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SROI

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And outcomes are probabilistic.more anon. DRAFT. Possible Benefits 1 ... secondary spending of shop owners et al note that the multiplier theory is ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: SROI


1
SROI
  • The Social Return on Investment
  • By
  • Nick Wiseman
  • SWLLN

2
SROI in the case of a HEFCE-funded LLN project
  • Hefce has funded the SWLLN to the tune of 3.4m
    over 3 years
  • The object is to ease the entry into HE of
    vocational, largely p-t, learners in 3 discipline
    areas Public Services Heritage and
    Tourism..... And
  • To enhance their Progression opportunities once
    within the HE system

3
SWLLN Strands
  • The SWLLN is facilitating this additional
    opportunity and enhanced progression rights via
  • Curriculum development (and p-t, WBL delivery
    initiatives)
  • Progression Agreements between the many FECs and
    HEIs in the SWLLN sub-region (and admission
    agreements for vocational learners)
  • IAGLS activities that support the development of
    extant IAGLS centres thus providing better
    information on HE opportunities and how to
    exploit them, and better learning support

4
SROI - the basics
  • In essence the SWLLN strands of activity aim, in
    concert, to meet the prime directive of
    facilitating enhanced HE opportunities for
    vocational learners
  • The HEFCE funds provide a multi-faceted and
    integrated set of actions
  • The cost to society is the LLN funding (that
    could have been allocated elsewhere)
  • The benefits that accrue are complex and affect,
    inter alia individual learners, educational
    institutions, the UK Governments Treasury, and
    society at large
  • Prime benefit is the extra productivity enabled
    via Higher Level skills development (and the
    associated rewards to stakeholders)

5
Cost-Benefit Analysis with a social twist
  • The investment (cost) is the SWLLN core funding
    3.4m, plus the funding to HEIs in the form of
    Additional Student Numbers (ASNs)
  • The benefits include enhanced qualifications and
    better career prospects for vocational learners
    more funding for HEIs/FECs more tax revenues to
    HMTreasury an improved workforce whose skills
    add to the profits of businesses and the
    wellbeing of communities

6
The Benefit/Cost Ratio
  • SROI is usually measured by the ratio of measured
    benefits to costs
  • The measure of the costs is fairly
    straightforward
  • Measuring the benefits is more of a challenge
  • There are agreed values to the individual of
    enhanced qualifications we can see the upfront
    benefits to HEIs/FECs tax revenues out of
    enhanced earnings can be established employer
    gains and (particularly) social improvements are
    trickier!
  • And outcomes are probabilistic.......more anon

7
Possible Benefits 1
  • The learner expected additional lifetime
    earnings (in Present Value terms) say 100k for
    someone moving from FE level 3 to Hons Degree
    status (level 6) evidence for this comes from
    official DIUS figures though the practical impact
    will vary depending on sector and area of the
    country where the probability distributions of
    lifetime earning enhancement will differ
  • The HEI gaining an ASN (ie 1fte) gains HEFCE
    funding plus fee income approx 6k or 7k per
    annum for 2 or more years say 12k to be
    cautious
  • ASNs have been allocated so the only
    probabilistic aspect revolves around whether they
    get used

8
Possible Benefits 2
  • The HEIs employees (by and large) gain from the
    extra revenue and their possible additional
    spending power causes a multiplier effect in the
    economy (similarly, that share going to new
    capital, and maintenance, eventually ends in
    someones hands as new spending power)
  • HMTreasury gains clawback through income taxes,
    corporation tax and VAT say 50 of the initial
    outlay by HEFCE
  • These benefits are reasonably certain

9
Possible Benefits 3
  • Whilst new learners are in education, even p-t,
    they too make additional expenditures, as do
    their families and partners/friends owing to
    their new status these also have multiplier
    effects through the extra income to shops etc
    (and their owners/shareholders in turn) on the
    other hand, the time in work learners have
    foregone will reduce their short term income and
    potential spending the net effect is likely to
    be small, zero, or a negative!
  • Once in fresh, enhanced employment their
    employers also benefit from the new skills (and
    profit opportunities) the freshly qualified
    worker brings these skills are a prime private
    benefit from an upskilled workforce
  • This last benefit is not certain and an expected
    value might be calculated as a certainty
    equivalent

10
Potential Benefits 4
  • In addition to their greater productivity, the
    newly skilled members of society bring benefits
    to their wider community this is the social
    inclusion effect of education difficult to
    measure objectively and definitely uncertain
  • So we have the individual education
    institutions employers HMT shops and other
    spending recipients and the community at large
    ALL benefitting from 1 new graduate
  • Expected values of benefits apply in some cases

11
A word or two of caution
  • Costs and benefits have to be assessed, not at
    their headline level but against the opportunity
    foregone in their creation
  • For example, the HEFCE monies additional benefit
    needs to be net of the potential next best use eg
    the benefit of spending on SWLLN is the extra
    benefit that comes from our efforts as against
    (say) WVLLNs
  • Indeed we could look at the benefits of
    equivalent spending on another, non-educational,
    social project, or an equivalent tax cut which
    would entail benefits to a wider social group

12
And some more caveats
  • The example coming up is crude in the extreme
  • It assumes the ONLY benefits of the spending on
    SWLLN comes through the use of the ASNs allocated
  • It assumes that the prime beneficiaries are the
    new learners, their HEIs/FECs, their employers,
    and HMT it also uses a crude multiplier value
    of 1.25 ie 25 additional spending and income is
    generated by the secondary spending of shop
    owners et al note that the multiplier theory is
    based on a perpetual extra spend.....caveat
    emptor!

13
A Model of Costs
  • Costs of SWLLN approx 3.4m in PV terms
  • 217 ASNs have been allocated at a cost to HEFCE
    of approx 6.6m in PV terms
  • NB IF the ASNs are permanent, the costs, and the
    benefits, are in perpetuity ie more like 66m in
    PV terms (using an arbitrary 10 discount rate)
  • Total outlay (costs) approx 10m or 69.4m

14
A Model of Benefits
  • Learners enhanced lifetime earning 21,700,000
    or 217m if in perpetuity and certain
  • HEIs/FECs additional income 217 times 12k
    260,400 or 2.604m if in perpetuity
  • Additional profits to employers approx 25 of
    salaries 25k per newly qualified person 217
    times 25k 5,425,000 evidence reqd as to the
    25 figure - or 54.25m of in perpetuity
  • Total 27,385,400 or 273.854m
  • Now add multiplier effect 1.25 times this
    figure 34.23m or 342.3m in the perpetuity case

15
The SROI
  • Thus ignoring HMTs take at say 50 of the gross
    extra earnings (approx 17m or 170m) the ratio
    is
  • 34.23m/10m 3.423 or 340m/69.4m approx 5
  • NB NO other benefits assumed to be added are
    the IAG and PF benefits I see these as
    increasing the probability of a learner
    progressing to gain the lifetime enhancement in
    salary we need an idea on this perhaps from the
    take up of HE from the HUB activities?? Or the
    effect from the PAs??
  • These effects would shift the relevant prob dists
    where uncertain outcomes prevail
  • So if the 100k lifetime earnings enhancement is
    actually the expected value or mean of the real
    distribution, then IAG and PAs would raise the
    certainty equivalent mean value
  • BUT NO opportunity cost used either
  • Including HMT clawback adds 17m to the numerator
    approx 51m, thus SROI 5.1 or 510m/69.4m
    approx 7

16
SROI take 2
  • To make the analysis more realistic we need to
    add in other benefits emerging from the same
    3.4m spend
  • Better IAG ie enhanced probability of HE being
    taken up shifting the lifetime mean salary
    benefit by raising the probability of access to
    HE and hence career success
  • Better chances to progress to higher quals via
    PAs again shifting the prob dist in the favour
    of the learner
  • Better coordination and collaboration between
    HEIs and FECs ditto effects on the potential
    learner
  • These would simply increase the numerator and
    thus SROI

17
What if NO ASNs?
  • In this case the benefits are shorn of the 6.6m
    or 66m (and so are the costs)
  • So the SWLLN adds IAG, PAs and some new
    curriculum to further meet employers/learners
    needs but NO net extra learners
  • There may remain net benefits if WP learners are
    substituted for traditional students ( they may
    have a higher propensity to spend leading to a
    bigger multiplier and there might be positive
    social re-distribution effects and there may be
    net positive effects on productivity given the
    likelihood of greater life chances enhancement)

18
SROI without ASNs
  • Benefits are now merely the additional multiplier
    effects of having recruited 217 non-traditional
    students plus the net productivity benefits of
    the re-distribution of learning opportunities and
    better social cohesion (say) 21.7m (ALL spent)
    versus 21.7m with 0.9 spent) net benefit of
    2.17m (or more once we include the greater
    lifetime income gain and the additional HMT take
    via income tax)
  • If non-traditional learners gain relatively more
    from their HE experience (as assumed above) then
    greater employers productivity gains are an
    additional benefit
  • Applying the 1.25 multiplier to this approx 4m
  • In perpetuity this is likely to be much more
    since the benefits of LLNs, once embedded, are
    likely to continue
  • Costs are now 3.4m but in perpetuity benefits
    might reach 40m
  • SROI is approx 12 IF sustainable benefits accrue

19
References that might add to the discussion
  • New Economics Foundation (NEF) (2008), Measuring
    Value a guide to the Social Return on Investment
    (SROI), second edition
  • NEF (2004), Measuring Social Value the
    foundations of SROI
  • www.neweconomic.org
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