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First off, NPV is the NPV of Cash Flows, not Net Income. But that’s not a major point because if total depreciation is the same over the project life, total Net Income will be too. The question is why the NPV of cash flows is greater under accelerated depreciation.afranks1 wrote:
With straight line depreciation, accelerated depreciation or units of production, the tax expense, depreciation amount and net income are the same over the entire period.
But can someone please clarify why higher depreciation (under say accelerated depreciation) leads to a higher NPV? Higher depreciation means lower net income, so not sure how this translates to higher NPV?