Title: Economic Analysis Concepts
1Economic Analysis Concepts
2Questions Decisions (1)
- Is the project justified ?- Are benefits greater
than costs? - Which is the best investment if we have a set of
mutually exclusive alternatives? - If funds are limited, how should different
schemes be ranked? - When should the road be built or upgraded?
3Questions Decisions (2)
- What standard of construction should be used?
- What standard and frequency of road maintenance
is optimal? - Should staged construction be used?
- Are complementary investments required?
4Appraisal Framework
- All appraisals need a framework or model for
- a) Forecasting changes
- b) Evaluating those changes
5Components of Economic Analysis (1)
- Costs and benefits are measured in money terms
- Road construction and maintenance costs are
compared with estimates of the direct primary
benefits going to road users and road agency - Secondary benefits are usually ignored
- Economic prices are used in constant terms
6Components of Economic Analysis (2)
- Costs and Benefits are forecast over the planning
time horizon (usually between 10 and 20 years) - Future Benefits are valued less as time
progresses using the planning discount rate - Costs and Benefits are compared using decision
criteria such as NPV, IRR, etc.
7Economic and Financial Prices
The cost to the economy of road rehabilitation
and maintenance may differ from the financial
cost because of
- taxes and duties
- shortage of foreign exchange
- under-employment
The Government will usually be concerned with
ECONOMIC costs. Contractors will usually be
concerned with FINANCIAL costs.
8Use of Economic Prices
In an Economic Appraisal we use ECONOMIC (or
SHADOW) prices NOT FINANCIAL prices
- Adjust financial prices as follows
- Exclude all taxes and duties and subsidies
- Use the planning discount rate not financial
market rate - If overvalued exchange rate then value imports
and - exports more highly
- Use the opportunity cost of labor
- Standard Conversion Factors are now widely used
for - road construction costs
9Benefits from Road Investment
- Changes in transport costs occur because of
- Lower road roughness
- Shorter trip distance
- Faster speeds
- Reduced chance of impassability
- Reduced traffickability problems
- Change in mode
10Project Costs
- Management (including design and supervision)
- Labor
- Equipment
- Materials
- Land, Resettlement, Environment
11Primary Effects (1)
- Reduced vehicle operating costs (VOC)
- fuel and lubricants
- vehicle maintenance
- depreciation and interest
- Tire wear
- Crew time
- overheads
- Reduced journey time
- drivers, passengers and goods
12Primary Effects (2)
- Changes in road maintenance costs
- Changes in accident rates
- Increased travel
- Environmental effects
- Change in value of goods moved
13Secondary Effects
- Changes in agricultural output
- Changes in services
- Changes in industrial output
- Changes in consumers behavior
- Changes in land values
- Changes in income
14Consumers Surplus Approach
- Captures primary benefits
- Advantages Simple, cost based, traffic approach
dependent on predicting changes in traffic - Disadvantages May not address critical factors
promoting either rural development or social
access
15Normal and Generated Traffic Benefits
Transport cost savings to Normal traffic and
growth
Cost
Additional benefits to Generated traffic
C1
C2
Demand Curve (Price Elasticity of Demand)
T1
T2
Traffic
Normal
Generated
16Generated Traffic Benefits
- Traffic induced by the road investment are
traditionally valued at -
- Half the difference in transport costs
- Hence total generated transport cost benefits
- Generated Traffic Volume x Change in
Transport Costs per km x Distance x 1/2
17Producers Surplus Approach
- Captures secondary benefits
- Advantages Draws attention to changes in
agricultural output (key economic activity in
rural areas) - Disadvantages No reliable way of predicting
response - - impact studies give widely different answers
- - it could be based on agricultural supply
price - elasticities but this is almost never done
it requires very careful examination to use. - For most projects benefits are just invented !
18Producers Surplus
Price Costs per Unit of Output
IncreasedFarmgate Price
P2
P1
Lower Input Costs
Output
O1
O2
19Coverage and Double Counting
- Any economic analysis should be designed to give
maximum coverage of benefits - But we must avoid double counting. Do not add
primary and secondary benefits (e.g. changes in
land values added to changes in transport costs) - In a competitive economy the consumers surplus
approach (used in HDM) should be adequate
20Economic Comparisons
- Economic analysis involves a comparison of
With and Without project cases - Forecasts are made of traffic, road condition,
VOC and road maintenance effects for BOTH
scenarios - An unrealistic Without case (i.e. with little
maintenance) can give a false result - A range of With investment cases should be
analyzed to find the best solution
21Traffic Categories
- Normal traffic Existing traffic and growth that
would occur on road, with and without the
investment - Diverted traffic Traffic diverted from another
road with same origin and destination to as the
project road as a result of the investment - Generated traffic Traffic associated with
existing users of the road driving more
frequently or driving further than before - Induced traffic Traffic attracted to the project
road due to increased economic activity in the
roads zone of influence brought about by the
project
22Benefits from Road Investment
Transport cost savings for existing (or normal)
traffic Normal Traffic Volume x Change in
Transport Costs per km x Distance Main changes
in cost from a) change in transport MODE b)
reduced journey TIME c) reduced VOCs
23Benefits of Upgrading to a Motorable Track
Headloading
C1
Track
Costs
Improved
road
C2
C3
T1
T2
T3
Traffic
24Cost Effectiveness Against Standard of Road
25Development Benefits
- Development benefits arise from a combination of
increased traffic and reduced transport costs. - Benefits may also include
- Increased agricultural production
- Increased service provision
- Increased industrial activity
26Estimating Benefits
- Normal traffic benefits tripsN d1 (VOC1-
VOC2) - Diverted traffic benefits tripsD ((d1
VOC1)-(d2VOC2)) - Generated and Induced traffic benefits tripsG
d2 (VOC1- VOC2)/2 - d1 existing road length d2 new road
length - VOC1 vehicle operating costs per km without
investment - VOC2 vehicle operating costs per km with
investment - VOC data relates to each road section and its
condition at the time
27Economic Decision Criteria (1)
- Net Present Value
- NPV (B1- C1)/(1 r) (B2- C2)/ (1 r)2
(Bn- Cn)/(1 r )n - Internal Rate of Return
- To calculate IRR, solve for r, such that NPV 0
- B1, B2Bn Benefits in years 1, 2 n
- C1, C2Cn Costs in years 1, 2 . n r
Planning discount rate n Planning time
horizon
28Economic Decision Criteria (2)
- Net Present Value/ Investment Cost
- NPV/ C NPV/Ci
- First Year Rate of Return
- FYRR (B1- C1) / Ci
- B1 , C1 Benefits and Costs in year 1 after
construction - Ci Road investment costs
- Payback Period
29Economic Decision Criteria (3)
- NPV IRR3 NPV/C FYRR
- Project economic validity V.Good V.Good V.Good Poo
r - Mutually exclusive projects V.Good Poor Good Poor
- Project timing Fair Poor Poor Good
- Project screening 1 Poor V.Good Good Poor
- Under budget constraint 2 Fair Poor V.Good Poor
- Notes
- 1. check for robustness to changes in key
variables (sensitivity analysis) - . with incremental analysis
- . IRR may be indeterminate with NONE or MANY
solutions.
30Present Value Calculation
Period Flow
A0
PV(A0) A0
0
1
2
3
4
A5
PV(A5) A5 / (1 i ) 5
5
6
7
PV(Aj) Aj / (1 i ) j
PV(Aj) Present Value of Aj
Aj Amount at year j
i Discount rate
j Year
31Present Value at 12.0 Discount Rate
1.00
1.00 in
Year 1
in Year 1
Year 2
0.89
Year 3
0.80
Year 4
0.71
0.64
in Year 1
1.00 in
Year 5
0.57
Year 6
0.51
Year 7
0.45
Year 8
0.40
Year 9
Year 1 0
0.36
1.00 in
in Year 1
in Year 1
1.00 in
0.20
Year 15
0.12
Year 20
in Year 1
1.00 in
32Discount Rate
- The discount rate is opportunity cost of capital
in the public sector, ie the rate of return on
marginal public sector investments - The discount rate to be used will be given by the
planning authority responsible for the project - The World Bank traditionally has not calculated a
discount rate for each project but has used 10 to
15 percent as a notional opportunity cost of
capital in developing countries
33Discount Rate Versus Interest Rate
US discount rate around 4
34NPV and IRR
- The Net Present Value (NPV) of a project
alternative relative to the without project
alternative is the sum of the discounted annual
net benefits. - The Internal Rate of Return (IRR) is the discount
rate at which the NPV is zero.
35NPV Decision Rule
- 1. If the NPV is positive, for the chosen
discount rate, then the alternative is
acceptable. - 2. If the NPV is negative, for the chosen
discount rate, then the alternative is
unacceptable. - 3. If the NPV is zero, for the chosen discount
rate, then the alternative is indifferent to the
without project alternative.
36NPV and IRR Calculation (1)
37NPV and IRR Calculation (2)
38NPV Versus IRR
- The IRR and NPV will not necessarily rank the
alternatives by the same order- Always use NPV
to compare project alternatives
39Multiples Rates of Return
40No Rate of Return
41Same Rate of Return
42Incremental Rate of Return
43IRR Reinvestment Assumption
44Modified Internal Rate of Return
45Benefits X Cost
46Net Benefits X Costs (Efficiency Frontier)
47Comparison of Alternatives
- When comparing project-alternatives, the Net
Present Value (NPV) is used to select the optimal
project-alternative (alternative with highest
NPV) - The Internal Rate of Return (IRR) or the B/C
ratio are not recommended to compare alternatives
of a given project
Alternatives NPV0.03.76.75.5
Project
Optimal AlternativeHighest NPV
48Ranking Projects
- When comparing the economic priority of different
projects, a recommended economic indicator is the
NPV per Investment ratio
Selected Alternative OverlayReseal Overlay
NPV/Investment 8.45.2 2.1
PRIORITY
Projects
49Budget Constraints Simple Methodology
Selected Alternative OverlayReseal Overlay
Reseal Overlay
NPV perInvestment 8.45.2 4.0 1.5 0.5
NPV 16.815.6 20.0 3.0 5.0
Investment 2.03.0 5.0 2.0 10.0
Projects
PRIORITY
Available Budget
Budget Constraint Cut Off
50Budget Constraints Optimization
NPV0.03.76.75.50.02.01.03.50.05.42.1
3.2
Projects Alternatives
Evaluates all possible combinations of
project-alternatives to find the combination that
maximizes the NPV of the overall network for the
given budget constraint. P Number of projects A
Number of alternatives C Number of possible
combinations C A P
Available Budget
51HDM-4 Optimization Example (1)
Section 1
Option
NPV
Cost
2
A
4
5
B
7
7
8
C
Section 2
Option
NPV
Cost
1
3
A
3
6
B
5
C
8
What is the recommended program for a budget of 5?
52HDM-4 Optimization Example (2)
dNPV/dCost
53HDM-4 Optimization Example (3)
Combination of project alternatives that
maximizes the NPV of the network
54Appraisals Post Evaluations (1)
- An Appraisal is carried out before an investment
is made. Everything is uncertain. - A Post evaluation may be made say 5 years after
the investment. The investment is known and 5yrs
of with case are known. - The without case is unknown as is the
remainder of the with case.
55Appraisals Post Evaluations (2)
- In Both Cases forecasting and evaluation models
are required to come to an answer. - Hence we can never be certain about the viability
of an investment !
56Sensitivity Analysis
- Consequences of changes on inputs
- Investment Costs (e.g. 15)
- Traffic Growth Rate (e.g. zero)
- Generate Traffic (e.g. zero)
- Value of Time (e.g. zero)
- A Investment Costs Increase (e.g. 15)
- B Road User Benefits Decrease (e.g. -15)
- C A and B together
57Switching Values Analysis
- Inputs that yield a NPV equal to zero
- Investments Costs
- Normal Traffic
- Traffic Growth Rate
- Generate Traffic
- Investment Cost
- Road User Benefits
58Risk Analysis
- Inputs vary at the same time following some
defined distributions
59Rural Transport Infrastructure
Tracks
Roads
Highways
60Rural Transport Infrastructure
Focus on social evaluation (cost effectiveness
indices, community priorities and multi-criteria
analysis)
61Social Benefits Why the Concern ?
- There is unease with conventional appraisal based
primarily on transport cost savings to traffic - There is a strong desire at community and
national levels for better access and mobility
which is frequently not matched by standard
measured economic benefits - The rich world governments subsidise rural
transport. Should the same happen for developing
countries ? - Isolation is a recognised characteristic of
poverty - There is a feeling that a minimum degree of
access and mobility is a basic human right - Development has moved away from a narrow
definition of economic development towards
concern with livelihoods and meeting
Millennium Development Goals - The issue is particularly important when roads
are impassable to motor traffic
62Economic Social Benefits
- Consumers and producers surplus approaches are
very economic in orientation. Yet roads provide
social benefits including improved access to
health and education facilities and improved
social mobility that cannot be easily translated
into conventional economic benefits. Although
they may have important long term economic
consequences. Improved health and education and
more secure social networks increase long term
earning capabilities but so far the economic
forecasting framework does not include this. - When roads are impassable to motorized traffic we
know that the quality of health care and
schooling falls. Drug supply and supervision
drops. Likewise no NGO, government agency or
commercial enterprise will establish or support a
service which cannot guarantee all year round
access.
63Indices and Ranking
- Widely used for feeder road planning there are
many different approaches - e.g. i) cost of improvement /
population - ii) estimated trips / cost
- Advantages Speed , simplicity, transparency,
many factors can be incorporated - Disadvantages How do we value widely different
factors ? (adding up apples and pears)
weightings are not stable cannot easily address
questions of road standards, timing etc,
possible double counting
64Example of Two Indices
- i) Andhra Pradesh (India)
- cost effectiveness cost of upgrading/
population served - But no measure of condition change and no
importance to traffic - ii) Airey Taylor
- 1st for impassable roads
- rank cost per head of
establishing basic access - 2nd when access is there
-
-
estimated trips x access change - prioritization index
-------------------------------------------- -
rehabilitation cost per km -
65Community Priorities
- Community priorities now often form an important
part of feeder road appraisal. It is possible
just to ask communities to rank the investments
they prefer- both within the road sector or
between roads and other investments. - Advantages Community acceptability, use of
community knowledge - Disadvantages Sectional interest groups may
dominate voting, community knowledge of area or
road impact may be poor
66Cost Effectiveness Analysis (CEA)
- Compares the cost of interventions with its
predicted impacts and it is used where the
benefits cannot be measured in monetary terms, or
where the measurement is difficult - It includes provisions that (a) the objectives of
the intervention are indicated and are clearly
part of a ampler program of objectives (such as
reduction of the poverty) and (b) the
intervention represents the smaller cost
alternative of obtaining the indicated objectives - It produces effectiveness indicators, such as
Total Beneficiary Population per Investment or
Investment per Beneficiary Population
67CEA Comparison of Alternatives
- To compare project-alternatives, the investment
cost is used to select the optimal alternative - The selected alternative is the one with the
lowest investment cost that will achieve the
objective of the program
Alternatives Investment 2.03.71.75.5
Project
Optimal AlternativeLower Investment
68Projects Eligibility with CEA
- To assess if a project is eligible, an acceptable
effectiveness indicator threshold is defined
Investment perPopulation(U/person)
50150 500
EffectivenessIndicatorThresholdExample
Projects
Eligible
Not Eligible
69Effectiveness Indicator Threshold
Evaluate Universe of Projects and Available Budget
70Possible CEA Indicators
- Investment Cost per Total Beneficiary Population
- 100 US per person
- Total Beneficiary Population per Investment Cost
- 0.01 persons per US
- Total Beneficiary Population per Investment Cost
in thousands of dollars - 10 persons per 1,000 US
- Etc.
71Options for Beneficiary Population
- Rural beneficiary population
- Effectiveness (rural beneficiary population) /
Investment - Poor beneficiary population
- Effectiveness (poor beneficiary population) /
Investment - Mixed beneficiary population
- Effectiveness (poor persons 0.3 non poor
persons) / Investment - Etc.
72Total Beneficiary Population (1)
- Total Beneficiary Population Directly Benefited
Population Indirectly Benefited Population - The Directly Benefited Population is the one that
lives next on the road, defined for example to
2.0 km at each side of the road, and the
population in the ends of the road, depending on
its characteristics and the use of the road - The Indirectly Benefited Population is the
population that lives in other roads near the
road in consideration, who use the project road
to arrive at the main population center of the
region or at a main road
73Total Beneficiary Population (2)
For example, for the road section B-CDirectly
Benefited Population Population along section
B-C plus on towns B and CIndirectly Benefited
Population Population along section A-B plus on
town A
74Multi Criteria Analysis (MCA) (1)
- It adopts criteria such as traffic, proximity to
educative, health, and economic centers, etc. - To each section, a number of the points is
assigned to each criteria that correspond to the
fulfillment of the criteria - The added number of the points that each section
receives is computed simply adding the points
assigned for each criteria, or with the use of a
more complex formula, for example, weighting the
criteria by their perceived importance
75Multi Criteria Analysis (2)
- It produces a priority indicator
- The indicators used in a MCA reflect implicit
economic and subjective evaluations - If the weights and the points are decided and
assigned on a participative way, the MCA has the
potential to be a good participative method for
planning based on implicit a socioeconomic
estimates - Nevertheless, it tends to be applied by planning
consultants or in isolation without the
consultation with the users and communities
affected by the project
76Multi Criteria Analysis (3)
- The result of the MCA, is often, unfortunately,
not transparent, specially if many factors are
considered and a complicated formula is also
applied - Therefore, if it is adopted, this method must be
used very carefully and to be maintained simple,
transparent, and participative
77Multi Criteria Analysis Example (1)
- Level of poverty of the influence area (Low,
Medium, High) - Potential for economic development of the
influence area (Low, Medium, High) - Importance of the road given by local
consultation process (Low, Medium, High) - Provision of access of social services of the
road (Low, Medium, High) - Problems of transitability of the road (Low,
Medium, High) - Functional classification level of the road (Low,
Medium, High) - Existence of public transport (Low, Medium, High)
78Multi Criteria Analysis Example (2)
Factor Value / Maximum Value