Arie Kuyvenhoven and L. B. M. Mennes. Guidelines for Project Appraisal.
Sahibzada, Shamin A. ; Mahmood, Mir Annice
Arie Kuyvenhoven and L. B. M. Mennes. Guidelines for Project
Appraisal. The Hague: Directorate-General for International
Co-operation, Ministry of Foreign Affairs. 1985. x + 190 pp. Price: fl.
19.50.
There has lately been an increasing emphasis on methods of
evaluating development projects in the developing countries. The
traditional focus, which relies on only a financial appraisal of
projects, is no longer a favourite topic with project analysts,
especially in the public sector. In order to capture the full impact of
projects, several methodologies, focusing on the economic and social
aspects, have been introduced in the literature during the late Sixties
and early Seventies. Moreover, to enhance/facilitate the applicability
of these methods to actual projects, the need for Manuals, Guidelines,
and Guides of project appraisal has been felt from time to time. Some
well known attempts in this area have been made by OECD [2], UNIDO
[1;5], ODA [6] and ODM [7].
The book under review is another such attempt to make this complex
subject more easily applicable to real-world situations. It is an
introductory guide to the application of cost-benefit analysis for
project preparers and appraisers in a practical-oriented environment. It
is essentially an outcome of the demand expressed by the participants in
training courses organized by the Directorate-General for International
Co-operation, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Hague, Netherlands, on
the preparation, formulation and appraisal of projects. Because the book
is aimed at practitioners who prepare projects, it is non-technical and
easy to follow. However, its non-technical nature does not detract from the general usefulness of the book for project analysts.
Chapter One of the Guidelines introduces the subject of
cost-benefit analysis and discusses its relative strengths and
weaknesses. Chapter Two gives a brief account of the various stages in
project planning and appraisal from the point of view of a donor
country. The core of the book, however, comprises Chapters Three, Four,
and Five.
Chapter Three deals with the financial appraisal of projects
wherein the basic topic of cash-flow accounting is introduced. The
derivation of the cash-flow statement, which is the first step towards
an analysis of liquidity and profitability of a project, is shown in a
simple manner. The discounted cash-flow analysis has been introduced
with an arithmetical explanation of two measures of a project's
worth, viz. Net Present Worth (NPW) and the Internal Rate of Return
(IRR). The authors, while discussing the two measures, mention two major
disadvantages of the IRR, namely its inability to provide a unique
solution if positive and negative values in a cash flow alternate, and
its unsuitability as a criterion of profitability in cases of mutually
exclusive options. As the latter cases are of frequent occurrence in
project appraisal, the authors recommend and give an arithmetical
explanation of the use of incremental IRR. Nothing, however, has been
said to overcome the former type of disadvantage. It may be pointed out
that although the cases of former type, i.e. the presence of multiple
solutions of IRR, are relatively rare in practice, they do nevertheless
exist. Therefore, it would have been useful for teachers of project
appraisal if a reference were made to the extended yield method given in
Merret and Sykes [3].
Other relevant topics that are discussed in Chapter Three include
inflation, depreciation, sensitivity analysis and the issue of
subsidies. These topics are important in cost-benefit analysis as they
can affect the profitability of projects. The chapter also deals with
different types of cash flow, a subject that is expanded in the
subsequent chapters which discuss the economic and social analysis of
projects.
Chapter Four marks transition from financial to economic analysis,
thus substituting efficient allocation of resources for profitability as
an objective of development. The differences between the two types of
analyses are brought out and explained with the use of examples. The
valuation of efficiency prices for outputs and inputs, such as labour,
capital and land, forms the basis of economic analysis. Efficiency
prices are calculated with the use of conversion factors operating in a
distortion-free environment. An explanation of the general principles
lying behind the factors is given. Various conversion factors have been
derived but the derivation is not based on actual data from countries
from where the case-study projects have been taken. Of course, one feels
that this sort of explanation can be found in any standard book on
project appraisal. What the authors have done is to make them simple
with the help of arithmetical examples borrowed from other authors.
The annex to Chapter Four makes a brief comparative study of the
systems of economic analysis used by Little & Mirrlees [2], Lyn
Squire & van der Tak [4] [L-M & S-T] and the United Nations
Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO). Examples are given of how
these methodologies can be used in practice.
Chapter Five focuses on social analysis of projects which concerns
itself primarily with the distribution of income among different social
groups and different regions and between present and future generations.
Valuation of inputs and outputs is done with the use of social
accounting prices. Consumption distribution weights taken from Squire
and van der Tak have been used to estimate shadow wage rates for social
analysis. A simple and practicable method, based on hypothetical data,
has been used to calculate the value of the savings premium (V). It has
been shown that the introduction of saving constraints in the
calculation of the shadow wage rate increases the social price of
labour. On the other hand, the authors demonstrate that the
incorporation of consumption distribution weights does the opposite if
the value of distribution weights is greater than 1 for a given value of
savings premium which itself should be greater than one to become a
constraining factor. The Accounting Rate of Interest and the Critical
Consumption Level have also been discussed but the treatment is quite
inadequate. The chapter concludes with a discussion of a multi-purpose
river project from Sri Lanka. The social cost-benefit analysis of this
project is shown to have raised some very interesting issues for the
government of Sri Lanka in terms of providing information about the
interaction between elements of macro-economic policy and project
selection.
The three appendices of the book present detailed case-studies
showing the three different stages of appraisal: financial, economic and
social. Out of the three, the second one, namely "The
Rehabilitation of Solar Salt Works on East Madura, Indonesia", has
been analysed more comprehensively from the financial, economic, and
social points of view. The social aspect is elaborated in terms of
introducing regional income distribution weights. The island of Madura,
where the project is located, is shown to have a per capita income only
two-fifths of the average for Indonesia as a whole. Consequently, an
increase in per capita consumption in Madura is valued more than twice
as high as an equal increase in per capita consumption in the rest of
the country. This method of calculating regional income distribution
weights is a very practicable way of solving some of the complex
problems which regional project planners face. By incorporating this new
distributional element in the social analysis, the project becomes
acceptable, which shows that a complete social appraisal should be
undertaken whenever data permit. Financial appraisal, and sometimes even
economic/efficiency analysis, tends to be narrow-based, as can be seen
from the Madura project.
Project appraisal is a technical subject. The use of case studies
and worked examples to illustrate its various aspects can be extremely
useful. This is exactly what this book should intend to do when citing
actual projects as case studies from Indonesia, Mexico and Sri Lanka.
But somehow the format of the case-study presentation leaves a lot to be
desired. The analytical description of the projects is, no doubt,
excellently and exhaustively done. But, when it comes to co-ordinating
it with the section illustrating the application of social cost-benefit
analysis techniques to the actual projects through arithmetical
examples, the reader is left wandering between the main text and the
three appendices given at the end of the book.
It must be appreciated, however, that in the appendices various
tables have been painstakingly prepared, showing the breakdown of
various cost items into tradeable, labour and residual components. But
since no integrated cash-flow statement is given in any one of the case
studies, it seems to give the impression of a disjointed attempt when it
comes to the interpretation of the results section. This feeling of
uneasiness on the part of readers may be because of the fact that no
attempt has been made to demonstrate a step-wise application of any one
of the available appraisal methodologies to case-study projects.
However, when looking at the calculation of shadow wage rates and
consumption distribution weights, one is strongly convinced that the
book under review implicitly adopts the L-M & S-T method in
appraising projects.
A positive feature of the book is its relatively detailed treatment
of the evaluation of labour (the shadow wage rate) in economic as well
as social appraisal. In economic analysis, where the emphasis is on an
efficient allocation of resources, opportunity cost considerations
determine the shadow wage rate. In social analysis, both inter- and
intra-temporal income distribution issues are taken into consideration
when estimating the shadow wage rate.
It may also be mentioned here that if this book has been written
with the objective of making social cost-benefit analysis (SCBA) simpler
and easier to follow and apply, then it has partially achieved its
purpose. But, in the light of what the authors state in their preface
("the main purpose of the Guidelines is to explain how to improve
and maintain the quality of project and programme preparation through
the introduction and systematic application of cost-benefit analysis
with particular reference to the Netherlands technical and financial aid
programme"), the book does not appear to act as a 'real'
guide for project analysts.
Also, a very brief attempt has been made to discuss
cost-effectiveness analysis as a second-best tool for decision making.
Perhaps a case study illustrating the application of cost-effectiveness
analysis would have been useful as it would have broadened the scope of
the book to include other sectors of the economy. Further, the treatment
of the question of risk and uncertainty in project analysis is far from
satisfactory.
To conclude, the book emphasizes the appraisal stage of the project
cycle in evaluating projects. It is a very basic introductory guide to
the subject and the subject matter deals largely with projects in the
industrial sector whose costs and benefits are readily identifiable and
quantifiable. Other sectors, such as education, health, agriculture and
transport, are largely ignored and we feel that the Dutch
Government's interest in income redistribution through
human-resource development would definitely demand some concrete
guidelines for project appraisal in the social sectors.
However, a positive feature of the book is its very practical
approach to a very complex subject in that worked examples are presented
to illustrate the application of the techniques of cost-benefit
analysis. This is particularly true when the two different methodologies
of appraisal are being considered in Chapter Four of the book. Also, the
list of references provided at the end of each chapter is extremely
useful and comprehensive. One would find it difficult to add to it.
Finally, the book's utility can be maximized if it could be made to
serve as a training aid to teachers of project appraisal and also if it
could help independent readers in clarifying their ideas about the
estimation of some shadow prices.
REFERENCES
[1.] Dasgupta, P. S., S. A. Marglin, and A. K. Sen. Guidelines for
Project Evaluation. New York: UNIDO. 1972.
[2.] Little, I. M. D., and J. A. Mirrlees. Manual of Industrial
Projects Analysis. Vol. II. Paris: OECD Development Centre. 1969.
[3.] Merret, A. J., and Allen Sykes. The Finance and Analysis of
Capital Projects. London: Longmans. 1963.
[4.] Squire, Lyn, and Herman G. van der Tak. Economic Analysis of
Projects. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press (for World
Bank). 1981. (fourth printing)
[5.] UNIDO. Guide to Practical Project Appraisal: Social
Cost-Benefit Analysis in Developing Countries. New York: United Nations.
1978.
[6.] United Kingdom. Overseas Development Administration. Planning
Development Projects. A Practical Guide to the Choice and Appraisal of
Public Sector Investment. London. 1983.
[7.] United Kingdom. Ministry of Overseas Development: A Guide to
the Economic Appraisal of Projects in Developing Countries. London.
1977.
Shamim A. Sahibzada
Chief, Training Programme
and
Mir Annice Mahmood
Research Economist
Pakistan Institute of Development Economics, Islamabad