Economic Rate of Return (ERR) Calculator
What is the Economic Rate of Return (ERR)?
The Economic Rate of Return (ERR) is a critical metric used primarily in public sector project appraisal and international development. Unlike the Financial Internal Rate of Return (IRR), which focuses strictly on cash inflows and outflows for a private entity, the ERR considers the broader impact on the entire economy.
In an ERR calculation, "costs" and "benefits" are adjusted to reflect their true value to society. This includes accounting for externalities (like environmental impact), using shadow prices for labor, and removing transfer payments like taxes and subsidies which do not represent a real consumption of resources.
How to Calculate Economic Rate of Return
To calculate the ERR, you must find the discount rate at which the Net Present Value (NPV) of all economic benefits equals the NPV of all economic costs. The formula is expressed as:
0 = Σ [ (Et – Ct) / (1 + ERR)^t ]
Where:
- Et: Economic benefits in year t.
- Ct: Economic costs in year t.
- t: The time period.
- ERR: The Economic Rate of Return.
Practical Example: Rural Infrastructure Project
Imagine a government investing in a new bridge:
- Initial Investment: 1,000,000 units.
- Annual Benefits: 250,000 units (saved travel time, increased trade).
- Annual Maintenance: 30,000 units.
- Project Life: 15 years.
- Residual Value: 100,000 units.
By inputting these values, the calculator iterates to find the discount rate where the social value of time and trade outweighs the construction and maintenance costs over 15 years.
Why ERR Matters for Policymakers
Projects with a high financial IRR might have a low ERR if they cause significant pollution or rely on heavy government subsidies. Conversely, a public health project might have a negative financial IRR (it makes no money) but a massive ERR due to the productivity gains of a healthier workforce. Decision-makers usually look for an ERR that exceeds the "Social Discount Rate" (often 10-12% in developing economies) to approve a project.