Triple bottom line and costbenefit analysis

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Triple bottom line and costbenefit analysis

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Title: Triple bottom line and costbenefit analysis


1
Triple bottom line and cost-benefit analysis
  • Presented by Dr Daniel Terrill
  • Senior Consultant, ACIL Tasman

February 2005
2
What is an economic evaluation?
  • Different to other types of valuations
  • The comparative analysis of alternative courses
    of action in terms of both their costs and
    benefits
  • Most useful to consider when making choices that
    involve tradeoffs in allocating resources.

3
Cost-benefit
  • Cost benefit analysis (CBA) refers to the tools
    and procedures needed to establish whether a
    proposed project or policy is worthwhile -
    designed to answer the basic question of how do
    costs and benefits compare?

4
Triple bottom line
  • Triple bottom line (TBL) accounting refers
    literally to the accounting of an entities
    Economic, Social and Environmental performance -
    depends upon the idea that the overall
    performance should be measured based on
    combined contribution to economic prosperity,
    environmental quality and social capital.
    (Source European Commission, 2001)

5
What we are seeking
  • Economic evaluations seek to maximize the public
    good
  • But what does that mean?
  • the national interest, the public interest,
    national welfare
  • However, who is the public, and what is their
    good?

6
Public goods and the public good
  • Two very different concepts that are commonly
    confused
  • A public good
  • A good or service that has to be provided
    publicly
  • The public good
  • A social outcome that, by some stated criterion,
    is better than all other outcomes

7
The standard for judgment
  • How do we assess what decision is in the public
    interest?
  • By what standard can such an assessment be made?
  • The Hicks-Kaldor compensation criterion
  • If gainers from a project or a policy change
    could compensate the losers and still come out
    ahead, then the project or policy is in the
    public interest

8
Comparison of CBL and TBL Similarities
  • CBL and TBL are forms of impact assessments, both
    evaluations
  • incorporate externalities
  • An extension of impact beyond the immediate
    interests of the organization performing the
    analysis
  • consider a range of economic, social and
    environmental impacts.
  • require quantification of impacts

9
Comparison of CBA AND TBLMain differences
10
Triple Bottom Line Accounting
  • An emerging philosophy placing emphasis on
    economic, environmental and social goals, rather
    than solely the (financial) bottom line.

11
Example of TBL methodology
  • Identify the unit of interest (firm, project)
  • Identify the impacts
  • Choose indicators to quantify impacts
  • Flagship template Global Reporting Initiative,
    2002 (http//www.globalreporting.org)
  • Online corporate example, http//www.geodynamics.c
    om.au

12
Typical TBL impacts
13
Use of Indicators
  • Indicators quantify the impacts.
  • Example of use of Indicators
  • Water quality impacts
  • Chemical analysis of water
  • Biota index
  • Salinity levels
  • Coliform density
  • Number of algal blooms

14
Examples of TBL applications
  • Reporting on organisation's social performance
  • allows for green consumerism
  • Monitoring projects or policy over time
  • Project or policy evaluation
  • when used in this role, the distinction between
    TBL and CBA can become very blurred
  • Highlighting trade offs and linkages between
    economics, society and the environment

15
Current Thinking on TBL
  • An increasingly popular reporting tool
  • Some criticism
  • lacking rigor
  • open to misuse
  • conceptually misleading.
  • Best thought of as a conceptual means to approach
    impact assessment, through a logical
    categorization of impacts that is not burdened
    with the same methodological constraints as CBA.

16
Current Thinking on TBL
  • Some hope that, in the future, there will be
    eventual integration of indicators into something
    more like a bottom line, and then of all three
    forms of company performance a single bottom
    line
  • Most applications do not represent a true
    economic evaluation

17
TBL References
  • Elkington, John, 1997. Cannibals with Forks, the
    Triple Bottom Line of 21st Century Business,
    Capstone Publishing, Oxford
  • (First to use the term)
  • The Institute of Social and Ethical
    Accountability, 1999. AccountAbility 1000
    Framework, Exposure Draft, The Institute of
    Social and Ethical Accountability, London.
  • Business Ethics Quarterly http//www.businessethic
    s.ca/3bl/triple-bottom-line.pdf
  • Ryan P, 2002 Corporate social responsibility
    Economic Research Institute http//www.marubeni.co
    .jp/research/eindex/0211a

18
Uses of cost benefit analysis
  • Accepting or rejecting a single project or policy
  • Choosing between alternative projects
  • Choosing the scope of one or many projects.

19
Cost Benefit analysis procedure
  • Outline of project to be analyzed
  • Identification of alternatives
  • Determine impacts (both benefits and costs)
  • Values (usually ) assigned to those impacts
  • The net value (total benefit minus total cost) is
    calculated)
  • Decision is made

20
The Concept of Net Value
  • Decision on once off use of scarce land cattle
    or sheep which is more valuable?
  • Analysis does not allow for timing of impacts

21
The treatment of time Discounting
  • All things being equal, people prefer benefits
    now and costs to be later
  • people discount their future
  • Discount rate
  • The rate at which people discount the future
  • enables us to bring future benefits and costs
    back to the present so that they can be compared
    against costs and benefits of today.
  • Estimating the discount rate and using it to
    determine net present value

22
Use of the discount rate
Assuming a discount rate of 10
23
Extending the analysisexternalities
  • CBA considers costs and benefits accrue to the
    wider society
  • What we have performed thus far is more properly
    considered a financial evaluation from the
    perspective of the farmer alone
  • Externalities that may come from trees include
  • improved downstream water quality
  • pleasant views for neighbors
  • flood mitigation
  • cleaner air
  • biodiversity

24
Extending the analysisexternalities
  • Considering these positive externalities of
    trees, the trees option may now be more desirable
    than the cattle option from an economic
    perspective,
  • But to know this we need to place values on those
    externalities a most difficult task

25
The challenge of attaching values
  • The main challenge of CBA is not the mathematics
    involved in subtracting the costs and benefits
    accrue to the organization making the decision,
    but of attaching values to those benefits and
    costs

26
The challenge of attaching values - Where
market values are available
  • Actual market value
  • E.g. the value of cattle or timber
  • Hedonic pricing - Property value technique
  • e.g. the value of nice views
  • Preventative expenditure technique
  • e.g. the value of clean water
  • Travel cost technique
  • e.g. the value of a lake for recreation

27
The challenge of attaching values where
markets are not available
  • Benefit transfer method
  • Willingness-to-pay - contingent valuation
  • Contingent choice
  • A highly imprecise science

28
Another category of costs Opportunity costs
  • the value of lost opportunities
  • an important cost to consider in CBA
  • It is the cost of the most valuable alternative
  • It is an economic concept, rather than an
    accounting one
  • Example
  • if the farmer chooses to do nothing with the
    land, an opportunity cost accrue to that choice
    is the lost income that could have been earned
    through cattle or trees, or whatever else was
    most valuable.

29
Beneficial uses of cost benefit analysis
  • Typically, projects with large up front costs and
    long term benefits
  • heavy plant, eg power stations
  • infrastructure, eg roads, rail lines, pipelines,
    electricity transmission lines, water
    reticulation, port upgrades
  • Less useful where benefits are hard to measure
  • eg parks

30
Exercise Step-by-step CBA
  • Outline project to be analyzed
  • Identify alternatives
  • Determine impacts (both benefits and costs)
  • Assign values to those impacts
  • Calculate the net benefit and make decision

31
Some abuses of cost benefit analysis
  • Failure to identify all costs
  • Claiming of benefits that would occur anyway
  • Double counting
  • Mixing inflated and real (deflated) values
  • Unrealistic projections of growth rates
  • Failure to identify and consider all alternatives
  • Assumption that resources (e.g. labour) have no
    alternative use

32
Treatment of uncertainty
  • Options
  • Increase the discount rate
  • Causes a bias against longer term projects
  • Put in ranges of values for the costs or benefits
    that are uncertain (e.g. the discount rate used),
    and test sensitivity of findings.

33
Some other types of economic evaluations
  • Cost-minimisation - Comparing the costs of
    alternative programs with the same expected
    outcomes
  • Cost-effectiveness comparing the ratio of costs
    to benefits that are not in commensurate units
    (e.g dollars per life saved)

34
References
  • For basics on discounted cash flows, cost benefit
    and real options analysis Principles of
    Corporate Finance, Brearley Myers
  • Applications and abuses Facts and furphies in
    benefit cost analysis transport, Bureau of
    Transport Economics Drummond MF., O'Brien B.,
  • Stoddart GL., Torrance GW (2000). Methods for
    the Economic Evaluation of Health Care
    Programmes. (2nd ed.) Oxford Oxford University
    Press.
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