g ) PVW= $44 400 ((1 – ((1+3%)/(1+6.5%))40)/ 6.5% - 3%) PVW = $44 400 ((1 – (1.03/1.065)40)/ 0.035) PVW = $ 44 400 ((1 – 0.2627) / 0.035) PVW = $44
Premium Net present value
Mini Case - The MBA Decision 1. How does Ben’s age affect his decision to get an MBA? Ben’s age is a very important factor which can affect his decision to get an MBA degree. Firstly‚ Ben is now 28 years old and expects to work for 40 more years. So he has an expected work life of 68 years. So the earlier he gets an MBA‚ the better for him. For example: probably it won’t benefit him much if he decided to get an MBA at the age of 60. No one would hire him as an investment banker even if
Premium Net present value
1. How does Ben’s age affect his decision to get an MBA? This document is the property of Management Development Institute‚ Gurgaon. Ben passed out from college six years ago with a finance undergraduate degree. He is 28 years of age and his goal I to become an investment banker. Ben’s age can affect his decision to get an MBA due to the following reasons: o His age determines the time period wherein he can be productively employed. The time window available to Ben keeps on reducing with age
Premium Time value of money Opportunity cost Rate of return
1. What is Decision Making? Decision-making is an essential aspect of modern management. It is a primary function of management. A manager’s major job is sound/rational decision-making. He takes hundreds of decisions consciously and subconsciously. Decision-making is the key part of manager’s activities. Decisions are important as they determine both managerial and organizational actions. A decision may be defined as "a course of action which is consciously chosen from among a set of alternatives
Premium Decision making Management Decision theory
Maryland‚ USA Decision Analysis Publication details‚ including instructions for authors and subscription information: http://pubsonline.informs.org A Multiple-Objective Decision Analysis for Terrorism Protection: Potassium Iodide Distribution in Nuclear Incidents Tianjun Feng‚ L. Robin Keller‚ To cite this article: Tianjun Feng‚ L. Robin Keller‚ (2006) A Multiple-Objective Decision Analysis for Terrorism Protection: Potassium Iodide Distribution in Nuclear Incidents. Decision Analysis 3(2):76-93
Premium Nuclear power Decision making Chernobyl disaster
Consumer decision making is a process – Evaluate why marketers need to understand this process. Consumers constantly make decisions regarding to the choices‚ purchases and use of products and services. Consumers are often faced with a large number of alternatives‚ which are changing due to new technologies and competitive pressures (Bettman‚ J. R.‚ & Sujan‚ M. (1987). Journal of Consumer Research‚ 14‚ 50-51). The consumer is often not completely certain about how a product may perform. Even when
Premium Risk Marketing Decision making
Assignment 1: Operation Decision Assume you have been hired as a managing consultant by a company to offer some advice that will help it make a decision as to whether it should shut down completely or continue its operations. It currently uses 100 workers to produce 6‚000 units of output per month (working 20 days / month). The daily wage (per worker) is $70‚ and the price of the firm’s output is $32. The cost of other variable inputs is $2‚000 per day. It also tells us that the firm’s fixed cost
Premium Variable cost Marginal cost Total cost
|………………… | |6 |Eric Gate Kirubi |D53/CTY/PT/21198/2010 |………………… | GROUP: 7 Assignment 1: Discuss the product decisions. Before discussing the product decisions‚ it is important to define a product and its classifications. Product A product can be defined as anything that can be offered to satisfy human needs. Further it can also be described as anything that is potentially
Premium Marketing Product management
Gillian Singer Jacta Alia Est Decisions‚ Decisions Before discussing the different ways a person can reach a decision‚ it is first necessary to know what decision making is. According to The Oxford English Dictionary decision making is‚ The making up of one’s mind on any point or on a course of action; a resolution‚ determination. While the definition seems simple‚ the act of making up ones mind can be quite complicated. You need only look at my dorm room floor on a Saturday
Premium Decision making Decision theory Decision engineering
intertemporal decisions In attempt to outline the standard economic theory about how people make intertemporal decisions we must first begin by looking at what intertemporal decision are‚ using examples to receive a clear understanding of the full concept. Once we have a distinguished understanding of intertemporal choice we must then look berifly at the economic and psycholigical history which formed this concept and ultimatally lead to the theory of discounting utility. It is then that
Premium Economics Utility Preference