Campbell, Harry F.
Cost-Benefit Analysis: Financial and Economic Appraisal Using Spreadsheets /
by Harry F. Campbell and Richard P. C. Brown
- 3rd ed.
- Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge, 2023.
- xxv, 462p.; 24cm.
1 Introduction to cost-benefit analysis 1.1 Introduction 1.2 The Referent Group 1.3 The structure of the cost-benefit model 1.4 The use of spreadsheets in cost-benefit analysis 1.5 The rationale for public projects 1.6 The role of the analyst 1.7 Further reading Exercises Note 2 Project appraisal: Principles 2.1 Introduction 2.2 Project appraisal from an individual viewpoint 2.3 Investment opportunities in the economy as a whole 2.4 The algebra of NPV and IRR calculations 2.5 Annuities and perpetuities 2.6 The Rule of 72 Why it works 2.7 Economic depreciation and the annual cost of capital 2.8 Treatment of inflation in project appraisal 2.9 Incorporating a risk factor in the discount rate 2.10 Further reading Exercises Notes 3 Project appraisal: Decision-rules 3.1 Introduction 3.2 Discounted cash flow analysis in practice 3.3 Discounting and the time value of money 3.4 Using Annuity Tables 3.5 Using investment decision-making criteria 3.5.1 The Net Present Value (NPV) criterion 3.5.2 The Benefit-Cost Ratio decision-rule 3.5.3 The Internal Rate of Return (IRR) criterion 3.5.4 Problems with the IRR decision criterion 3.5.5 Problems with the NPV decision criterion 3.6 Using spreadsheets 3.7 Further reading Exercises Note 4 Private cost-benefit analysis: Financial appraisal 4.1 Introduction 4.2 Benefits and costs measured as cash flows 4.2.1 Identifying project inputs and outputs 4.2.2 Valuing inputs and outputs at market prices 4.2.3 Characteristics of cash flows 4.3 Inflation and relative prices 4.4 Incremental or relative cash flows 4.5 Capital costs and the treatment of depreciation Fixed investment Working capital 4.6 Interest charges, financing flows and cash flow on equity Example: Calculating the return on total investment, the cost of debt finance and the return on equity 4.7 Taxation and after-tax net cash flows 4.8 The discount rate 4.9 Summary of the relationship between the Market Analysis and the Private Analysis 4.10 Derivation of project private cash flows using spreadsheets Worked example: National Fruit Growers (NFG) project Step 1: Setting up the “Key Variables” table Step 2: Setting up the project’s cash flow for the Market Analysis Step 3: Setting up the cash flow for the financing of the project Step 4: Calculating business income taxes and after-tax flows Step 5: Deriving the Private (after-tax) net cash flow 4.11 Further reading Appendix to Chapter 4 Case study of International Cloth Products1 ICP Project 1 Introduction 2 The market 3 Investment costs 4 Raw materials 5 Direct labour force 6 Fuel, water, spare parts 7 Insurance and rent 8 Financing 9 Taxes and incentives 10 Location in “deprived areas” Some solution spreadsheet tables for the ICP case study Exercises Note 5 Cost-benefit analysis and economic efficiency 5.1 Introduction 5.2 The competitive market 5.3 Shadow-pricing project inputs and outputs 5.4 Shadow-pricing marketed inputs 5.4.1 Materials 5.4.2 Labour 5.4.3 Capital 5.4.4 Land 5.4.5 Rules for shadow-pricing marketed inputs 5.5 Shadow-pricing marketed outputs Output subject to a tax Output subject to a subsidy Output supplied by a monopoly Output of rental units Time saved 5.5.1 Rules for shadow-pricing marketed outputs 5.6 The efficiency pricing rules: summary 5.7 Corrective taxation: the modified efficiency pricing rules 5.8 How to determine which pricing rule to follow 5.9 Shadow-pricing public funds The opportunity cost of bond finance The opportunity cost of funds obtained from a tax increase on labour income 5.10 Shadow-pricing foreign exchange 5.11 The discount rate 5.12 Worked examples 5.12.1 Efficiency analysis of the National Fruit Growers (NFG) project 5.12.2 Cost-benefit analysis of the 55 mph speed limit 5.13 Further reading Appendix to Chapter 5 Economic Efficiency Analysis of the ICP case study Cost of capital goods Cost of labour Cost of utilities Cotton and yarn inputs and outputs The Efficiency Analysis Exercises 6 The distribution of project net benefits 6.1 Introduction 6.2 How to identify Referent Group net benefits in practice Information provided by financial flows Information provided by shadow-prices 6.3 Some examples of the classification of net benefits 6.3.1 Shadow-prices on project inputs 6.3.2 Shadow-prices on project outputs 6.4 Corrective taxation 6.5 Further examples 6.6 Lessons from the examples 6.7 Worked example: Referent Group Analysis of National Fruit Growers’ (NFG) project 6.8 Further reading Appendix 1 to Chapter 6Referent Group net benefits in the ICP case study Referent Group net benefits The discount rate Comparing alternative scenarios Appendix 2 to Chapter 6 Incorporating the public funds cost premium in the ICP case study Exercises Note 7 Consumer and producer surplus in cost-benefit analysis 7.1 Introduction 7.2 Real versus pecuniary effects 7.3 Consumer surplus 7.3.1 Aggregating consumer surplus measures 7.3.2 The significance of income distribution 7.4 Producer surplus 7.5 Accounting for output price changes 7.5.1 Benefits of urban transport projects 7.5.2 Benefits of worker training 7.5.3 Producer benefits from an irrigation project 7.6 Accounting for input price changes 7.7 Price changes in other markets 7.8 Classification of consumer and producer surplus changes 7.9 Further reading Appendix 1 to Chapter 7 Allowing for an increase in the skilled wage in the ICP case study Appendix 2 to Chapter 7 Compensating and equivalent variation Exercises 8 Non-market valuation 8.1 Introduction 8.2 Causes of market failure 8.3 Valuing environmental costs and benefits Environmental resources as public goods Externalities and the environment Total economic value 8.4 Incorporating non-market values in cost-benefit analysis 8.5 Methods of non-market valuation 8.5.1 The production approach 8.5.2 The utility approach 8.6 Revealed and stated preference methods of applying the utility approach 8.6.1 Revealed preference methods 8.6.2 Stated preference methods 8.7 Benefit Transfer and Threshold Analysis 8.8 Alternative approaches to environmental valuation Deliberative Value Assessment Multi-Criteria Analysis 8.9 Non-market valuation: the value of life 8.10 The pandemic 8.11 Climate change The social cost of carbon dioxide emissions in cost-benefit analysis 8.12 Further reading Appendix to Chapter 8 The annual benefits of the Virginia Creeper Trail as measured by the Travel Cost Method Exercises Notes 9 Uncertainty, information and risk 9.1 Introduction 9.2 The value of information Sensitivity analysis 9.3 An abbreviated cost-benefit analysis 9.4 The option of delay 9.5 Calculating the value of information 9.6 The cost of risk 9.6.1 The theory of risk aversion 9.6.2 Dealing with project risk 9.7 Risk modelling 9.7.1 Use of discrete probability distributions 9.7.2 Joint probability distributions 9.7.3 Continuous probability distributions 9.8 Using risk analysis in decision-making 9.9 Modelling risk in spreadsheet applications using ExcelSim© 9.9.1 Modelling a “random walk” 9.10 Further reading Appendix 1 to Chapter 9 Incorporating risk analysis in the ICP case study Additional information Entering the risk analysis data The results of the risk analysis Appendix 2 to Chapter 9 Using the @RISK© (Palisade) risk modelling program Using @Risk© to model a random walk: the ICP case study Some additional points to note when using @Risk© Exercises Notes 10 Valuing traded and non-traded goods in cost-benefit analysis 10.1 Introduction 10.2 Traded and non-traded goods 10.3 Valuing traded and non-traded goods and services 10.4 Worked example: domestic and international price structures 10.4.1 Evaluation of an import-replacing project in real terms 10.4.2 Evaluation of an import-replacing project in money terms 10.5 Summary of the two approaches to valuation: border versus domestic prices 10.6 The equivalence of the two approaches 10.7 Determinants of the shadow exchange rate 10.8 Further reading Appendix to Chapter 10 Shadow-pricing foreign exchange in the ICP case study Exercises 11 Appraisal of the distribution of project benefits and costs 11.1 Introduction Interpersonal distribution Inter-sectoral distribution 11.2 Measuring the degree of inequality 11.3 Alternative measures of income distribution 11.4 Policies to change the income distribution 11.5 The use of income distribution weights in project appraisal: some illustrative examples 11.6 The derivation of distribution weights 11.7 Distributional weighting in practice The bottom-up approach 11.8 Worked example: incorporating income distribution effects in the NFG project 11.9 Inter-temporal distribution considerations 11.10 Further reading Exercises Notes 12 Economic impact analysis 12.1 Introduction 12.2 Multiplier analysis 12.2.1 The closed economy 12.2.2 The open economy 12.2.3 Crowding out 12.2.4 Cost-benefit analysis of fiscal stimulus 12.2.5 The employment multiplier 12.3 Inter-industry analysis 12.3.1 Inter-industry analysis and the national income multiplier 12.3.2 Inter-industry analysis and employment 12.4 General equilibrium analysis 12.5 Case study: the impact of the ICP Project on the economy 12.6 Further reading Appendix to Chapter 12 The annual economic impact of the Virginia Creeper Trail Exercises 13 Writing the cost-benefit analysis report 13.1 Introduction 13.2 Contents of the report 13.2.1 The executive summary 13.2.2 The introduction 13.2.3 The methodology 13.2.4 The analysis 13.2.5 The conclusion 13.3 Other issues Appendix to Chapter 13 Report on International Cloth Products Ltd: Spinning Mill proposal prepared by Angela Mcintosh1 Executive summary 4 Conclusion Note Appendix 1: Case study assignments Appendix 2: Discount and annuity factors Glossary Index
Now in its third edition, Cost-Benefit Analysis has been updated, offering readers the perfect introduction to project, programme and policy appraisal using basic tools of financial and economic analysis. The key economic questions of any social cost-benefit analysis are: do the benefits of the project or policy exceed the costs, no matter how widely costs and benefits are spread, and irrespective of whether or not project impacts, such as environmental effects, are reflected in market prices? And which group or groups of individuals receive the benefits and which bear the costs? This book addresses these questions with an emphasis on putting the theory presented in the book into practice. This third edition has several attractive features: Readers are encouraged to develop their own skills by applying the tools and techniques of cost-benefit analysis to case studies and examples, including an analysis of a project which is developed throughout the book. The book emphasizes the use of spreadsheets which are invaluable in providing a framework for the cost-benefit analysis. A dedicated chapter provides guidance for writing up a report which summarizes the analysis which has been undertaken. New pedagogical features, including Technical Notes and Examples, have been added as an aid to readers throughout the text. An appendix provides 14 additional case studies which can be developed in class or as assignment projects. Additional material for instructors and students is provided through Support Material maintained by Routledge. This updated edition is an ideal text for a course on cost-benefit analysis where the emphasis is on practical application of principles and equipping students to conduct appraisals. It is also a useful handbook for professionals looking for a logical framework in which to undertake their cost-benefit analysis work. ---provided by publisher
ISBN: 9781032320755
Subjects--Topical Terms: Cost effectiveness Decision making
Dewey Class. No.: 658.15 / CAM