Cost-benefit analyses offend against the notion that life is priceless
Their Gradgrindian logic is off-putting, but also mind-opening
THE AIRLESS nooks under a man’s foreskin are a cosy spot for microbes. These can inflame the surrounding skin, helping viruses such as HIV to spread. In places where the disease is common and treatment is patchy, removing foreskins can be a cost-effective way to fight it. In parts of Africa, the benefits of circumcising adolescents can outweigh the costs by about 10 to 1, according to the Copenhagen Consensus Centre (CCC), a think-tank. The ratio rises above 40 to 1 in the worst-hit countries.
This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “Do-gooders and do-besters”
Finance & economics November 16th 2019
- America’s public-sector pension schemes are trillions of dollars short
- Tighter production targets have failed to lift the price of oil
- The Trump administration is trying to reforge carmakers’ supply chains
- The case for a falling dollar
- The improved mood in financial markets
- Some Chinese firms turn out to have lied about their state pedigree
- Stiff sentences for bank fraud capture Italy’s sour public mood
- How Jim Simons became the most successful investor of all time
Discover more
Could war in the Gulf push oil to $100 a barrel?
Missiles are flying over a region that supplies a third of the world’s crude
How bond investors soured on France
They now regard the euro zone’s second-largest economy as riskier than Spain
Can Andrea Orcel, Europe’s star banker, create a super-bank?
An interview with the boss of UniCredit
Why economic warfare nearly always misses its target
There is no such thing as a strategic commodity
A tonne of public debt is never made public
New research suggests governments routinely hide their borrowing
Xi Jinping’s belated stimulus has reset the mood in Chinese markets
But can the buying frenzy last?