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Cost-Benefit Analysis 3rd Edition 2022 Softbound at Meripustak

Cost-Benefit Analysis 3rd Edition 2022 Softbound by Campbell and Harry F., Taylor and Francis Ltd

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  • General Information  
    Author(s)Campbell and Harry F.
    PublisherTaylor and Francis Ltd
    Edition3rd Edition
    ISBN9781032320755
    Pages462
    BindingSoftbound
    LanguageEnglish
    Publish YearOctober 2022

    Description

    Taylor and Francis Ltd Cost-Benefit Analysis 3rd Edition 2022 Softbound by Campbell and Harry F.

    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 summarises 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.

    Table of Contents
    List of figures xi

    List of tables xiv

    List of examples xvi

    List of Technical Notes xvii

    Preface xviii

    Acknowledgements xxii

    Notes to the instructor xxiv

    Chapter 1: Introduction to cost-benefit analysis 1

    1.1 Introduction 1

    1.2 The Referent Group 6

    1.3 The structure of the cost-benefit model 8

    1.4 The use of spreadsheets in cost-benefit analysis 11

    1.5 The rationale for public projects 14

    1.6 The role of the analyst 16

    1.7 Further reading 17

    Exercises 17

    Chapter 2: Project appraisal: principles 19

    2.1 Introduction 19

    2.2 Project appraisal from an individual viewpoint 19

    2.3 Investment opportunities in the economy as a whole 22

    2.4 The algebra of NPV and IRR calculations 23

    2.5 Annuities and perpetuities 30

    2.6 The Rule of 72 34

    2.7 Economic depreciation and the annual cost of capital 35

    2.8 Treatment of inflation in project appraisal 36

    2.9 Incorporating a risk factor in the discount rate 38

    2.10 Further reading 39

    Exercises 39

    Chapter 3: Project appraisal: decision-rules 40

    3.1 Introduction 40

    3.2 Discounted cash flow analysis in practice 40

    3.3 Discounting and the time value of money 41

    3.4 Using Annuity Tables 44

    3.5 Using investment decision-making criteria 45

    The Net Present Value (NPV) criterion 45
    The Benefit-Cost Ratio decision-rule 47
    The Internal Rate of Return (IRR) criterion 48
    Problems with the IRR decision criterion 51
    Problems with the NPV decision criterion 53
    3.6 Using spreadsheets 59

    3.7 Further reading 64

    Exercises 64

    Chapter 4: Private cost-benefit analysis: financial appraisal 68

    4.1 Introduction 68

    4.2 Benefits and costs measured as cash flows 69

    Identifying project inputs and outputs 69
    Valuing inputs and outputs at market prices 70
    Characteristics of cash flows 70
    4.3 Inflation and relative prices 72

    4.4 Incremental or relative cash flows 74

    4.5 Capital costs and the treatment of depreciation 76

    4.6 Interest charges, financing flows and cash flow on equity 78

    4.7 Taxation and after-tax net cash flows 83

    4.8 The discount rate 84

    4.9 Summary of the relationship between the Market Analysis and the Private Analysis 85

    4.10 Derivation of project private cash flows using spreadsheets 85

    4.11 Further reading 91

    Appendix to Chapter 4: Case Study of International Cloth Products 91

    Exercises 97

    Chapter 5: Cost-benefit analysis and economic efficiency 99


    5.1 Introduction 99

    5.2 The competitive market 100

    5.3 Shadow-pricing project inputs and outputs 103

    5.4 Shadow-pricing marketed inputs 104

    Materials 105
    Labour 109
    Capital 117
    Land 118
    Rules for shadow-pricing marketed inputs 118
    5.5 Shadow-pricing marketed outputs 119

    Rules for shadow-pricing marketed outputs 124
    5.6 The efficiency pricing rules: summary 124

    5.7 Corrective taxation: the modified efficiency pricing rules 125

    5.8 How to determine which pricing rule to follow 126

    5.9 Shadow-pricing public funds 128

    5.10 Shadow-pricing foreign exchange 133

    5.11 The discount rate 133

    5.12 Worked examples 136

    Efficiency analysis of the National Fruit Growers (NFG) Project 136
    Cost-benefit analysis of the 55 mph speed limit 140
    5.13 Further reading 141

    Appendix to Chapter 5: Economic Efficiency Analysis of the ICP Case Study 142

    Exercises 146

    Chapter 6: The distribution of project net benefits 149

    6.1 Introduction 149

    6.2 How to identify Referent Group net benefits in practice 150

    6.3 Some examples of the classification of net benefits 154

    Shadow-prices on project inputs 154
    Shadow-prices on project outputs 160
    6.4 Corrective taxation 161

    6.5 Further examples 166

    6.6 Lessons from the examples 168

    6.7 Worked example: Referent Group Analysis of National Fruit Growers’ (NFG) Project 168

    6.8 Further reading 171

    Appendix 1 to Chapter 6: Referent Group net benefits in the ICP Case Study 171

    Appendix 2 to Chapter 6: Incorporating the public funds cost premium in the ICP Case Study 177

    Exercises 180

    Chapter 7: Consumer and producer surplus in cost-benefit analysis 182

    7.1 Introduction 182

    7.2 Real versus pecuniary effects 183

    7.3 Consumer surplus 184

    Aggregating consumer surplus measures 185
    The significance of income distribution 186
    7.4 Producer surplus 186

    7.5 Accounting for output price changes 186

    Benefits of urban transport projects 187
    Benefits of worker training 193
    Producer benefits from an irrigation project 196
    7.6 Accounting for input price changes 201

    7.7 Price changes in other markets 203

    7.8 Classification of consumer and producer surplus changes 204

    7.9 Further reading 205

    Appendix 1 to Chapter 7: Allowing for an increase in the skilled wage in the ICP Case Study 206

    Appendix 2 to Chapter 7: Compensating and equivalent variation 209

    Exercises 215

    Chapter 8: Non-market valuation 217

    8.1 Introduction 217

    8.2 Causes of market failure 217

    8.3 Valuing environmental costs and benefits 219

    8.4 Incorporating non-market values in cost-benefit analysis 223

    8.5 Methods of non-market valuation 224

    The production approach 225
    The utility approach 230
    8.6 Revealed and stated preference methods of applying the utility approach 233

    Revealed preference methods 234
    Stated preference methods 240
    8.7 Benefit Transfer and Threshold Analysis 243

    8.8 Alternative approaches to environmental valuation 244

    8.9 Non-market valuation: the value of life 245

    8.10 The Pandemic

    8.11 Climate Change

    8.12 Further reading

    Appendix to Chapter 8: The annual benefits of the Virginia Creeper Trail as measured by the Travel Cost Method 248

    Exercises 251

    Chapter 9: Uncertainty, information and risk 253

    9.1 Introduction 253

    9.2 The value of information 255

    9.3 An abbreviated cost-benefit analysis 257

    9.4 The option of delay 257

    9.5 Calculating the value of information 260

    9.6 The cost of risk 262

    The theory of risk aversion 262
    Dealing with project risk 265
    9.7 Risk modelling 267

    Use of discrete probability distributions 268
    Joint probability distributions 269
    Continuous probability distributions 270
    9.8 Using risk analysis in decision-making 273

    9.9 Modelling risk in spreadsheet applications using ExcelSim© 274

    Modelling a "random walk" 279
    9.10 Further reading

    Appendix 1 to Chapter 9: Incorporating risk analysis in the ICP Case Study 282

    Appendix 2 to Chapter 9: Using the @Risk© (Palisade) Risk Modelling Program 285

    Exercises 290

    Chapter 10: Valuing traded and non-traded goods in cost-benefit analysis 292


    10.1 Introduction 292

    10.2 Traded and non-traded goods 292

    10.3 Valuing traded and non-traded goods and services 293

    10.4 Worked example: domestic and international price structures 294

    Evaluation of an import-replacing project in real terms 294
    Evaluation of an import-replacing project in money terms 295
    10.5 Summary of the two approaches to valuation: border versus domestic prices 298

    10.6 Equivalence of the two approaches 298

    10.7 Determinants of the shadow exchange rate 302

    10.8 Further reading 308

    Appendix to Chapter 10: Shadow-pricing foreign exchange in the ICP case study 305

    Exercises 308

    Chapter 11: Appraisal of the distribution of project benefits and costs 310

    11.1 Introduction 310

    11.2 Measuring the degree of inequality 311

    11.3 Alternative measures of income distribution 313

    11.4 Policies to change the income distribution 314

    11.5 The use of income distribution weights in project appraisal: some illustrative examples 314

    11.6 The derivation of distribution weights 316

    11.7 Distributional weighting in practice 322

    11.8 Worked example: Incorporating income distribution effects in the NFG Project 326

    11.9 Inter-temporal distribution considerations 327

    11.10 Further reading 331

    Exercises 331

    Chapter 12: Economic impact analysis 334


    12.1 Introduction 334

    12.2 Multiplier analysis 334

    The closed economy 334
    The open economy 339
    Crowding out 340
    Cost-benefit analysis of fiscal stimulus 341
    The employment multiplier 342
    12.3 Inter-industry analysis 342

    Inter-industry analysis and the national income multiplier 345
    Inter-industry analysis and employment 346
    12.4 General equilibrium analysis 348

    12.5 Case study: The impact of the ICP Project on the economy 349

    12.6 Further reading 352

    Appendix to Chapter 12: The annual economic impact of the Virginia Creeper Trail 350

    Exercises 352

    Chapter 3: Writing the cost-benefit analysis report 354


    13.1 Introduction 354

    13.2 Contents of the report 355

    The Executive Summary 355
    The Introduction 355
    The Methodology 355
    The Analysis 356
    The Conclusion 356
    13.3 Other issues 357

    Appendix to Chapter 13: Report on International Cloth Products Ltd.: Spinning Mill Proposal 357 

    Appendix 1: Case study assignments 371

    A1.1 South Australian Olive Oil Project 372 A1.2 Walnuts Tasmania Project 376

    A1.3 A tuna cannery in Papua New Guinea 380

    A1.4 Urban water supply in South-East Queensland 383

    A1.5 The Scottish Highlands and Islands remote dental care program 388 A1.6 The Defarian Early Childhood Intervention Program (DECIP) 392 A1.7 A pulp mill for Tasmania? 399

    A1.8 Qingcheng Water Project 403 A1.9 Highway Project 2012 409

    A1.10 International Mining Corporation (IMC) Copper Mining Project 416

    A1.11 Comparative Levelized Cost of Electricity: Renewables vs Coal

    A1.12 Cost-Benefit Analysis of the Proposed Repeal of Water Saving Regulations

    A1.13 Cost-Benefit Analysis of the Proposed Extension to the Mount Beno Walking Trail

    A1.14 Cost-Benefit Analysis of a Proposed Drug Court Program in the State of Euphoria, Federal Republic of Oz

    Appendix 2 Discount and Annuity Factors 424

    Glossary 427

    Index
    Author(s)
    Biography
    Harry F. Campbell is an Emeritus Professor of Economics at the University of Queensland, Australia.

    Richard P.C. Brown is an Honorary Associate Professor of Economics at the University of Queensland, Australia.



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