Saturday, March 21, 2020
Cost-Effective vs. Cost-Efficient
Cost-Effective vs. Cost-Efficient  Cost-Effective vs. Cost-Efficient  Cost-Effective vs. Cost-Efficient                                      By Maeve Maddox                                            	  A reader has asked about the use of these two terms:  I was wondering if you would care to comment on the difference between cost-efficient and cost-effective. In both, Oxford and Webster (the free online versions), cost-effective is properly defined while the cost-efficient page points to that of cost-effective. It looks like cost-efficient is a tolerated synonym of a lesser status.  As always, my starting place is The Oxford English Dictionary. There I find a reference to cost-effective in the entry for cost:  cost-effective adj. designating or pertaining to a project, etc., that is effective in terms of its cost.   The first OED citation given for cost-effective is dated 1967. I find no entry for cost-efficient.  Merriam-Webster Unabridged provides entries for both terms:  cost-effective adjective:à  economical in terms of tangible benefits produced by money spent.  cost-efficient adjective: cost-effective.  M-W gives 1970 as the ââ¬Å"first known use of cost-efficient.â⬠   I conclude that there is no difference of meaning between cost-effective and cost-efficient.   Is one term of ââ¬Å"lower statusâ⬠ than the other?  The most that can be said is that one is more common than the other.  The OED and M-W date the terms from 1967 and 1970, but the Ngram Viewer shows that cost-effective was present in printed sources as early as 1836. Both terms are documented in works printed in 1887. Cost-effective shows a bump on the graph in the 1940s, but then both terms remain more or less even until the 1960s, when cost-effective soars ahead.   A Google search also shows a preference for cost-effective:   ââ¬Å"cost-effectiveâ⬠: about 83,600,000 results   ââ¬Å"cost-efficientâ⬠: about 7,840,000 resultsà    My advice is to use the more common term: cost-effective.                                          Want to improve your English in five minutes a day? Get a subscription and start receiving our writing tips and exercises daily!                Keep learning! Browse the Expressions category, check our popular posts, or choose a related post below:12 Signs and Symbols You Should Know15 Types of DocumentsWords Often Misspelled Because of Double Letters    
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