Skc. 1] VALUE OF CAPITAL 203
of one year, the sum of $104, the present value of this
right, if the rate of interest is 4 per cent, will be $100.
If the property is the right to $1 one year hence, its present
value is evidently 5; or $0.962, and if the sum to which the
property entitles the owner is any other amount than $1,
its present value is simply that amount divided by 1.04
or multiplied by .962. Thus the present value of $432
due in one year is ju, or 432 x .962, which is $416."
If the future sum is due in two years, and the rate of
interest is still 4 per cent, it is evident that $1 to-day is
the present value of $1.04 next year, which in turn (by
compounding) will then be the present value of $1.04 x 1.04
(i. e. [1.04] %, or $1.082) at the end of the second year. The
$1.082 is called the “amount” of $1 at the end of two
years, and $1.04 is the “amount” of $1 in one year.
Similarly, in three years (1.04)° is the “amount” or sum
worth $1 in present value; and so on for any number of
years. These results show what $1 to-day is worth at
the end of any number of years. And conversely, from
them it is easy to see what $1 due at the end of any number
of years is worth to-day. We have already seen that the
present worth of $1 due in one year is fg or $0.962.
Similarly, the present value of $1 due at the end of two,
three, etc., years is respectively wig, ops etc.’ Knowing
the present value of $1, we may evidently find that of any
other sum by simple proportion.
To illustrate these results geometrically, let us represent
time by horizontal lines, and the value of the capital by
vertical lines: then the curve 4 A” A” A’, as shown in
Figure 1, will exhibit the relative values at any two in-
stants, exchangeable on the basis of a given rate of interest,
compounded annually. : , :
The point B represents the present instant; B’, the in-
! For the general mathematical treatment, see Appendix to Chap,
XIII, § 1.
2 For a mathematical formulation, see Appendix to Chap. XIII, § 2.