CBA Basics - Benefit Balancing Act
- Assesses interventions by valuing both inputs (costs) and outcomes (benefits) in monetary units.
- Objective: Determine if total benefits ($B$) outweigh total costs ($C$).
- Key decision criteria:
- Net Benefit (NB): $B - C > \textbf{0}$
- Benefit-Cost Ratio (BCR): $B/C > \textbf{1}$
- Application: Guides resource allocation, aids policy-making by comparing varied programs.
⭐ CBA is unique as it values both costs and benefits in monetary terms, allowing comparison across diverse programs.
CBA Components - Coin Counting Crew
Costs and benefits in CBA are identified, measured, and valued. 📌 Mnemonic: "I DID see the costs/benefits!" (Intangible, Direct Medical, Indirect, Direct Non-Medical).
- Costs: Resources consumed or negative outcomes.
- Direct Medical: E.g., drugs, hospital fees, lab tests.
- Direct Non-Medical: E.g., travel for care, special food.
- Indirect: E.g., lost wages, ↓ productivity.
- Intangible: E.g., pain, suffering, anxiety.
- Benefits: Gains or positive outcomes from an intervention.
- Direct Medical: E.g., averted treatment costs.
- Direct Non-Medical: E.g., saved travel costs.
- Indirect: E.g., ↑ productivity, earnings gained.
- Intangible: E.g., improved quality of life, ↓ pain.

⭐ Valuation of intangible costs (e.g., pain, suffering) and benefits (e.g., quality of life improvement in monetary terms) is a major challenge in CBA.
CBA Methodology - Value Valuation Voyage
Assesses monetary value of an intervention versus its costs.
- Key Steps:
- 1. Identify Program/Alternatives: Define intervention & comparators.
- 2. Enumerate Costs: Direct (medical, non-medical), indirect (productivity loss), intangible (pain).
- 3. Enumerate Benefits: Direct (costs averted), indirect (productivity gain), intangible (QoL gain).
- 4. Monetize: Assign monetary values.
- Human Capital Approach: Based on earnings.
- Willingness-To-Pay (WTP): Stated preference.
- 5. Discounting: Converts future values to present. $PV = FV / (1+r)^n$.
- Rate: Typically 3-5%.
- 6. Calculate Results: Net Present Value (NPV), Benefit-Cost Ratio (BCR). Perform Sensitivity Analysis.
⭐ Discounting is crucial in CBA to convert future costs and benefits to their present values, reflecting time preference.
Interpreting CBA - Profit Pointers
- Key project viability metrics:
- Net Present Value (NPV): $NPV = \sum (B_t - C_t) / (1+r)^t$
- Project viable if NPV > 0.
- Project not viable if NPV < 0.
- Benefit-Cost Ratio (BCR): $BCR = (\sum B_t / (1+r)^t) / (\sum C_t / (1+r)^t)$
- Project viable if BCR > 1.
- Project not viable if BCR < 1.
- Net Present Value (NPV): $NPV = \sum (B_t - C_t) / (1+r)^t$
⭐ A project is economically viable if its Net Present Value (NPV) is positive or its Benefit-Cost Ratio (BCR) is greater than 1.
CBA Pros & Cons - Merit & Misgivings
| Pros | Cons |
|---|---|
| * Compares diverse projects (money) | * Valuing life/health in money (ethical) |
| * Aids allocative efficiency | * Intangibles hard to quantify |
| * Considers wider societal benefits | * Distributional effects often ignored |
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Cost-Benefit Analysis (CBA) measures both costs and benefits in monetary units.
- Allows comparison of diverse health programs with different types of outcomes.
- Decision criteria: Benefit-Cost Ratio (BCR) > 1 or Net Present Value (NPV) > 0.
- Discounting accounts for the time value of money for future costs and benefits.
- Major challenge: Monetizing health outcomes (e.g., life years gained, QALYs).
- Useful for allocating scarce resources across heterogeneous interventions.
- Results often expressed as Net Benefit, BCR, or Return on Investment (ROI).
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