Transcription of Social cost benefit analysis principles - WHO
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11 Social cost benefitanalysis principlesJohn CameronThe economic assessment of drinking-water interventions especially small-scaleinterventions is challenging because of the complexity of the information neededto assess all direct and indirect outcomes. Meeting these challenges requires thefollowing steps to be taken: Combine information on physical and socioeconomic systems. Economicassessment of water and sanitation interventions is expected to coverchanges in the physical environment (such as water contamination andenvironmental pollution) and changes in livelihoods. A systematicframework is needed to keep the analysis manageable. Model causality and linking concepts and physical andhuman processes are complex in themselves, and even more complex in 2011 World Health Organization (WHO).Valuing Water, Valuing Livelihoods. Edited by JohnCameron, Paul Hunter, Paul Jagals and Katherine Pond.
11 Social cost–benefit analysis – principles John Cameron The economic assessment of drinking-water interventions – especially small-scale
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