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Cost–benefit analysis

Cost–benefit analysis (CBA), sometimes also called benefit–cost analysis, is a systematic approach to estimating the strengths and weaknesses of alternatives. It is used to determine options which provide the best approach to achieving benefits while preserving savings in, for example, transactions, activities, and functional business requirements.[1] A CBA may be used to compare completed or potential courses of action, and to estimate or evaluate the value against the cost of a decision, project, or policy. It is commonly used to evaluate business or policy decisions (particularly public policy), commercial transactions, and project investments. For example, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission must conduct cost-benefit analyses before instituting regulations or deregulations.[2]: 6 

CBA has two main applications:[3]

  1. To determine if an investment (or decision) is sound, ascertaining if – and by how much – its benefits outweigh its costs.
  2. To provide a basis for comparing investments (or decisions), comparing the total expected cost of each option with its total expected benefits.

CBA is related to cost-effectiveness analysis. Benefits and costs in CBA are expressed in monetary terms and are adjusted for the time value of money; all flows of benefits and costs over time are expressed on a common basis in terms of their net present value, regardless of whether they are incurred at different times. Other related techniques include cost–utility analysis, risk–benefit analysis, economic impact analysis, fiscal impact analysis, and social return on investment (SROI) analysis.

Cost–benefit analysis is often used by organizations to appraise the desirability of a given policy. It is an analysis of the expected balance of benefits and costs, including an account of any alternatives and the status quo. CBA helps predict whether the benefits of a policy outweigh its costs (and by how much), relative to other alternatives. This allows the ranking of alternative policies in terms of a cost–benefit ratio.[4] Generally, accurate cost–benefit analysis identifies choices which increase welfare from a utilitarian perspective. Assuming an accurate CBA, changing the status quo by implementing the alternative with the lowest cost–benefit ratio can improve Pareto efficiency.[5] Although CBA can offer an informed estimate of the best alternative, a perfect appraisal of all present and future costs and benefits is difficult; perfection, in economic efficiency and social welfare, is not guaranteed.[6]

The value of a cost–benefit analysis depends on the accuracy of the individual cost and benefit estimates. Comparative studies indicate that such estimates are often flawed, preventing improvements in Pareto and Kaldor–Hicks efficiency.[7] Interest groups may attempt to include (or exclude) significant costs in an analysis to influence its outcome.[8]

History edit

 
French engineer and economist Jules Dupuit, credited with the creation of cost–benefit analysis

The concept of CBA dates back to an 1848 article by Jules Dupuit, and was formalized in subsequent works by Alfred Marshall.[9] Jules Dupuit pioneered this approach by first calculating "the social profitability of a project like the construction of a road or bridge"[10] In an attempt to answer this, Dupuit began to look at the utility users would gain from the project. He determined that the best method of measuring utility is by learning one's willingness to pay for something. By taking the sum of each user's willingness to pay, Dupuit illustrated that the social benefit of the thing (bridge or road or canal) could be measured. Some users may be willing to pay nearly nothing, others much more, but the sum of these would shed light on the benefit of it. It should be reiterated that Dupuit was not suggesting that the government perfectly price-discriminate and charge each user exactly what they would pay. Rather, their willingness to pay provided a theoretical foundation on the societal worth or benefit of a project. The cost of the project proved much simpler to calculate. Simply taking the sum of the materials and labor, in addition to the maintenance afterward, would give one the cost. Now, the costs and benefits of the project could be accurately analyzed, and an informed decision could be made.

The Corps of Engineers initiated the use of CBA in the US, after the Federal Navigation Act of 1936 mandated cost–benefit analysis for proposed federal-waterway infrastructure.[11] The Flood Control Act of 1939 was instrumental in establishing CBA as federal policy, requiring that "the benefits to whomever they accrue [be] in excess of the estimated costs."[12]

More recently, cost-benefit analysis has been applied to decisions regarding investments in cybersecurity-related activities (e.g., see the Gordon–Loeb model for decisions concerning cybersecurity investments).[13]

Public policy edit

CBA's application to broader public policy began with the work of Otto Eckstein,[14] who laid out a welfare economics foundation for CBA and its application to water-resource development in 1958. It was applied in the US to water quality,[15] recreational travel,[16] and land conservation during the 1960s,[17] and the concept of option value was developed to represent the non-tangible value of resources such as national parks.[18]

CBA was expanded to address the intangible and tangible benefits of public policies relating to mental illness,[19] substance abuse,[20] college education,[21] and chemical waste.[22] In the US, the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 required CBA for regulatory programs; since then, other governments have enacted similar rules. Government guidebooks for the application of CBA to public policies include the Canadian guide for regulatory analysis,[23] the Australian guide for regulation and finance,[24] and the US guides for health-care[25] and emergency-management programs.[26]

Transportation investment edit

CBA for transport investment began in the UK with the M1 motorway project and was later used for many projects, including the London Underground's Victoria line.[27] The New Approach to Appraisal (NATA) was later introduced by the Department for Transport, Environment and the Regions. This presented balanced cost–benefit results and detailed environmental impact assessments. NATA was first applied to national road schemes in the 1998 Roads Review, and was subsequently rolled out to all transport modes. Maintained and developed by the Department for Transport, it was a cornerstone of UK transport appraisal in 2011.

The European Union's Developing Harmonised European Approaches for Transport Costing and Project Assessment (HEATCO) project, part of the EU's Sixth Framework Programme, reviewed transport appraisal guidance of EU member states and found significant national differences.[28] HEATCO aimed to develop guidelines to harmonise transport appraisal practice across the EU.[29]

Transport Canada promoted CBA for major transport investments with the 1994 publication of its guidebook.[30] US federal and state transport departments commonly apply CBA with a variety of software tools, including HERS, BCA.Net, StatBenCost, Cal-BC, and TREDIS. Guides are available from the Federal Highway Administration,[31][32] Federal Aviation Administration,[33] Minnesota Department of Transportation,[34] California Department of Transportation (Caltrans),[35] and the Transportation Research Board's Transportation Economics Committee.[36]

Accuracy edit

In health economics, CBA may be an inadequate measure because willingness-to-pay methods of determining the value of human life can be influenced by income level. Variants, such as cost–utility analysis, QALY and DALY to analyze the effects of health policies, may be more suitable.[37][38]

For some environmental effects, cost–benefit analysis can be replaced by cost-effectiveness analysis. This is especially true when one type of physical outcome is sought, such as a reduction in energy use by an increase in energy efficiency. Using cost-effectiveness analysis is less laborious and time-consuming, since it does not involve the monetization of outcomes (which can be difficult in some cases).[39]

It has been argued that if modern cost–benefit analyses had been applied to decisions such as whether to mandate the removal of lead from gasoline, block the construction of two proposed dams just above and below the Grand Canyon on the Colorado River, and regulate workers' exposure to vinyl chloride, the measures would not have been implemented (although all are considered highly successful).[40] The US Clean Air Act has been cited in retrospective studies as a case in which benefits exceeded costs, but knowledge of the benefits (attributable largely to the benefits of reducing particulate pollution) was not available until many years later.[40]

Process edit

A generic cost–benefit analysis has the following steps:[41]

  1. Define the goals and objectives of the action.
  2. List alternative actions.
  3. List stakeholders.[dubious ]
  4. Select measurement(s) and measure all cost and benefit elements.
  5. Predict outcome of costs and benefits over the relevant time period.
  6. Convert all costs and benefits into a common currency.
  7. Apply discount rate.
  8. Calculate the net present value of actions under consideration.
  9. Perform sensitivity analysis.
  10. Adopt the recommended course of action.

In United States regulatory policy, cost-benefit analysis is governed by OMB Circular A-4.

Evaluation edit

CBA attempts to measure the positive or negative consequences of a project. A similar approach is used in the environmental analysis of total economic value. Both costs and benefits can be diverse. Costs tend to be most thoroughly represented in cost–benefit analyses due to relatively-abundant market data. The net benefits of a project may incorporate cost savings, public willingness to pay (implying that the public has no legal right to the benefits of the policy), or willingness to accept compensation (implying that the public has a right to the benefits of the policy) for the policy's welfare change. The guiding principle of evaluating benefits is to list all parties affected by an intervention and add the positive or negative value (usually monetary) that they ascribe to its effect on their welfare.

The actual compensation an individual would require to have their welfare unchanged by a policy is inexact at best. Surveys (stated preferences) or market behavior (revealed preferences) are often used to estimate compensation associated with a policy. Stated preferences are a direct way of assessing willingness to pay for an environmental feature, for example.[42] Survey respondents often misreport their true preferences, however, and market behavior does not provide information about important non-market welfare impacts. Revealed preference is an indirect approach to individual willingness to pay. People make market choices of items with different environmental characteristics, for example, revealing the value placed on environmental factors.[43]

The value of human life is controversial when assessing road-safety measures or life-saving medicines. Controversy can sometimes be avoided by using the related technique of cost–utility analysis, in which benefits are expressed in non-monetary units such as quality-adjusted life years. Road safety can be measured in cost per life saved, without assigning a financial value to the life. However, non-monetary metrics have limited usefulness for evaluating policies with substantially different outcomes. Other benefits may also accrue from a policy, and metrics such as cost per life saved may lead to a substantially different ranking of alternatives than CBA.In some cases, in addition to changing the benefit indicator, the cost-benefit analysis strategy is directly abandoned as a measure. In the 1980s, to ensure workers' safety, the US Supreme Court made an important decision to abandon the consideration of return on investment and instead seek the lowest cost-benefit to meet specific standards.[44]

Another metric is valuing the environment, which in the 21st century is typically assessed by valuing ecosystem services to humans (such as air and water quality and pollution).[45] Monetary values may also be assigned to other intangible effects such as business reputation, market penetration, or long-term enterprise strategy alignment.

Time and discounting edit

CBA generally attempts to put all relevant costs and benefits on a common temporal footing, using time value of money calculations. This is often done by converting the future expected streams of costs ( ) and benefits ( ) into a present value amount with a discount rate ( ) and the net present value defined as:

 
The selection of a discount rate for this calculation is subjective. A smaller rate values the current generation and future generations equally. Larger rates (a market rate of return, for example) reflects human present bias or hyperbolic discounting: valuing money which they will receive in the near future more than money they will receive in the distant future. Empirical studies suggest that people discount future benefits in a way similar to these calculations.[46] The choice makes a large difference in assessing interventions with long-term effects. An example is the equity premium puzzle, which suggests that long-term returns on equities may be higher than they should be after controlling for risk and uncertainty. If so, market rates of return should not be used to determine the discount rate because they would undervalue the distant future.[47]

Methods for choosing a discount rate edit

For publicly traded companies, it is possible to find a project's discount rate by using an equilibrium asset pricing model to find the required return on equity for the company and then assuming that the risk profile of a given project is similar to that the company faces. Commonly used models include the capital asset pricing model (CAPM):

 
and the Fama-French model:
 
where the   terms correspond to the factor loadings. A generalization of these methods can be found in arbitrage pricing theory, which allows for an arbitrary number of risk premiums in the calculation of the required return.

Risk and uncertainty edit

Risk associated with project outcomes is usually handled with probability theory. Although it can be factored into the discount rate (to have uncertainty increasing over time), it is usually considered separately. Particular consideration is often given to agent risk aversion: preferring a situation with less uncertainty to one with greater uncertainty, even if the latter has a higher expected return.

Uncertainty in CBA parameters can be evaluated with a sensitivity analysis, which indicates how results respond to parameter changes. A more formal risk analysis may also be undertaken with the Monte Carlo method.[48] However, even a low parameter of uncertainty does not guarantee the success of a project.

Principle of maximum entropy edit

Suppose that we have sources of uncertainty in a CBA that are best treated with the Monte Carlo method, and the distributions describing uncertainty are all continuous. How do we go about choosing the appropriate distribution to represent the sources of uncertainty? One popular method is to make use of the principle of maximum entropy, which states that the distribution with the best representation of current knowledge is the one with the largest entropy - defined for continuous distributions as:

 
where   is the support set of a probability density function  . Suppose that we impose a series of constraints that must be satisfied:
  1.  , with equality outside of  
  2.  
  3.  

where the last equality is a series of moment conditions. Maximizing the entropy with these constraints leads to the functional:[49]

 
where the   are Lagrange multipliers. Maximizing this functional leads to the form of a maximum entropy distribution:
 
There is a direct correspondence between the form of a maximum entropy distribution and the exponential family. Examples of commonly used continuous maximum entropy distributions in simulations include:
  • Uniform distribution
    • No constraints are imposed over the support set  
    • It is assumed that we have maximum ignorance about the uncertainty
  • Exponential distribution
    • Specified mean   over the support set  
  • Gamma distribution
    • Specified mean   and log mean   over the support set  
    • The exponential distribution is a special case
  • Normal distribution
    • Specified mean   and variance   over the support set  
    • If we have a specified mean and variance on the log scale, then the lognormal distribution is the maximum entropy distribution

CBA under US administrations edit

The increased use of CBA in the US regulatory process is often associated with President Ronald Reagan's administration. Although CBA in US policy-making dates back several decades, Reagan's Executive Order 12291 mandated its use in the regulatory process. After campaigning on a deregulation platform, he issued the 1981 EO authorizing the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) to review agency regulations and requiring federal agencies to produce regulatory impact analyses when the estimated annual impact exceeded $100 million. During the 1980s, academic and institutional critiques of CBA emerged. The three main criticisms were:[50]

  1. That CBA could be used for political goals. Debates on the merits of cost and benefit comparisons can be used to sidestep political or philosophical goals, rules and regulations.
  2. That CBA is inherently anti-regulatory, and therefore a biased tool. The monetization of policy impacts is an inappropriate tool for assessing mortality risks and distributional impacts.
  3. That the length of time necessary to complete CBA can create significant delays, which can impede policy regulation.

These criticisms continued under the Clinton administration during the 1990s. Clinton furthered the anti-regulatory environment with his Executive Order 12866.[51] The order changed some of Reagan's language, requiring benefits to justify (rather than exceeding) costs and adding "reduction of discrimination or bias" as a benefit to be analyzed. Criticisms of CBA (including uncertainty valuations, discounting future values, and the calculation of risk) were used to argue that it should play no part in the regulatory process.[52] The use of CBA in the regulatory process continued under the Obama administration, along with the debate about its practical and objective value. Some analysts oppose the use of CBA in policy-making, and those in favor of it support improvements in analysis and calculations.

Criticisms edit

As a concept in economics, cost-benefit analysis has provided a valuable reference for many public construction and governmental decisions, but its application has gradually revealed a number of drawbacks and limitations. A number of critical arguments have been put forward in response. That include concerns about measuring the distribution of costs and benefits, discounting the costs and benefits to future generations, and accounting for the diminishing marginal utility of income.[53][54][55][56] in addition, relying solely on cost-benefit analysis may lead to neglecting the multifaceted value factors of a project.

Distribution edit

CBA has been criticized in some disciplines as it relies on the Kaldor-Hicks criterion which does not take into account distributional issues. This means, that positive net-benefits are decisive, independent of who benefits and who loses when a certain policy or project is put into place. Phaneuf and Requate phrased it as follows "CBA today relies on the Kaldor-Hicks criteria to make statements about efficiency without addressing issues of income distribution. This has allowed economists to stay silent on issues of equity, while focusing on the more familiar task of measuring costs and benefits".[57] The challenge raised is that it is possible for the benefits of successive policies to consistently accrue to the same group of individuals, and CBA is ambivalent between providing benefits to those that have received them in the past and those that have been consistently excluded.[58][53][59][60] Policy solutions, such as progressive taxation can address some of these concerns.

Discounting and future generations edit

Others have critiqued the practice of discounting future costs and benefits for a variety of reasons, including the potential undervaluing of the temporally distant cost of climate change and other environmental damage, and the concern that such a practice effectively ignores the preferences of future generations.[55][61][62] Some scholars argue that the use of discounting makes CBA biased against future generations, and understates the potential harmful impacts of climate change.[63][64] The growing relevance of climate change has led to a re-examination of the practice of discounting in CBA.[65][66][67]

Marginal utility edit

The main criticism stems from the diminishing marginal utility of income.[68][69] According to this critique, without using weights in the CBA, it is not the case that everyone "matters" the same but rather that people with greater ability to pay receive a higher weight.[70][71] One reason for this is that for high income people, one monetary unit is worth less relative to low income people, so they are more willing to give up one unit in order to make a change that is favourable for them.[72] This means that there is no symmetry in agents, i.e. some people benefit more from the same absolute monetary benefit. Any welfare change, no matter positive or negative, affects people with a lower income stronger than people with a higher income, even if the exact monetary impacts are identical.[71] This is more than just a challenge to the distribution of benefits in CBA, it is a critique of the ability of CBA to accurately measure benefits as, according to this critique, using unweighted absolute willingness to pay overstates the costs and benefits to the wealthy, and understates those costs and benefits to the poor. Sometimes this is framed in terms of an argument about democracy, that each person's preferences should be given the same weight in an analysis (one person one vote), while under a standard CBA model the preferences of the wealthy are given greater weight.[54]

Taken together, according to this objection, not using weights is a decision in itself – richer people receive de facto a bigger weight. To compensate for this difference in valuation, it is possible to use different methods. One is to use weights, and there are a number of different approaches for calculating these weights.[70] Often, a Bergson-Samuelson social welfare function is used and weights are calculated according to the willingness-to-pay of people.[73][74] Another method is to use percentage willingness to pay, where willingness to pay is measured as a percentage of total income or wealth to control for income.[71] These methods would also help to address distributional concerns raised by the Kaldor-Hick criterion.

Limitations in the scope of assessment edit

Economic cost-benefit analysis tends to limit the assessment of benefits to economic values, ignoring the importance of other value factors such as the wishes of minority groups, inclusiveness and respect for the rights of others.[75] These value factors are difficult to rank and measure in terms of weighting, yet cost-benefit analysis suffers from the inability to consider these factors comprehensively, thus lacking the integrity and comprehensiveness of social welfare judgements. Therefore, for projects with a higher standard of evaluation, other evaluation methods need to be used and referred to in order to compensate for these shortcomings and to assess the impact of the project on society in a more comprehensive and integrated manner.[76]

See also edit

References edit

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  53. ^ a b Carneades (2022). Are All Lives Equal? Why Cost-Benefit Analysis Values Rich Lives More and How Philosophy Can Fix It. Carneades.org. p. 320. ISBN 979-8-98-612861-0. One may be concerned that Kaldor-Hicks allows for unequally distributed benefits regardless of whether absolute or percentage willingness to pay is used. If policies always benefit one group and never benefit another group, it may not matter how those benefits are measured.
  54. ^ a b Boardman, Anthony E. (2018). Cost-benefit analysis : concepts and practice. David H. Greenberg, Aidan R. Vining, David Leo Weimer (5th ed.). Cambridge, United Kingdom. p. 542. ISBN 978-1-108-41599-6. OCLC 1014011028. The final part of this argument is analogous to the "one-person, one vote" voting principle: in a democracy, low-income persons should have as much influence over decisions on whether to undertake public projects as high-income persons. In other words, measures of changes in consumer surplus for different persons should be adjusted to what they would be if everyone had the same income.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
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Further reading edit

  • Campbell, Harry; Brown, Richard (2003). Benefit–Cost Analysis: Financial and Economic Appraisal Using Spreadsheets. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-82146-9.
  • Chakravarty, Sukhamoy (1987). "Cost–benefit analysis". The New Palgrave: A Dictionary of Economics. Vol. 1. London: Macmillan. pp. 687–690. ISBN 978-0-333-37235-7.
  • David, R., Ngulube, P. & Dube, A., 2013, "A cost–benefit analysis of document management strategies used at a financial institution in Zimbabwe: A case study", SA Journal of Information Management 15(2), Art. #540, 10 pages.
  • Dupuit, Jules (1969). "On the Measurement of the Utility of Public Works". In Arrow, Kenneth J.; Scitovsky, Tibor (eds.). Readings in Welfare Economics. London: Allen and Unwin. ISBN 978-0-04-338038-3.
  • Eckstein, Otto (1958). Water-resource Development: The Economics of Project Evaluation. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
  • Folland, Sherman; Goodman, Allen C.; Stano, Miron (2007). The Economics of Health and Health Care (Fifth ed.). New Jersey: Pearson Prentice Hall. pp. 83–84. ISBN 978-0-13-227942-0.
  • Ferrara, A. (2010). Cost–Benefit Analysis of Multi-Level Government: The Case of EU Cohesion Policy and US Federal Investment Policies. London and New York: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-56821-0.
  • Frank, Robert H. (2000). "Why is Cost–Benefit Analysis so Controversial?". Journal of Legal Studies. 29 (S2): 913–930. doi:10.1086/468099. S2CID 153355929.
  • Hirshleifer, Jack (1960). Water Supply: Economics, Technology, and Policy. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  • Huesemann, Michael H., and Joyce A. Huesemann (2011). Technofix: Why Technology Won't Save Us or the Environment, Chapter 8, “The Positive Biases of Technology Assessments and Cost Benefit Analyses”, New Society Publishers, Gabriola Island, British Columbia, Canada, ISBN 0865717044, 464 pp.
  • Maass, Arthur, ed. (1962). Design of Water-resource Systems: New Techniques for Relating Economic Objectives, Engineering Analysis, and Governmental Planning. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
  • McKean, Roland N. (1958). Efficiency in Government through Systems Analysis: With Emphasis on Water Resources Development. New York: Wiley.
  • Nas, Tevfik F. (1996). Cost–Benefit Analysis: Theory and Application. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage. ISBN 978-0-8039-7133-2.
  • Richardson, Henry S. (2000). "The Stupidity of the Cost–Benefit Analysis". Journal of Legal Studies. 29 (S2): 971–1003. doi:10.1086/468102. S2CID 153426905.
  • Quigley, John; Walls, Lesley (2003). (PDF). Journal of the Operational Research Society. 54 (12): 1234–1241. doi:10.1057/palgrave.jors.2601633. S2CID 26862642. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2020-10-10. Retrieved 2019-08-01.
  • Sen, Amartya (2000). "The Discipline of Cost–Benefit Analysis". Journal of Legal Studies. 29 (S2): 931–952. doi:10.1086/468100. S2CID 106398171.

External links edit

cost, benefit, analysis, sometimes, also, called, benefit, cost, analysis, systematic, approach, estimating, strengths, weaknesses, alternatives, used, determine, options, which, provide, best, approach, achieving, benefits, while, preserving, savings, example. Cost benefit analysis CBA sometimes also called benefit cost analysis is a systematic approach to estimating the strengths and weaknesses of alternatives It is used to determine options which provide the best approach to achieving benefits while preserving savings in for example transactions activities and functional business requirements 1 A CBA may be used to compare completed or potential courses of action and to estimate or evaluate the value against the cost of a decision project or policy It is commonly used to evaluate business or policy decisions particularly public policy commercial transactions and project investments For example the U S Securities and Exchange Commission must conduct cost benefit analyses before instituting regulations or deregulations 2 6 CBA has two main applications 3 To determine if an investment or decision is sound ascertaining if and by how much its benefits outweigh its costs To provide a basis for comparing investments or decisions comparing the total expected cost of each option with its total expected benefits CBA is related to cost effectiveness analysis Benefits and costs in CBA are expressed in monetary terms and are adjusted for the time value of money all flows of benefits and costs over time are expressed on a common basis in terms of their net present value regardless of whether they are incurred at different times Other related techniques include cost utility analysis risk benefit analysis economic impact analysis fiscal impact analysis and social return on investment SROI analysis Cost benefit analysis is often used by organizations to appraise the desirability of a given policy It is an analysis of the expected balance of benefits and costs including an account of any alternatives and the status quo CBA helps predict whether the benefits of a policy outweigh its costs and by how much relative to other alternatives This allows the ranking of alternative policies in terms of a cost benefit ratio 4 Generally accurate cost benefit analysis identifies choices which increase welfare from a utilitarian perspective Assuming an accurate CBA changing the status quo by implementing the alternative with the lowest cost benefit ratio can improve Pareto efficiency 5 Although CBA can offer an informed estimate of the best alternative a perfect appraisal of all present and future costs and benefits is difficult perfection in economic efficiency and social welfare is not guaranteed 6 The value of a cost benefit analysis depends on the accuracy of the individual cost and benefit estimates Comparative studies indicate that such estimates are often flawed preventing improvements in Pareto and Kaldor Hicks efficiency 7 Interest groups may attempt to include or exclude significant costs in an analysis to influence its outcome 8 Contents 1 History 1 1 Public policy 1 2 Transportation investment 2 Accuracy 3 Process 4 Evaluation 5 Time and discounting 5 1 Methods for choosing a discount rate 6 Risk and uncertainty 6 1 Principle of maximum entropy 6 2 CBA under US administrations 7 Criticisms 7 1 Distribution 7 2 Discounting and future generations 7 3 Marginal utility 7 4 Limitations in the scope of assessment 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksHistory edit nbsp French engineer and economist Jules Dupuit credited with the creation of cost benefit analysisThe concept of CBA dates back to an 1848 article by Jules Dupuit and was formalized in subsequent works by Alfred Marshall 9 Jules Dupuit pioneered this approach by first calculating the social profitability of a project like the construction of a road or bridge 10 In an attempt to answer this Dupuit began to look at the utility users would gain from the project He determined that the best method of measuring utility is by learning one s willingness to pay for something By taking the sum of each user s willingness to pay Dupuit illustrated that the social benefit of the thing bridge or road or canal could be measured Some users may be willing to pay nearly nothing others much more but the sum of these would shed light on the benefit of it It should be reiterated that Dupuit was not suggesting that the government perfectly price discriminate and charge each user exactly what they would pay Rather their willingness to pay provided a theoretical foundation on the societal worth or benefit of a project The cost of the project proved much simpler to calculate Simply taking the sum of the materials and labor in addition to the maintenance afterward would give one the cost Now the costs and benefits of the project could be accurately analyzed and an informed decision could be made The Corps of Engineers initiated the use of CBA in the US after the Federal Navigation Act of 1936 mandated cost benefit analysis for proposed federal waterway infrastructure 11 The Flood Control Act of 1939 was instrumental in establishing CBA as federal policy requiring that the benefits to whomever they accrue be in excess of the estimated costs 12 More recently cost benefit analysis has been applied to decisions regarding investments in cybersecurity related activities e g see the Gordon Loeb model for decisions concerning cybersecurity investments 13 Public policy edit CBA s application to broader public policy began with the work of Otto Eckstein 14 who laid out a welfare economics foundation for CBA and its application to water resource development in 1958 It was applied in the US to water quality 15 recreational travel 16 and land conservation during the 1960s 17 and the concept of option value was developed to represent the non tangible value of resources such as national parks 18 CBA was expanded to address the intangible and tangible benefits of public policies relating to mental illness 19 substance abuse 20 college education 21 and chemical waste 22 In the US the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 required CBA for regulatory programs since then other governments have enacted similar rules Government guidebooks for the application of CBA to public policies include the Canadian guide for regulatory analysis 23 the Australian guide for regulation and finance 24 and the US guides for health care 25 and emergency management programs 26 Transportation investment edit CBA for transport investment began in the UK with the M1 motorway project and was later used for many projects including the London Underground s Victoria line 27 The New Approach to Appraisal NATA was later introduced by the Department for Transport Environment and the Regions This presented balanced cost benefit results and detailed environmental impact assessments NATA was first applied to national road schemes in the 1998 Roads Review and was subsequently rolled out to all transport modes Maintained and developed by the Department for Transport it was a cornerstone of UK transport appraisal in 2011 The European Union s Developing Harmonised European Approaches for Transport Costing and Project Assessment HEATCO project part of the EU s Sixth Framework Programme reviewed transport appraisal guidance of EU member states and found significant national differences 28 HEATCO aimed to develop guidelines to harmonise transport appraisal practice across the EU 29 Transport Canada promoted CBA for major transport investments with the 1994 publication of its guidebook 30 US federal and state transport departments commonly apply CBA with a variety of software tools including HERS BCA Net StatBenCost Cal BC and TREDIS Guides are available from the Federal Highway Administration 31 32 Federal Aviation Administration 33 Minnesota Department of Transportation 34 California Department of Transportation Caltrans 35 and the Transportation Research Board s Transportation Economics Committee 36 Accuracy editIn health economics CBA may be an inadequate measure because willingness to pay methods of determining the value of human life can be influenced by income level Variants such as cost utility analysis QALY and DALY to analyze the effects of health policies may be more suitable 37 38 For some environmental effects cost benefit analysis can be replaced by cost effectiveness analysis This is especially true when one type of physical outcome is sought such as a reduction in energy use by an increase in energy efficiency Using cost effectiveness analysis is less laborious and time consuming since it does not involve the monetization of outcomes which can be difficult in some cases 39 It has been argued that if modern cost benefit analyses had been applied to decisions such as whether to mandate the removal of lead from gasoline block the construction of two proposed dams just above and below the Grand Canyon on the Colorado River and regulate workers exposure to vinyl chloride the measures would not have been implemented although all are considered highly successful 40 The US Clean Air Act has been cited in retrospective studies as a case in which benefits exceeded costs but knowledge of the benefits attributable largely to the benefits of reducing particulate pollution was not available until many years later 40 Process editA generic cost benefit analysis has the following steps 41 Define the goals and objectives of the action List alternative actions List stakeholders dubious discuss Select measurement s and measure all cost and benefit elements Predict outcome of costs and benefits over the relevant time period Convert all costs and benefits into a common currency Apply discount rate Calculate the net present value of actions under consideration Perform sensitivity analysis Adopt the recommended course of action In United States regulatory policy cost benefit analysis is governed by OMB Circular A 4 Evaluation editCBA attempts to measure the positive or negative consequences of a project A similar approach is used in the environmental analysis of total economic value Both costs and benefits can be diverse Costs tend to be most thoroughly represented in cost benefit analyses due to relatively abundant market data The net benefits of a project may incorporate cost savings public willingness to pay implying that the public has no legal right to the benefits of the policy or willingness to accept compensation implying that the public has a right to the benefits of the policy for the policy s welfare change The guiding principle of evaluating benefits is to list all parties affected by an intervention and add the positive or negative value usually monetary that they ascribe to its effect on their welfare The actual compensation an individual would require to have their welfare unchanged by a policy is inexact at best Surveys stated preferences or market behavior revealed preferences are often used to estimate compensation associated with a policy Stated preferences are a direct way of assessing willingness to pay for an environmental feature for example 42 Survey respondents often misreport their true preferences however and market behavior does not provide information about important non market welfare impacts Revealed preference is an indirect approach to individual willingness to pay People make market choices of items with different environmental characteristics for example revealing the value placed on environmental factors 43 The value of human life is controversial when assessing road safety measures or life saving medicines Controversy can sometimes be avoided by using the related technique of cost utility analysis in which benefits are expressed in non monetary units such as quality adjusted life years Road safety can be measured in cost per life saved without assigning a financial value to the life However non monetary metrics have limited usefulness for evaluating policies with substantially different outcomes Other benefits may also accrue from a policy and metrics such as cost per life saved may lead to a substantially different ranking of alternatives than CBA In some cases in addition to changing the benefit indicator the cost benefit analysis strategy is directly abandoned as a measure In the 1980s to ensure workers safety the US Supreme Court made an important decision to abandon the consideration of return on investment and instead seek the lowest cost benefit to meet specific standards 44 Another metric is valuing the environment which in the 21st century is typically assessed by valuing ecosystem services to humans such as air and water quality and pollution 45 Monetary values may also be assigned to other intangible effects such as business reputation market penetration or long term enterprise strategy alignment Time and discounting editCBA generally attempts to put all relevant costs and benefits on a common temporal footing using time value of money calculations This is often done by converting the future expected streams of costs C displaystyle C nbsp and benefits B displaystyle B nbsp into a present value amount with a discount rate r displaystyle r nbsp and the net present value defined as NPV t 0 B t C t 1 r t displaystyle text NPV sum t 0 infty B t C t over 1 r t nbsp The selection of a discount rate for this calculation is subjective A smaller rate values the current generation and future generations equally Larger rates a market rate of return for example reflects human present bias or hyperbolic discounting valuing money which they will receive in the near future more than money they will receive in the distant future Empirical studies suggest that people discount future benefits in a way similar to these calculations 46 The choice makes a large difference in assessing interventions with long term effects An example is the equity premium puzzle which suggests that long term returns on equities may be higher than they should be after controlling for risk and uncertainty If so market rates of return should not be used to determine the discount rate because they would undervalue the distant future 47 Methods for choosing a discount rate edit For publicly traded companies it is possible to find a project s discount rate by using an equilibrium asset pricing model to find the required return on equity for the company and then assuming that the risk profile of a given project is similar to that the company faces Commonly used models include the capital asset pricing model CAPM r r f b E r M r f displaystyle r r f beta left mathbb E r M r f right nbsp and the Fama French model r r f Risk Free Rate b M E r M r f Market Risk b S M B E r S E r B Size Factor b H M L E r H E r L Value Factor displaystyle r underbrace r f text Risk Free Rate beta M underbrace left mathbb E r M r f right text Market Risk beta SMB underbrace left mathbb E r S mathbb E r B right text Size Factor beta HML underbrace left mathbb E r H mathbb E r L right text Value Factor nbsp where the b i displaystyle beta i nbsp terms correspond to the factor loadings A generalization of these methods can be found in arbitrage pricing theory which allows for an arbitrary number of risk premiums in the calculation of the required return Risk and uncertainty editRisk associated with project outcomes is usually handled with probability theory Although it can be factored into the discount rate to have uncertainty increasing over time it is usually considered separately Particular consideration is often given to agent risk aversion preferring a situation with less uncertainty to one with greater uncertainty even if the latter has a higher expected return Uncertainty in CBA parameters can be evaluated with a sensitivity analysis which indicates how results respond to parameter changes A more formal risk analysis may also be undertaken with the Monte Carlo method 48 However even a low parameter of uncertainty does not guarantee the success of a project Principle of maximum entropy edit Main article Principle of maximum entropy Suppose that we have sources of uncertainty in a CBA that are best treated with the Monte Carlo method and the distributions describing uncertainty are all continuous How do we go about choosing the appropriate distribution to represent the sources of uncertainty One popular method is to make use of the principle of maximum entropy which states that the distribution with the best representation of current knowledge is the one with the largest entropy defined for continuous distributions as H X E log f X S f x log f x d x displaystyle H X mathbb E left log f X right int mathcal S f x log f x dx nbsp where S displaystyle mathcal S nbsp is the support set of a probability density function f x displaystyle f x nbsp Suppose that we impose a series of constraints that must be satisfied f x 0 displaystyle f x geq 0 nbsp with equality outside of S displaystyle mathcal S nbsp S f x d x 1 displaystyle int mathcal S f x dx 1 nbsp S r i x f x d x a i i 1 m displaystyle int mathcal S r i x f x dx alpha i quad i 1 m nbsp where the last equality is a series of moment conditions Maximizing the entropy with these constraints leads to the functional 49 J max f S f log f l 0 f i 1 m l i r i f d x displaystyle J max f int mathcal S left f log f lambda 0 f sum i 1 m lambda i r i f right dx nbsp where the l i displaystyle lambda i nbsp are Lagrange multipliers Maximizing this functional leads to the form of a maximum entropy distribution f x exp l 0 1 i 1 m l i r i x displaystyle f x exp left lambda 0 1 sum i 1 m lambda i r i x right nbsp There is a direct correspondence between the form of a maximum entropy distribution and the exponential family Examples of commonly used continuous maximum entropy distributions in simulations include Uniform distribution No constraints are imposed over the support set S a b displaystyle mathcal S in a b nbsp It is assumed that we have maximum ignorance about the uncertainty Exponential distribution Specified mean E X displaystyle mathbb E X nbsp over the support set S 0 displaystyle mathcal S in 0 infty nbsp Gamma distribution Specified mean E X displaystyle mathbb E X nbsp and log mean E log X displaystyle mathbb E log X nbsp over the support set S 0 displaystyle mathcal S in 0 infty nbsp The exponential distribution is a special case Normal distribution Specified mean E X displaystyle mathbb E X nbsp and variance Var X displaystyle text Var X nbsp over the support set S displaystyle mathcal S in infty infty nbsp If we have a specified mean and variance on the log scale then the lognormal distribution is the maximum entropy distributionCBA under US administrations edit The increased use of CBA in the US regulatory process is often associated with President Ronald Reagan s administration Although CBA in US policy making dates back several decades Reagan s Executive Order 12291 mandated its use in the regulatory process After campaigning on a deregulation platform he issued the 1981 EO authorizing the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs OIRA to review agency regulations and requiring federal agencies to produce regulatory impact analyses when the estimated annual impact exceeded 100 million During the 1980s academic and institutional critiques of CBA emerged The three main criticisms were 50 That CBA could be used for political goals Debates on the merits of cost and benefit comparisons can be used to sidestep political or philosophical goals rules and regulations That CBA is inherently anti regulatory and therefore a biased tool The monetization of policy impacts is an inappropriate tool for assessing mortality risks and distributional impacts That the length of time necessary to complete CBA can create significant delays which can impede policy regulation These criticisms continued under the Clinton administration during the 1990s Clinton furthered the anti regulatory environment with his Executive Order 12866 51 The order changed some of Reagan s language requiring benefits to justify rather than exceeding costs and adding reduction of discrimination or bias as a benefit to be analyzed Criticisms of CBA including uncertainty valuations discounting future values and the calculation of risk were used to argue that it should play no part in the regulatory process 52 The use of CBA in the regulatory process continued under the Obama administration along with the debate about its practical and objective value Some analysts oppose the use of CBA in policy making and those in favor of it support improvements in analysis and calculations Criticisms editAs a concept in economics cost benefit analysis has provided a valuable reference for many public construction and governmental decisions but its application has gradually revealed a number of drawbacks and limitations A number of critical arguments have been put forward in response That include concerns about measuring the distribution of costs and benefits discounting the costs and benefits to future generations and accounting for the diminishing marginal utility of income 53 54 55 56 in addition relying solely on cost benefit analysis may lead to neglecting the multifaceted value factors of a project Distribution edit CBA has been criticized in some disciplines as it relies on the Kaldor Hicks criterion which does not take into account distributional issues This means that positive net benefits are decisive independent of who benefits and who loses when a certain policy or project is put into place Phaneuf and Requate phrased it as follows CBA today relies on the Kaldor Hicks criteria to make statements about efficiency without addressing issues of income distribution This has allowed economists to stay silent on issues of equity while focusing on the more familiar task of measuring costs and benefits 57 The challenge raised is that it is possible for the benefits of successive policies to consistently accrue to the same group of individuals and CBA is ambivalent between providing benefits to those that have received them in the past and those that have been consistently excluded 58 53 59 60 Policy solutions such as progressive taxation can address some of these concerns Discounting and future generations edit Others have critiqued the practice of discounting future costs and benefits for a variety of reasons including the potential undervaluing of the temporally distant cost of climate change and other environmental damage and the concern that such a practice effectively ignores the preferences of future generations 55 61 62 Some scholars argue that the use of discounting makes CBA biased against future generations and understates the potential harmful impacts of climate change 63 64 The growing relevance of climate change has led to a re examination of the practice of discounting in CBA 65 66 67 Marginal utility edit The main criticism stems from the diminishing marginal utility of income 68 69 According to this critique without using weights in the CBA it is not the case that everyone matters the same but rather that people with greater ability to pay receive a higher weight 70 71 One reason for this is that for high income people one monetary unit is worth less relative to low income people so they are more willing to give up one unit in order to make a change that is favourable for them 72 This means that there is no symmetry in agents i e some people benefit more from the same absolute monetary benefit Any welfare change no matter positive or negative affects people with a lower income stronger than people with a higher income even if the exact monetary impacts are identical 71 This is more than just a challenge to the distribution of benefits in CBA it is a critique of the ability of CBA to accurately measure benefits as according to this critique using unweighted absolute willingness to pay overstates the costs and benefits to the wealthy and understates those costs and benefits to the poor Sometimes this is framed in terms of an argument about democracy that each person s preferences should be given the same weight in an analysis one person one vote while under a standard CBA model the preferences of the wealthy are given greater weight 54 Taken together according to this objection not using weights is a decision in itself richer people receive de facto a bigger weight To compensate for this difference in valuation it is possible to use different methods One is to use weights and there are a number of different approaches for calculating these weights 70 Often a Bergson Samuelson social welfare function is used and weights are calculated according to the willingness to pay of people 73 74 Another method is to use percentage willingness to pay where willingness to pay is measured as a percentage of total income or wealth to control for income 71 These methods would also help to address distributional concerns raised by the Kaldor Hick criterion Limitations in the scope of assessment edit Economic cost benefit analysis tends to limit the assessment of benefits to economic values ignoring the importance of other value factors such as the wishes of minority groups inclusiveness and respect for the rights of others 75 These value factors are difficult to rank and measure in terms of weighting yet cost benefit analysis suffers from the inability to consider these factors comprehensively thus lacking the integrity and comprehensiveness of social welfare judgements Therefore for projects with a higher standard of evaluation other evaluation methods need to be used and referred to in order to compensate for these shortcomings and to assess the impact of the project on society in a more comprehensive and integrated manner 76 See also editBalance sheet Business case Document providing reasoning for a project Calculus of negligence United States legal term Downside risk Risk of the actual return being below the expected return Economic forecasting Process of making predictions about the economy Efficient contract theory Hypothesis that if a contract continues to exist it must be efficient due to survivorship bias Guns versus butter model Macroeconomic relationship between defense spending and civilian welfare Have one s cake and eat it too English idiomatic proverbPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Law and economics Application of economic theory to analysis of legal systems Opportunity cost Benefit lost by a choice between options Scarcity Concept in economics Shadow price monetary value assigned to currently unknowable or difficult to calculate costsPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Social impact assessment Reviews infrastructure and development Statistical murder Tax choice belief that taxpayers should be able to choose what their taxes are used forPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback There ain t no such thing as a free lunch Popular adage communicating the idea that it is impossible to get something for nothingPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Trade off Situational decision Triple bottom line cost benefit analysis True cost accounting Uncertainty quantification Characterization and reduction of uncertainties in both computational and real world applicationsReferences edit David Rodreck Ngulube Patrick Dube Adock 16 July 2013 A cost benefit analysis of document management strategies used at a financial institution in Zimbabwe A case study SA Journal of Information Management 15 2 doi 10 4102 sajim v15i2 540 Hirst Scott 2018 07 01 The Case for Investor Ordering The Harvard Law School Program on Corporate Governance Discussion Paper No 2017 13 1 Archived October 16 2008 at the Wayback Machine Cellini Stephanie Riegg Kee James Edwin Cost Effectiveness and Cost Benefit Analysis PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2013 05 26 Retrieved 2012 09 24 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2012 11 02 Retrieved 2012 09 20 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Weimer D Vining A 2005 Policy Analysis Concepts and Practice Fourth ed Upper Saddle River NJ Pearson Prentice Hall ISBN 978 0 13 183001 1 Pamela Misuraca 2014 The Effectiveness of a Costs and Benefits Analysis in Making Federal Government Decisions A Literature Review PDF The MITRE Corporation Huesemann Michael H and Joyce A Huesemann 2011 Technofix Why Technology Won t Save Us or the Environment Chapter 8 The Positive Biases of Technology Assessments and Cost Benefit Analyses New Society Publishers Gabriola Island British Columbia Canada ISBN 0865717044 464 pp Wiener Jonathan B 2013 The Diffusion of Regulatory Oversight In Livermore Michael A Revesz Richard L eds The Globalization of Cost Benefit Analysis in Environmental Policy New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 199 93438 6 Sandmo Agnar 2011 Economics evolving a history of economic thought Princeton University Press ISBN 9780691148427 OCLC 799499179 History of Benefit Cost Analysis PDF Proceedings of the 2006 Cost Benefit Conference Archived from the original PDF on 2006 06 16 Guess George M Farnham Paul G 2000 Cases in Public Policy Analysis Washington DC Georgetown University Press pp 304 308 ISBN 978 0 87840 768 2 Gordon Lawrence A Loeb Martin P November 2002 The Economics of Information Security Investment ACM Transactions on Information and System Security 5 4 438 457 doi 10 1145 581271 581274 S2CID 1500788 Eckstein Otto 1958 Water Resource Development The Economics of Project Evaluation Cambridge Harvard University Press Kneese A V 1964 The Economics of Regional Water Quality Management Baltimore Johns Hopkins Press Clawson M Knetsch J L 1966 Economics of Outdoor Recreation Baltimore Johns Hopkins Press Krutilla J V 1967 Conservation Reconsidered American Economic Review 57 4 777 786 JSTOR 1815368 Weisbrod Burton A 1964 Collective Consumption Services of Individual Consumption Goods Quarterly Journal of Economics 78 3 471 477 doi 10 2307 1879478 JSTOR 1879478 S2CID 154873105 Weisbrod Burton A 1981 Benefit Cost Analysis of a Controlled Experiment Treating the Mentally Ill Journal of Human Resources 16 4 523 548 doi 10 2307 145235 JSTOR 145235 PMID 6799568 Plotnick Robert D 1994 Applying Benefit Cost Analysis to Substance Abuse Prevention Programs International Journal of the Addictions 29 3 339 359 doi 10 3109 10826089409047385 PMID 8188432 Weisbrod Burton A Hansen W Lee 1969 Benefits Costs and Finance of Public Higher Education Markham Moll K S et al 1975 Hazardous wastes A Risk Benefit Framework Applied to Cadmium and Asbestos Menlo Park CA Stanford Research Institute Canadian Cost Benefit Guide Regulatory Proposals Treasury Canada 2007 2 Australian Government 2006 Introduction to Cost Benefit Analysis and Alternative Evaluation Methodologies and Handbook of Cost Benefit Analysis Finance Circular 2006 01 http www finance gov au publications finance circulars 2006 01 html Archived 2014 02 01 at the Wayback Machine US Department of Health and Human Services 1993 Feasibility Alternatives And Cost Benefit Analysis Guide Administration for Children and Families and Health Care Finance Administration http www acf hhs gov programs cb systems sacwis cbaguide index htm Archived 2012 07 20 at the Wayback Machine Federal Emergency Management Administration 1022 Guide to Benefit Cost Analysis http www fema gov government grant bca shtm Hugh Coombs Ellis Jenkins David Hobbs 18 April 2005 Management Accounting Principles and Applications SAGE Publications pp 278 ISBN 978 1 84787 711 6 HEATCO project site Heatco ier uni stuttgart de Archived from the original on 2015 05 24 Retrieved 2013 04 21 3 Guide to Cost Benefit Analysis of Major Projects Evaluation Unit DG Regional Policy European Commission 2008 Guide to Benefit Cost Analysis in Transport Canada Transport Canada Economic Evaluation Branch Transport Canada Ottawa 1994 4 Archived 2013 12 21 at the Wayback Machine US Federal Highway Administration Economic Analysis Primer Benefit Cost Analysis 2003 5 US Federal Highway Administration Cost Benefit Forecasting Toolbox for Highways Circa 2001 6 Archived 2012 01 12 at the Wayback Machine US Federal Aviation Administration Airport Benefit Cost Analysis Guidance 1999 7 permanent dead link 8 Minnesota Department of Transportation Benefit Cost Analysis MN DOT Office of Investment Management 9 Archived 2009 08 13 at the Wayback Machine California Department of Transportation Benefit Cost Analysis Guide for Transportation Planning 10 Transportation Research Board Transportation Economics Committee Transportation Benefit Cost Analysis 11 Phelps Charles 2009 Health Economics 4th ed New York Pearson Addison Wesley ISBN 978 0 321 59457 0 Buekers J 2015 Health impact model for modal shift from car use to cycling or walking in Flanders application to two bicycle highways Journal of Transport and Health 2 4 549 562 doi 10 1016 j jth 2015 08 003 Tuominen Pekka Reda Francesco Dawoud Waled Elboshy Bahaa Elshafei Ghada Negm Abdelazim 2015 Economic Appraisal of Energy Efficiency in Buildings Using Cost effectiveness Assessment Procedia Economics and Finance 21 422 430 doi 10 1016 S2212 5671 15 00195 1 a b Ackerman et al 2005 Applying Cost Benefit to Past Decisions Was Environmental Protection Ever a Good Idea Administrative Law Review 57 155 Boardman N E 2006 Cost benefit Analysis Concepts and Practice 3rd ed Upper Saddle River NJ Prentice Hall ISBN 978 0 13 143583 4 Field Barry C Field Martha K 2016 Environmental Economics An Introduction 7th ed America McGraw Hill p 144 ISBN 978 0 07 802189 3 Field Barry C Field Martha K 2016 Environmental Economics An Introduction 7th ed America McGraw Hill p 138 ISBN 978 0 07 802189 3 PHILIP SHABECOFF Special to The New York Times 1981 Safety Agency to Forgo Cost Benefit Analysis New York Times 1923 A11 Campbell Harry F Brown Richard 2003 Valuing Traded and Non Traded Commodities in Benefit Cost Analysis Benefit Cost Analysis Financial and Economic Appraisal using Spreadsheets Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 52898 6 Ch 8 provides a useful discussion of non market valuation methods for CBA Dunn William N 2009 Public Policy Analysis An Introduction New York Longman ISBN 978 0 13 615554 6 Newell R G 2003 Discounting the Distant Future How Much Do Uncertain Rates Increase Valuations PDF Journal of Environmental Economics and Management 46 1 52 71 doi 10 1016 S0095 0696 02 00031 1 hdl 10161 9133 Campbell Harry F Brown Richard 2003 Incorporating Risk in Benefit Cost Analysis Benefit Cost Analysis Financial and Economic Appraisal using Spreadsheets Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 52898 6 Ch 9 provides a useful discussion of sensitivity analysis and risk modelling in cost benefits analysis CBA Cover Thomas M Thomas Joy A 2006 Elements of Information Theory Wiley Interscience 2nd ed Hoboken NJ John Wiley amp Sons pp 409 412 ISBN 0471241954 http regulation huji ac il papers jp5 pdf bare URL PDF Executive Order 12866 Regulatory Planning and Review govinfo library unt edu Heinzerling L 2000 The Rights of Statistical People Harvard Environmental Law Review 24 189 208 a b Carneades 2022 Are All Lives Equal Why Cost Benefit Analysis Values Rich Lives More and How Philosophy Can Fix It Carneades org p 320 ISBN 979 8 98 612861 0 One may be concerned that Kaldor Hicks allows for unequally distributed benefits regardless of whether absolute or percentage willingness to pay is used If policies always benefit one group and never benefit another group it may not matter how those benefits are measured a b Boardman Anthony E 2018 Cost benefit analysis concepts and practice David H Greenberg Aidan R Vining David Leo Weimer 5th ed Cambridge United Kingdom p 542 ISBN 978 1 108 41599 6 OCLC 1014011028 The final part of this argument is analogous to the one person one vote voting principle in a democracy low income persons should have as much influence over decisions on whether to undertake public projects as high income persons In other words measures of changes in consumer surplus for different persons should be adjusted to what they would be if everyone had the same income a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b Wenz P R 2006 Environmental Ethics Encyclopedia of philosophy Donald M Borchert 2nd ed Detroit Thomson Gale Macmillan Reference USA pp 285 261 ISBN 0 02 865780 2 OCLC 61151356 Exclusively monetary evaluations jeopardize future generations through the use of a discount rate that renders impacts 500 years from now insignificant Adler Matthew D Posner Eric A 2001 Cost benefit analysis legal economic and philosophical perspectives Chicago University of Chicago Press Phaneuf Daniel J Requate Till 2016 12 24 A Course in Environmental Economics Theory Policy and Practice Cambridge University Press p 648 ISBN 9781316867358 Sunstein Cass R 2018 The cost benefit revolution Cambridge Massachusetts pp 61 62 ISBN 978 0 262 03814 0 OCLC 1022976976 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Ackerman Frank 2004 Priceless on knowing the price of everything and the value of nothing Lisa Heinzerling New York pp 34 35 ISBN 1 56584 850 0 OCLC 52819812 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Stephen John D Curran Emma J 2022 Costa cancer and coronavirus contractualism as a guide to the ethics of lockdown Journal of Medical Ethics 48 9 643 650 doi 10 1136 medethics 2020 107103 PMID 33741680 S2CID 232289041 Ball T 1998 Green Political Philosophy Routledge encyclopedia of philosophy Vol 4 Edward Craig Routledge London Routledge ISBN 0 415 07310 3 OCLC 38096851 A second and scarcely less controversial practice is that of discounting the wellbeing of future generations by means of the social rate of discount The green critique of social discounting is easily summarized It is one thing to discount one s own future wellbeing it is a morally much more questionable matter to discount other people s wellbeing Carneades 2022 Are All Lives Equal Why Cost Benefit Analysis Values Rich Lives More and How Philosophy Can Fix It Carneades org pp 30 31 ISBN 979 8 98 612861 0 This practice leads to more concerning conclusions such as the lower valuing of future lives due to discounting of future benefit streams This can have a significant impact especially when looking at environmental policies that have costs far into the future Lind Robert C 1995 04 01 Intergenerational equity discounting and the role of cost benefit analysis in evaluating global climate policy Energy Policy Integrated assessments of mitigation impacts and adaptation to climate change 23 4 379 389 doi 10 1016 0301 4215 95 90162 Z ISSN 0301 4215 Tarsney Christian 2017 Does a discount rate measure the cost of climate change Economics and Philosophy 33 3 337 365 doi 10 1017 S0266267117000049 S2CID 157388595 Dennig Francis 2018 11 01 Climate change and the re evaluation of cost benefit analysis Climatic Change 151 1 43 54 Bibcode 2018ClCh 151 43D doi 10 1007 s10584 017 2047 4 ISSN 1573 1480 Aldred Jonathan 2009 12 01 Ethics and Climate Change Cost Benefit Analysis Stern and After New Political Economy 14 4 469 488 doi 10 1080 13563460903288221 ISSN 1356 3467 S2CID 154411163 Rendall Matthew 2019 Discounting Climate Change and the Ecological Fallacy Ethics 129 3 441 463 doi 10 1086 701481 S2CID 171808946 Nurmi Vaino Ahtiainen Heini 2018 08 01 Distributional Weights in Environmental Valuation and Cost Benefit Analysis Theory and Practice Ecological Economics 150 217 228 doi 10 1016 j ecolecon 2018 04 021 ISSN 0921 8009 Persky Joseph November 2001 Retrospectives Cost Benefit Analysis and the Classical Creed Journal of Economic Perspectives 15 4 199 208 doi 10 1257 jep 15 4 199 ISSN 0895 3309 a b Boardman Anthony E 2018 Cost benefit analysis concepts and practice David H Greenberg Aidan R Vining David Leo Weimer 5th ed Cambridge United Kingdom ISBN 978 1 108 41599 6 OCLC 1014011028 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b c Carneades 2022 Are All Lives Equal Why Cost Benefit Analysis Values Rich Lives More and How Philosophy Can Fix It Carneades org ISBN 979 8 98 612861 0 Brekke Kjell Arne 1997 04 01 The numeraire matters in cost benefit analysis Journal of Public Economics 64 1 117 123 doi 10 1016 S0047 2727 96 01610 6 ISSN 0047 2727 Boadway Robin 2006 Principles of Cost Benefit Analysis Public Policy Review 2 1 1 44 Samuelson P A 1977 Reaffirming the Existence of Reasonable Bergson Samuelson Social Welfare Functions Economica 44 173 81 88 doi 10 2307 2553553 ISSN 0013 0427 JSTOR 2553553 T O McGarity A cost benefit state Administrative Law Rev 50 1998 pp 7 79 Hansjurgens B 2004 Economic valuation through cost benefit analysis possibilities and limitations Toxicology Amsterdam 205 3 241 252 https doi org 10 1016 j tox 2004 06 054Further reading editCampbell Harry Brown Richard 2003 Benefit Cost Analysis Financial and Economic Appraisal Using Spreadsheets Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 82146 9 Chakravarty Sukhamoy 1987 Cost benefit analysis The New Palgrave A Dictionary of Economics Vol 1 London Macmillan pp 687 690 ISBN 978 0 333 37235 7 David R Ngulube P amp Dube A 2013 A cost benefit analysis of document management strategies used at a financial institution in Zimbabwe A case study SA Journal of Information Management 15 2 Art 540 10 pages Dupuit Jules 1969 On the Measurement of the Utility of Public Works In Arrow Kenneth J Scitovsky Tibor eds Readings in Welfare Economics London Allen and Unwin ISBN 978 0 04 338038 3 Eckstein Otto 1958 Water resource Development The Economics of Project Evaluation Cambridge Harvard University Press Folland Sherman Goodman Allen C Stano Miron 2007 The Economics of Health and Health Care Fifth ed New Jersey Pearson Prentice Hall pp 83 84 ISBN 978 0 13 227942 0 Ferrara A 2010 Cost Benefit Analysis of Multi Level Government The Case of EU Cohesion Policy and US Federal Investment Policies London and New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 56821 0 Frank Robert H 2000 Why is Cost Benefit Analysis so Controversial Journal of Legal Studies 29 S2 913 930 doi 10 1086 468099 S2CID 153355929 Hirshleifer Jack 1960 Water Supply Economics Technology and Policy Chicago University of Chicago Press Huesemann Michael H and Joyce A Huesemann 2011 Technofix Why Technology Won t Save Us or the Environment Chapter 8 The Positive Biases of Technology Assessments and Cost Benefit Analyses New Society Publishers Gabriola Island British Columbia Canada ISBN 0865717044 464 pp Maass Arthur ed 1962 Design of Water resource Systems New Techniques for Relating Economic Objectives Engineering Analysis and Governmental Planning Cambridge Harvard University Press McKean Roland N 1958 Efficiency in Government through Systems Analysis With Emphasis on Water Resources Development New York Wiley Nas Tevfik F 1996 Cost Benefit Analysis Theory and Application Thousand Oaks CA Sage ISBN 978 0 8039 7133 2 Richardson Henry S 2000 The Stupidity of the Cost Benefit Analysis Journal of Legal Studies 29 S2 971 1003 doi 10 1086 468102 S2CID 153426905 Quigley John Walls Lesley 2003 Cost Benefit Modelling for Reliability Growth PDF Journal of the Operational Research Society 54 12 1234 1241 doi 10 1057 palgrave jors 2601633 S2CID 26862642 Archived from the original PDF on 2020 10 10 Retrieved 2019 08 01 Sen Amartya 2000 The Discipline of Cost Benefit Analysis Journal of Legal Studies 29 S2 931 952 doi 10 1086 468100 S2CID 106398171 External links editBenefit Cost Analysis Center at the University of Washington s Daniel J Evans School of Public Affairs Benefit Cost Analysis Archived 2022 01 18 at the Wayback Machine site maintained by the Transportation Economics Committee of the Transportation Research Board TRB Intro to Cost Benefit Analysis Engineering Risk Benefit Analysis MIT OpenCourseWare Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cost benefit analysis amp oldid 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