Cost Benefit Analysis and Evaluation
Curriculum guideline
Lecture and seminar
- Introduction
- CBA, purpose and applications
- Foundations of CBA
- Measuring efficiency, willingness-to-pay, compensation, and political process
- Measurement of changes in welfare, consumer surplus and efficiency
- Cost and benefit evaluation in primary markets
- Cost and benefit evaluation in secondary market
- Timing, discounting, and future values
- Expected values and uncertainty
- Social discount rate
- Shadow prices
- Applications and examples
At the end of the course, the successful student should be able to:
- Compare methodologies and assess information requirements for cost-benefit analysis (CBA)
- Critique and compare the common cost-benefit analysis measures
- Evaluate and demonstrate an understanding of the concepts of social welfare, market failure and efficient resource allocation
- Correctly account for and measure time, costs, and benefits
- Explain the distributional consequences of changes in social surplus which result from policies, projects, and programs
- Apply and evaluate discounting methods for inter-temporal comparisons of costs and benefits
- Analyze the impact of uncertainty on cost-benefit analysis
- Explain how to use cost-benefit analysis as a tool to provide economic advice and evaluate government policy
Means of Assessment:
Term test(s) 25% - 50%
Assignments/ projects 10% - 35%
Final Exam 30% - 40%
Total 100%
(no individual test or assignment to exceed 40%)
Students may conduct research as part of their coursework in this class. Instructors for the course are responsible for ensuring that student research projects comply with College policies on ethical conduct for research involving humans, which can require obtaining Informed Consent from participants and getting the approval of the Douglas College Research Ethics Board prior to conducting the research.
The textbook is:
A.E. Boardman, D.H. Greenberg, A.R. Vining, and D.L. Weimer, Cost-Benefit Analysis: Concepts and Practice, Pearson Education.
or textbook as approved by the Economics Department.
Courses listed here are equivalent to this course and cannot be taken for further credit:
- No equivalency courses