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Cost-benefit analysis - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

  
Cost-benefit analysis is a term that refers both to: ... Cost Benefit Analysis is typically used by governments to evaluate the ...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cost-benefit_analysis

Cost-benefit analysis: Definition from Answers.com

  
Cost-Benefit Analysis A process by which business decisions are analyzed. ... Cost-benefit analysis provides the structure and support for making such decisions. ...
http://www.answers.com/topic/cost-benefit-analysis

INTRODUCTION TO COST BENEFIT ANALYSIS

  
COST BENEFIT ANALYSIS. Background. Cost-Benefit Analysis (CBA) estimates and totals up the ... Cost Benefit Analysis Involves a Particular Study Area ...
http://www.sjsu.edu/faculty/watkins/cba.htm

Cost-benefit analysis: Definition from Answers.com

  
Cost - Benefit Analysis A process by which business decisions are analyzed. ... Benefit Analysis. Comparison of the cost of a solution and the economic ...
http://www.answers.com/topic/cost-benefit-analysis?hl=cost&hl=benefit

Cost Benefit Analysis - Decision Making from Mind Tools

  
This article explains how to start using cost benefit analysis - a useful technique for evaluating quantitatively whether to follow a course of action
http://www.mindtools.com/pages/article/newTED_08.htm

Cost Benefit Analysis

  
Cost Benefit Analysis is a technique used to determine whether a planned action ... cost benefit analysis. business metrics. A cost benefit analysis is done to ...
http://management.about.com/cs/money/a/CostBenefit.htm

How to Develop A Cost-benefit Analysis | eHow.com

  
How to article - how to develop a cost-benefit analysis. Decide if a product or service your company receives or provides is worthwhile by conducting a cost-benefit...
http://www.ehow.com/how_2065576_develop-costbenefit-analysis.html

Cost Benefit Analysis

  
Washington State Ergonomics Cost Benefit Calculator. Ergonomics cost benefit calculator instructions (also available in PDF format) ...
http://www.pshfes.org/cba.htm

Cost Analysis in Evaluation

  
Another tool for comparison in cost-benefit analysis is the net rate of return, ... The idea behind cost-benefit analysis is simple: if all inputs and outcomes of a ...
http://ag.arizona.edu/fcs/cyfernet/cyfar/Costben2.htm

CPR Perspectives: Cost-benefit Analysis

  
Cost-benefit Analysis. Data Quality. Devolution. Emissions Trading. Environmental Enforcement ... Cost-benefit analysis seeks to translate all relevant ...
http://www.progressiveregulation.org/perspectives/costbenefit.cfm
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Q.Essay about climate change and Cost Benefit Analysis, any suggestions?Related Search:
Economics
 I am writing an essay about how cost benefit analysis can help solve some of the problems with climate change. What kind of things should I include in my essay? This is a university level essay 4000 words in length.
A.Hmm ouch haha... Um I'm thinking things about measuring the social cost or benefit (externalities) of a product. Look at things such as govt incentives (u could expand this to multiple countries). Let's see, increasing awareness of the environmental benefits... How a firm should factor in the environmental effect when discussing different avenues for new products... 4000 wds is pretty heavy (i've never written anything over 3k)... So i'd spend a bit of time talking about what cost benefit analysis actually is, hows its evolved over time or something, different methods... Maybe mention the cost of including the environment in the analysis etc... Hope that helps somewhat...
  

Q. How do you make a Cost/Benefit Analysis?Related Search:
Other - Social Science
 "A fiscal budget deficit occurs when government spending exceeds government (tax) revenue. Deficits add up to the national debt level(see National Debt Clock), which currently totals more than 9 trillion dollars. Economists have long argued the economic impacts of fiscal deficits. Some argue that they will impair long term economic growth, while others like President Bush argue that without deficits..."in the long run we're dead anyway". Prepare a cost/benefit analysis to determine: Do Deficits Matter?"
A.hope u can make something out of this : for the amount of $$ u receive and the amount spent u get the net returns - we see if all the things that happen, including infrastructure development, human resources, salaries, media, economic trade, environment, defence spending etc - all these expenditure is worth the output that we get. ie the value of the output surpasses the input. obviously its not eg as the iraq war is costing us more than what revenue we are getting. american govt's expenditure is acomplished strictly by internal revenue / taxes esp income. hence no business input where revenue would be obtained. this is unlike other govts who go into business to make more $$. this is the dilemma in many western countries. the more the citizen spend the more economic benefit there will be but there's a cap to it. how much more can we spend. buy and buy & buy. what about savings for a rainy day. this is something that those in lehman brothers etc forgot. many of us are living on credit - beyond our means. irony. but usa is so humongous that it can continue to do so. now its simply printing $$ and spending. no backing / collateral required. but u cant do that in zimbabwe where the $$ is totally worthless! isnt it? with the current collapse, economists have to rethink / invent new theories o o its very confusing
  

Q.How do I perform a software cost benefit analysis?Related Search:
Other - Business & Finance
 I am a web application developer, and have been asked to show the monetary benefits for a client utilizing my proposed solution (a new application), in comparison to their current solution, over a period of time. What approach should I take to validate the cost savings in the long run for the initial expenditure and ongoing support? Is there a set of factors and formulas I can use to show this benefit?
A.The primary output of a cost/benefit would be expected cash flow expressed either periodically or at a point in time. You will have to complete the analysis to know which one to choose. So in considering the costs for a new application, you should include development, project oversight, technology (hw/sw) and maintenance costs. You would likely be very heavy in upfront costs for implementation with significantly lower costs for maintenance after implementation. Benefits should include both cost savings as well as productivity gains (e.g. increased sales). You should account for decreased headcount (fractional [1.5 people]is okay), higher output of current employees, removing hw/sw costs of the other application and anything else you could justify. Create a monthly calendar (Jan, Feb, Mar...) for all of the costs and all of the benefits. You will likely see that initially the costs outweigh the benefits but eventually the benefits will "pay for" all of the costs assumed to that point and the application will then "pay for itself". You would then consider the same factors for the other application and any other alternatives (use both, use neither). I would recommend that you engineer the pay off for your application to be within 3 to 6 months, if at all possible. Your likelihood of success with a 12 to 18 month pay off will be substantially lower. If you find that the payoff really is that far out, you must be prepared to make the case why they would be using your application for an extended period of time. They will have to use the application that long for it to ultimately become beneficial. With and extended payoff, another point you could make is that the business can "capitalize" the cost of your software and they would be able to receive preferential tax treatment on the expenditure. You should ask another question to get a clear explaination of this process. Excel (or any spreadsheet) will make this task easier. But avoid using the spreadsheet for your presentation. The cited article points out the innate flaws in these types of analyses but if they want it you are oblidged to provide.
  

Q.Cost-benefit analysis is one of the most versatile tools in economic analysis.?Related Search:
Economics
 Suppose the end of the semester is approaching and you have to begin preparing for exams. Explain how you might use cost-benefit analysis to maximize your grade point average.
A.Well, I don't want to answer the question, but just think about what your actions could be and what are the results, and just come up with a few scenarios. I think you will find a pattern.
  

Q.Where I can find "data" of cost benefit analysis?Related Search:
Other - Business & Finance
 I need background of the company and "data". Cost Benefit Analysis is use for calculating Return On Invesment, Simple Payback Period, Discounted Payback, Net Present Value, Internal Rate of Return etc.
A.The data which are available in the public domain provide only the information for finding the financial ratios. So return on investment can be calculated. For doing complete Cost-benefit analysis the information would be available only with the company and not usually circulated in the public domain as the data will be voluminous.
  

Q.Why do global warmists not like a cost-benefit analysis of Kyoto?Related Search:
Global Warming
 Is it because it would cost so much and not give the world much of a benefit? Could we not serve the world better by giving them access to clean water, a bigger problem than global warming?
A.Because even if the theory of global warming is real, achieving the targets set out by Kyoto will do very little to stop global warming.
  

Q.Anyone have a formula for cost-benefit analysis of buying a windmill for power generation?Related Search:
Engineering
 I live in an area where a power company uses wind generators successfully. I'd be looking at about a 1.8 kw generator in an area where electricity is expensive. Initial cost is $13K. Would I be better off waiting a couple of years for newer, better, cheaper wind generators?
A.1.8kW wind generator... running at 25% load produces 1.8kW * 0.25 * 24hours/day * 365days = 3942kWh/year. Let's make that 4000kWh. You can probably sell that electricity for $0.07/kWh. Makes a total income of $280/year. 5% annual interest on $13000 is $650. Yep, you are going to lose roughly $370 per year... not counting running cost for repairs etc. Sounds like a great business proposition? I don't think so. If you are just offsetting your own consumption and electricity prices are around $0.15/kWh, you might just brake even. Barely... In general I would not think that wind below 250kW is a good investment. Try 10MW+ wind parks and you are probably talking about a sound business model. And some people simply want to do their share to improve global warming. They don't need to be concerned about the financial downside. If you are one of them, go for it. It will make you feel a lot better.
  
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Cost-benefit analysis is a term that refers both to:

  • a formal discipline used to help appraise, or assess, the case for a project or proposal, which itself is a process known as project appraisal; and
  • an informal approach to making decisions of any kind.

Under both definitions the process involves, whether explicitly or implicitly, weighing the total expected costs against the total expected benefits of one or more actions in order to choose the best or most profitable option. The formal process is often referred to as either CBA (Cost-Benefit Analysis) or BCA (Benefit-Cost Analysis).

A hallmark of CBA is that all benefits and all costs are expressed in money terms, and are adjusted for the time value of money, so that all flows of benefits and flows of project costs over time (which tend to occur at different points in time) are expressed on a common basis in terms of their “present value.” Closely related, but slightly different, formal techniques include Cost-effectiveness analysis, Economic impact analysis, Fiscal impact analysis and Social Return on Investment(SROI) analysis. The latter builds upon the logic of cost-benefit analysis, but differs in that it is explicitly designed to inform the practical decision-making of enterprise managers and investors focused on optimising their social and environmental impacts.

Contents

[edit] Theory

Cost Benefit Analysis is typically used by governments to evaluate the desirability of a given intervention in markets. The aim is to gauge the efficiency of the intervention relative to the status quo. The costs and benefits of the impacts of an intervention are evaluated in terms of the public's willingness to pay for them (benefits) or willingness to pay to avoid them (costs). Inputs are typically measured in terms of opportunity costs - the value in their best alternative use. The guiding principle is to list all of the parties affected by an intervention, and place a monetary value of the effect it has on their welfare as it would be valued by them.

The process involves monetary value of initial and ongoing expenses vs. expected return. Constructing plausible measures of the costs and benefits of specific actions is often very difficult. In practice, analysts try to estimate costs and benefits either by using survey methods or by drawing inferences from market behaviour. For example, a product manager may compare manufacturing and marketing expenses to projected sales for a proposed product, and only decide to produce it if he expects the revenues to eventually recoup the costs. Cost-benefit analysis attempts to put all relevant costs and benefits on a common temporal footing. A discount rate is chosen, which is then used to compute all relevant future costs and benefits in present-value terms. Most commonly, the discount rate used for present-value calculations is an interest rate taken from financial markets (R.H. Frank 2000). This can be very controversial - for example, a high discount rate implies a very low value on the welfare of future generations, which may have a huge impact on the desirability of interventions to help the environment, and so on. Empirical studies have suggested that in reality, people's discount rates do decline over time. Because CBA aims to measure the public's true willingness to pay, this feature is typically built into studies.

During cost-benefit analysis, monetary values may also be assigned to less tangible effects such as the various risks which could contribute to partial or total project failure; loss of reputation, market penetration, long-term enterprise strategy alignments, etc. This is especially true when governments use the technique, for instance to decide whether to introduce business regulation, build a new road or offer a new drug on the state healthcare. In this case, a value must be put on human life or the environment, often causing great controversy. The cost-benefit principle says, for example, that we should install a guardrail on a dangerous stretch of mountain road if the dollar cost of doing so is less than the implicit dollar value of the injuries, deaths, and property damage thus prevented (R.H. Frank 2000).

Cost-benefit calculations typically involve using time value of money formula. This is usually done by converting the future expected streams of costs and benefits to a present value amount.

[edit] Application and History

Cost-benefit analysis is mainly, but not exclusively, used to assess the value for money of very large private and public sector projects. This is because such projects tend to include costs and benefits that are less amenable to being expressed in financial or monetary terms (e.g. environmental damage), as well as those that can be expressed in monetary terms. Private sector organizations tend to make much more use of other project appraisal techniques, such as rate of return, where feasible.

The practice of cost-benefit analysis differs between countries and between sectors (e.g. transport, health) within countries. Some of the main differences include the types of impacts that are included as costs and benefits within appraisals, the extent to which impacts are expressed in monetary terms and differences in discount rate between countries. Agencies across the world rely on a basic set of key cost-benefit indicators, including:

  • PVB (present value of benefits);
  • PVC (present value of costs);
  • NPV (PVB less PVC);
  • NPV/k (where k is the level of funds available) and
  • BCR (benefit cost ratio, PVB divided by PVC).

The concept of CBA dates back to an 1848 article by Dupuit, and was formalized in subsequent works by Alfred Marshall. The practical application of CBA was initiated in the US by the Army Corps of Engineers, after the Federal Navigation Act of 1936 effectively required cost-benefit analysis for proposed federal waterway infrastructure. [1]

Subsequently, cost-benefit techniques were applied to the development of highway and motorway investments in the US and UK during the 1950s and 60s. An early, and often quoted, more developed application of the technique was made to London Underground's Victoria Line. Over the last 40 years, cost-benefit techniques have gradually developed to the extent that substantial guidance now exists on how transport projects should be appraised in many countries around the world.

In the UK, the New Approach to Appraisal (NATA) was introduced by the then Department for Transport, Environment and the Regions. This brought together cost-benefit results with those from detailed environmental impact assessments and presented them in a balanced way. NATA was first applied to national road schemes in the 1998 Roads Review, but subsequently rolled out to all modes of transport. It is now a cornerstone of transport appraisal in the UK and is maintained and developed by the Department for Transport.[10]

The EU's 'Developing Harmonised European Approaches for Transport Costing and Project Assessment' (HEATCO) project, part of its Sixth Framework Programme, has reviewed transport appraisal guidance across EU member states and found that significant differences exist between countries. HEATCO's aim is to develop guidelines to harmonise transport appraisal practice across the EU.[11][12] [2]

Transport Canada has also promoted the use of CBA for major transport investments since the issuance of its Guidebook in 1994.[3]

More recent guidance has been provided by the US Dept. of Transportation and several state transportation departments, with discussion of available software tools for application of CBA in transportation, including HERS, BCA.Net, StatBenCost, CalBC, and TREDIS. Available guides are provided by the Federal Highway Administration[4][5], Federal Aviation Administration[6], Minnesota Department of Transportation[7] and California Department of Transportation (Caltrans)[8].

During the early 1960’s, CBA was also extended to assessment of the relative benefits and costs of health care and education in works by Burton Weisbrod.[9][10]. Later, the US Dept. of Health and Human Services issued its CBA Guidebook[11].

[edit] Accuracy problems

The accuracy of the outcome of a cost-benefit analysis is dependent on how accurately costs and benefits have been estimated. A peer-reviewed study [13] of the accuracy of cost estimates in transportation infrastructure planning found that for rail projects actual costs turned out to be on average 44.7 percent higher than estimated costs, and for roads 20.4 percent higher (Flyvbjerg, Holm, and Buhl, 2002). For benefits, another peer-reviewed study [14] found that actual rail ridership was on average 51.4 percent lower than estimated ridership; for roads it was found that for half of all projects estimated traffic was wrong by more than 20 percent (Flyvbjerg, Holm, and Buhl, 2005). Comparative studies indicate that similar inaccuracies apply to fields other than transportation. These studies indicate that the outcomes of cost-benefit analyses should be treated with caution, because they may be highly inaccurate. In fact, inaccurate cost-benefit analyses may be argued to be a substantial risk in planning, because inaccuracies of the size documented are likely to lead to inefficient decisions, as defined by Pareto and Kaldor-Hicks efficiency ([15] Flyvbjerg, Bruzelius, and Rothengatter, 2003).

These outcomes (almost always tending to underestimation, unless significant new approaches are overlooked) are to be expected, since such estimates:

1. rely heavily on past like projects (frequently differing markedly in function or size, and certainly in the skill levels of the team members),

2. rely heavily on the project's members to identify (remember from their collective past experiences) the significant cost drivers,

3. rely on very crude heuristics ('rules of thumb') to estimate the money cost of the intangible elements, and

4. are unable to completely dispel the usually (unconscious) biases of the team members (who often have a vested interest in a decision to 'go ahead') and the natural psychological tendency to "think positive" (whatever that involves).

Another challenge to cost-benefit analysis comes from determining which costs should be included in an analysis (the significant cost drivers). This is often controversial as organizations or interest groups may feel that some costs should be included or excluded from a study.

In the case of the Ford Pinto (where, due to design flaws, the Pinto was liable to burst into flames in a rear-impact collision), the Ford company's decision was not to issue a recall. Ford's cost benefit analysis had estimated that: based on the number of cars in use and the probable accident rate, deaths due to the design flaw would run about $49.5 million (the amount Ford would pay out of court to settle wrongful death lawsuits). This was estimated to be less than the cost of issuing a recall ($137.5 million) [16]. In the event, Ford overlooked (or considered insignificant) the costs of the negative publicity so engendered, which turned out to be quite significant (since it led to the recall anyway and to measurable losses in sales).

In the field of Health Economics, some analysts feel that cost-benefit analysis can be an inadequate measure, as willingness-to-pay methods of determining the value of human life can be subject to bias according to income inequity. They support use of variants such as cost-utility analysis and quality-adjusted life year to analyze the effects of health policies.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ History of Benefit-Cost Analysis, Proceedings of the 2006 Cost Benefit Conference [1]
  2. ^ Guide to Cost-Benefit Analysis of Investment Projects. Evaluation Unit, DG Regional Policy, European Commission, 2002. [2]
  3. ^ Guide to Benefit-Cost Analysis in Transport Canada. Transport Canada. Economic Evaluation Branch, Transport Canada, Ottawa, 1994[3]
  4. ^ US Federal Highway Administration: Economic Analysis Primer: Benefit-Cost Analysis 2003 [4]
  5. ^ US Federal Highway Administration: Cost-Benefit Forecasting Toolbox for Highways, Circa 2001 [5]
  6. ^ US Federal Aviation Administration: Airport Benefit-Cost Analysis Guidance, 1999[6]
  7. ^ Minnesota Department of Transportation: Benefit Cost Analysis. MN DOT Office of Investment Management[7]
  8. ^ California Department of Transportation: Benefit-Cost Analysis Guide for Transportation Planning[8]
  9. ^ Weisbrod, Burton: “Does Better Health Pay?” Public Health Report, vol. 75, June 1960, pp. 557-60.
  10. ^ Weisbrod, Burton: “Education and Investment in Human Capital,” Journal of Political Economy, Supplement, vol. 70, no. 5, part 2, October 1962, pp. 106-23 (reprinted in B. Kiker, ed., Investment in Human Capital, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC, 1971; also R. Wykstra, ed., Human Capital Formation and Manpower Development, The Free Press, New York, 1971)
  11. ^ US Department of Health And Human Services: Feasibility, Alternatives, And Cost/Benefit Analysis Guide, July 1993[9]

[edit] Further reading

  • Ascott, Elizabeth. 2006. Benefit Cost Analysis of Wonderworld Drive Overpass in San Marcos, Texas. Applied Research Project. Texas State University. http://ecommons.txstate.edu/arp/104/
  • Bent Flyvbjerg, Mette K. Skamris Holm, and Søren L. Buhl, "Underestimating Costs in Public Works Projects: Error or Lie?" Journal of the American Planning Association, vol. 68, no. 3, Summer 2002, pp. 279-295. [17]
  • Bent Flyvbjerg, Mette K. Skamris Holm, and Søren L. Buhl, "How (In)accurate Are Demand Forecasts in Public Works Projects? The Case of Transportation." Journal of the American Planning Association, vol. 71, no. 2, Spring 2005, pp. 131-146. [18]
  • Chakravarty, Sukhamoy (1987). "cost-benefit analysis," The New Palgrave: A Dictionary of Economics, v. 1, pp. 687-90.
  • Bent Flyvbjerg, Nils Bruzelius, and Werner Rothengatter, Megaprojects and Risk: An Anatomy of Ambition (Cambridge University Press, 2003). [19]
  • Benefit/Cost Analysis: Introduction. Mankato State University. undated. [20]
  • Folland, Sherman, Allen C. Goodman and Miron Stano. The Economics of Heath and Health Care. Fifth ed. Pearson Prentice Hall: New Jersey, 2007. pg 83, 84.
  • Portney, Paul R., Benefit-Cost Analysis, in The Library Of Economics and Liberty. [21]
  • Tevfik F. Nas, Cost-Benefit Analysis: Theory and Application (Thousand Oaks, Ca.: Sage, 1996). [22]

[edit] External links

  • [23] - The Environmental Valuation & Cost-Benefit Website
  • [24] - Environmental Valuation & Cost-Benefit News
  • [25] - Caltrans Guide to Benefit-Cost Analysis
  • [26] - Inaccuracy in cost estimates
  • [27] - Inaccuracy in benefit estimates
  • Decision Analysis in Health Care George Mason University online course offering lectures and tools for measuring cost-effectiveness in health care scenarios.
  • Cost-Benefit Analysis on Clinfowiki


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