Measuring Efficiency CRJS 4466EA. Introduction It is very important to understand the effectiveness of a program, as we have discovered in all earlier.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Linking regions and central governments: Indicators for performance-based regional development policy 6 th EUROPEAN CONFERENCE ON EVALUATION OF COHESION.
Advertisements

Health and Human Sciences Economics and Health: a taster Masters in Public Health Key reference: McPake B., Kumaranayake, L. & Normand, C (2002) Health.
INTRODUCTION TO APPLIED WELFARE ECONOMICS AND BENEFIT-COST ANALYSIS.
Correcting Market Distortions: Shadow Prices, Shadow Wages and Discount Rates Chapter 6.
Module 4 Social Determinants of Financial Reporting
Hawawini & VialletChapter 7© 2007 Thomson South-Western Chapter 7 ALTERNATIVES TO THE NET PRESENT VALUE RULE.
Incorporating considerations about equity in policy briefs What factors are likely to be associated with disadvantage? Are there plausible reasons for.
EVAL 6970: Cost Analysis for Evaluation Dr. Chris L. S. Coryn Nick Saxton Fall 2014.
Program Evaluation It’s Not Just for OMB Anymore….
A METHODOLOGY FOR MEASURING THE COST- UTILITY OF EARLY CHILDHOOD DEVELOPMENTAL INTERVENTIONS Quality of improved life opportunities (QILO)
Chapter 14 Contemporary cost management. Cost management §Improvement of an organisation’s cost effectiveness through understanding and managing the real.
Economic evaluation considers assessment of intervention effects in economic terms, which is often of greatest interest to fund allocators Intervention.
ES INC: Economic and discounted cash flow techniques: a comparison with respect to the Requirements of the Management Control System.
Arda ÇELİK DEÜ Endüstri Mühendisliği ABSTRACT Cost analysis can play strategic roles in organizations and plans. As industrial engineers,
PPA 502 – Program Evaluation
PPA 691 – Policy Analysis Lecture 7a-8a. Benefit-Cost Analysis.
Valuation issues Jan Sørensen, Health Economist CAST – Centre for Applied Health Services Research and Technology Assessment University of Southern Denmark.
Chapter 11: Cost-Benefit Analysis Econ 330: Public Finance Dr
PROJECT EVALUATION. Introduction Evaluation  comparing a proposed project with alternatives and deciding whether to proceed with it Normally carried.
Program Evaluation In A Nutshell 1 Jonathan Brown, M.A.
Budgeting According to hotel management consultant Kirby Payne, ‘Managing expenses is among the most important things a manager does. (I never say it.
Introduction To Cost Benefit Analysis Townley Chapter 1.
Budget Impact Analysis and Return on Investment Usa Chaikledkaew, Ph.D.
Budgets. On completing this chapter, we will be able to: Understand why financial planning is important. Analyse the advantage of setting budgets- or.
Chapter 20 CONTROLLING FOR ORGANIZATIONAL PERFORMANCE © 2003 Pearson Education Canada Inc.20.1.
TECHNIQUES FOR COMPARING ALTERNATIVE EDUCATION INVESTMENTS EDUARDO VELEZ AFTH1 December 1998.
Economic Evaluations, Briefly… CHSC 433 Module 6/Chapter 13 UIC School of Public Health L. Michele Issel, PhD, R N.
Introduction ► This slide deck provides a suggested framework for the financial evaluation of an investment project. When evaluating any such project,
Quasi-experimental Design CRJS 4466EA. Introduction Quasi-experiment Describes non-randomly assigned participants and controls subject to impact assessment.
MANUFACTURING COMPANY: COST-VOLUME-PROFIT PLANNING AND ANALYSIS
Initiating and Planning Systems Development projects
WLI REGIONAL KNOWLEDGE EXCHANGE WORKSHOP ON DECISION-SUPPORT TOOLS AND MODELS SEPTEMBER, 2013, JERBA, TUNISIA Economic analysis of improved water.
Economics and Conservation, 2 Fri. April. 29. REVIEW: Cost Benefit Analysis (CBA) Overview Political observation – CBA was mandated for all new USA policies.
Knowing what you get for what you pay An introduction to cost effectiveness FETP India.
Normative Criteria for Decision Making Applying the Concepts
Considering the Costs of MUS Interventions. Direct Costs v. Opportunity Costs Direct Costs Expenditures and investments to achieve a particular outcome.
Economic evaluation of health programmes Department of Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Occupational Health Class no. 4: Measuring costs - Part 1 Sept 15,
Copyright © 2011 Wolters Kluwer Health | Lippincott Williams & Wilkins Chapter 7 Building Healthy Public Policy and Introduction to Health Economics.
COST BENEFIT ANALYSIS- PUBLIC SECTOR INVESTMENTS Lucky Yona.
Semester 2: Lecture 9 Analyzing Qualitative Data: Evaluation Research Prepared by: Dr. Lloyd Waller ©
Centro de Estudos e Sistemas Avançados do Recife PMBOK - Chapter 4 Project Integration Management.
Course on Data Analysis and Interpretation P Presented by B. Unmar Sponsored by GGSU PART 2 Date: 5 July
Crossing Methodological Borders to Develop and Implement an Approach for Determining the Value of Energy Efficiency R&D Programs Presented at the American.
Government and Public Policy
Valuing intangible costs of substance abuse in monetary terms Claude Jeanrenaud, Sonia Pellegrini IRER, University of Neuchâtel Neuchâtel October 25 th,
TYPES OF EVALUATION Types of evaluations ask different questions and focus on different purposes. This list is meant to be illustrative rather than exhaustive.
Predicting the Benefits and Costs of Criminal Justice Policies TAD Conference, August 23, 2013 David L. Weimer La Follette School of Public Affairs University.
UNDP Handbook for conducting technology needs assessments and Preliminary analysis of countries’ TNAs UNFCCC Seminar on the development and transfer on.
CHAPTER TEN Capital Budgeting: Basic Framework J.D. Han.
CAPITAL BUDGETING_LECT 091 The Concept of Opportunity Cost The concept of opportunity cost is used in CBA to place a dollar value on the inputs required.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 3 Valuing the Environment: Methods.
Evaluating Ongoing Programs: A Chronological Perspective to Include Performance Measurement Summarized from Berk & Rossi’s Thinking About Program Evaluation,
Information Technology Economics
Chapter Thirteen – Organizational Effectiveness.  Be able to define organizational effectiveness  Understand the issues underpinning measuring organizational.
Flagship Program on Health Sector Reform and Sustainable Financing.
© 2014 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part, except for use as permitted in a license.
Cost-Benefit Analysis and Government Investments
Benefit-Cost Analysis in Environmental Decision Making
UNIT No. 3 Capital Budgeting Nature Significance Technique of Capital Budgeting Pay back Method Accounting Rate of Return Net Present Value Profitability.
EVALUATION RESEARCH To know if Social programs, training programs, medical treatments, or other interventions work, we have to evaluate the outcomes systematically.
Needles Powers Crosson Financial and Managerial Accounting 10e Capital Investment Analysis 24 C H A P T E R © human/iStockphoto ©2014 Cengage Learning.
CRJS 4466 PROGRAM & POLICY EVALUATION LECTURE #6 Evaluation projects Questions?
Chapter 4 Measurement PowerPoint Presentation by Matthew Tilling ©2012 John Wiley & Sons Australia Ltd.
Strategies for Mature and Declining Markets
Incorporating Evaluation into a Clinical Project
© 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved.
EWG Study Tour, Galway, 18/09/2006
Strategic Planning for Learning Organizations
Regulatory Impact Analysis: Overview
MONITORING AND EVALUATION IN TB/HIV PROGRAMS
Presentation transcript:

Measuring Efficiency CRJS 4466EA

Introduction It is very important to understand the effectiveness of a program, as we have discovered in all earlier chapters But, it is equally important to be able to inform stakeholders about program costs, and more importantly, how program outcomes compare to program costs

Cost-benefit analysis Expressed in monetary terms E.g. “a cost-benefit analysis of a program to reduce cigarette smoking would focus on the difference between the dollars expended on the anti-smoking program and the dollar savings from reduced medical care for smoking-related diseases, days lost from work, and so on” (Rossi, Freeman and Lipsey, 1999)

Cost-effectiveness analysis Outcomes are expressed in substantive terms E.g. a cost-effectiveness analysis of the same smoking program “would estimate the dollars that had to be expended to convert each smoker into a non-smoker” (Rossi, Freeman and Lipsey, 1999)

Acceptance of efficiency assessment Derives from business applications Very acceptable in human services to assess efficiency, but concerns remain about acceptable procedures –Unfamiliarity with procedures –Debate regarding the appropriateness of applying monetary values to social program outcomes –An unwillingness to let go of what may not be working

Timing of efficiency analysis Most commonly undertaken at the planning stage or post program Before analysis is based on estimates of the future –Presumes a given magnitude of positive net impact –Not based on empirical information therefore over and under-estimates can occur –Most important when the program is unlikely to be abandoned once implemented –Important when resource commitments are anticipated to be high

After analysis Most commonly efficiency analysis occurs after outcome evaluation completion “in comparative terms, the issue is to determine the differential “payoff” of one program versus another – for example, comparing the reduction in arrest rates for drunken driving brought about by an educational program with that of a program that pays for taxis to take people home after they have imbibed too much. In ex post analyses, estimates of costs and outcomes are based on studies of the types described in previous chapters on program monitoring and impact evaluations” (Rossi, Freeman and Lipsey, 1999)

The concepts of cost-benefit and cost-effectiveness analyses Cost-benefit analyses –Requires tangible and intangible estimates of program costs, both direct and indirect –Once the benefits and costs are specified, they are translated into a common measure (usually a monetary unit) –A particular economic perspective is adopted –Controversy around procedures used to convert inputs and outputs into monetary values –“clearly, the assumptions underlying the definitions of the measures of costs and benefits strongly influence the resulting conclusions. Consequently, the analyst is required, at the very least, to state the basis for the assumptions that underlie the analysis” (Rossi, Freeman and Lipsey, 1999)

Cost-effectiveness analyses –Less controversial –Merely requires monetizing the program’s costs –Benefits are expressed in outcome units –“an ex ante cost-effectiveness analysis allows potential programs to be compared and ranked according to the magnitudes of their effects relative to their estimated costs” (Rossi, Freeman and Lipsey, 1999) –“…inputs and outputs – replace, to a considerable extent, estimates and assumptions” (Rossi, Freeman and Lipsey, 1999)

The uses of efficiency analyses Can’t be done when outcomes are unknown or unestimable Senseless for outcome evaluations that show no significant net effects Senseless for programs in progress that do not yet have program impact information

Methodology of cost-benefit analysis “benefits and costs must be defined from a single perspective because mixing points of view results in confused specifications and overlapping or double counting”(Rossi, Freeman and Lipsey, 1999) Accounting perspectives –Individual target –Program sponsor –Community aggregates (communal)

Individual – target accounting perspective Takes the point of view of the units that are the program target Can provide for the highest benefit-to-cost results because this group rarely bears the cost of the intervention

Program sponsor accounting perspective Takes the point of view of the funding source in valuing benefits and specifying cost factors “analysis from this perspective is designed to reveal what the sponsor will pay to provide a program and what benefits (or “profits”) should accrue to the sponsor” (Rossi, Freeman and Lipsey, 1999) Most appropriate perspective when choices need to be made by the sponsor between alternative programs in the face of fixed budget

The communal accounting perspective Takes the perspective of the community or society as a whole (usually in terms of total income) Most comprehensive approach but also most complex Special efforts are made to account for secondary or indirect project effects – effects on groups that are not directly involved in the intervention (Rossi, Freeman and Lipsey, 1999) “Can also be expanded to include equity considerations, that is the distributional effects of programs among different subgroups” (Rossi, Freeman and Lipsey, 1999)

Communal perspectives include costs and benefits from the other types of perspectives but monetize and value items differently But communal perspectives include opportunity costs Generally the communal perspective is the most politically neutral

Case Studies Exhibit 11-F: Components of Cost-Benefit Analyses from Different Perspectives Exhibit 11-G: Hypothetical Example of Cost-Benefit Calculation from Different Accounting Perspectives (Rossi, Freeman and Lipsey, 1999)

Measuring costs and benefits Potential problems: –Identifying and measuring all program costs and benefits –Expressing all costs and benefits in terms of a common denominator (translating them into money values) –Social programs do not often produce results that can be valued accurately by means of market prices –Sometimes cost-effectiveness analysis should be used because with this form of analysis benefits needn’t be valued

Monetizing outcomes Money measurements –Estimate of direct monetary benefits Market valuation Econometric estimation Hypothetical questions Observing political choices Opportunity costs Secondary effects (externalities) Shadow prices –Derived prices meant to reflect their true benefit and cost

Comparing costs to benefits Simple method (net benefit) –Subtract costs from benefits Ratio of benefits to costs –More difficult to interpret