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  2. Market impact - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Market_impact

    Market impact cost is a measure of market liquidity that reflects the cost faced by a trader of an index or security. [1] The market impact cost is measured in the chosen numeraire of the market, and is how much additionally a trader must pay over the initial price due to market slippage, i.e. the cost incurred because the transaction itself changed the price of the asset. [2]

  3. Economic impact analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economic_impact_analysis

    An economic impact analysis only covers specific types of economic activity. Some social impacts that affect a region's quality of life, such as safety and pollution, may be analyzed as part of a social impact assessment, but not an economic impact analysis, even if the economic value of those factors could be quantified. [2]

  4. Program evaluation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Program_evaluation

    According to Rossi et al. (2004, p. 222), [8] 'a measure that is poorly chosen or poorly conceived can completely undermine the worth of an impact assessment by producing misleading estimates. Only if outcome measures are valid, reliable and appropriately sensitive can impact assessments be regarded as credible'.

  5. Life-cycle cost analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Life-cycle_cost_analysis

    The term differs slightly from Total cost of ownership analysis (TCOA). LCCA determines the most cost-effective option to purchase, run, sustain or dispose of an object or process, and TCOA is used by managers or buyers to analyze and determine the direct and indirect cost of an item. [1] The term is used in the study of Industrial ecology (IE ...

  6. Social return on investment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_return_on_investment

    For example, the Participatory Social Return on Investment (PSROI) framework builds on the economic principles of SROI and CBA and integrates them with the theoretical and methodological foundations of participatory action research (PAR), critical systems thinking, and Resilience Theory and strength-based approaches such as appreciative inquiry ...

  7. Market analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Market_analysis

    Although the market potential is rather fictitious, it offers good values of orientation. The relation of market volume to market potential provides information about the chances of market growth. [6] [7] The following are examples of information sources for determining market size: Government data; Trade association data; Financial data from ...

  8. Cost–utility analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cost–utility_analysis

    The incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) is the ratio between the difference in costs and the difference in benefits of two interventions. The ICER may be stated as (C1 – C0)/(E1 – E0) in a simple example where C0 and E0 represent the cost and gain, respectively, from taking no health intervention action.

  9. Impact assessment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Impact_assessment

    If the assessment is favourable, and the proposed policy is enacted—after a suitable length of time for the policy to gain traction—it might be followed by an impact evaluation; ideally, assessed impacts before the fact and evaluated impacts after the fact are not wildly divergent. In some cases, impact becomes politicized due to a change ...