1 / 19

Public Policy Week 2: Policy Process – Analysis

Public Policy Week 2: Policy Process – Analysis. Policy Analysis. Description of the content of the policy Analysis of the impact of the social, economic and political forces on the context of the policy

fjudith
Download Presentation

Public Policy Week 2: Policy Process – Analysis

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Public Policy Week 2: Policy Process – Analysis

  2. Policy Analysis • Description of the content of the policy • Analysis of the impact of the social, economic and political forces on the context of the policy • Analysis of the effects of the different institutional arrangements and political processes on the policy • Analysis of impact of the policy on society

  3. Why Undertake Analysis? • Scientific understanding: improve knowledge of society • Professional advice: apply social science knowledge to solution of practical problems • Policy Recommendations: moral obligation on social scientists to advance specific polices?

  4. What can be learned from policy analysis? • Description of the policy • Causes of the policy • Consequences of the policy

  5. Causes and Consequences Institutions, Processes, Behaviours A B F E C Social and Economic Conditions Public Policies D (Adapted from Dye, 2002: 5)

  6. Use of Analysis • Analysis and advocacy are different • Analysis – • Explanation rather than prescription • Scientific search for cause and consequence • Accumulating reliable research findings of general interest.

  7. Policy Analysis - a remedy for society’s ills? • Limits on governments powers • Disagreements over the problems • Analysis itself is a subjective process • Limitations on the design of research • Complexity of Human Behaviours

  8. Policy Analysis as a Skill • Difficult skill to acquire • An applied sub field of economics, politics, law, public administration, sociology etc. • No one model of choice for analysts to test/use that will give the best results.

  9. Institutional model Process Model Rational Model Incremental Model Group/Pluralist Model Elite Model Public Choice Model Game Theory Model Models of Analysis

  10. Institutional Model • Policy as an institutional output • Relationship between public policy and government institutions • Government lends legitimacy to policies • Government policies involve universality • Government polices can be enforced by coercion

  11. Process Model • Problem Identification • Agenda Setting • Policy Formulation • Public Legitimation • Policy Implementation • Policy Evaluation * In other words, a series of political activities…

  12. Rational Model • Know all societies value preferences and their relative weights • Know all the policy alternatives available to them • Know the consequences of each policy alternative • Select the most efficient policy alternative • What are the barriers to this model?

  13. Incremental Model • Proceeds through Incremental Change • Involves mutual adjustment and negotiation • Excludes by accident rather than by systematic or deliberate exclusion • Policy is not made once and for all • Superior to a ‘futile attempt at superhuman comprehensiveness’ • Test of a good decision is agreement and process rather than goal attainment or meeting objectives • Involves some degree of trial and error (*Adapted from Parsons P.286-287)

  14. Group/Pluralist Model • Public policy is the outcome of group forces acting against one another. • Policymakers are viewed as constantly responding to group pressures – bargaining, negotiating, compromising among the competing demands of influential groups. • No one group will dominate for every group there will be an equal and opposite. • Policies are the product of bargaining and compromise, will tend to be moderate , fair to all and conducive to social stability.

  15. Elite Model • Policies flow downwards from the elite to the masses – they do not arise from mass demands • As a model, elitism is purported to be based on ‘how the real world works’ – those at the top with power and those at the bottom without power.

  16. Game Theory • Rational decisions in which 2 or more people have choices to make and the outcome depends on the choices made by others • The ‘best’ policy outcome depends upon what other will do • The Prisoner’s Dilemma

  17. Public Choice Model • Collective decision-making by self interested individuals • policy demands are self interested and that policy-makers are self interested. • Looks at how bureaucratic power serves itself rather than the public interest. • Look at interest groups pressure groups – selfish interests or wider interests

  18. Sources Policy Hub is a web-site developed by the CabinetOffice Strategy Unit which aims to improve the way public policy is shaped and delivered: tailored access to initiatives, projects and tools that support better policy making and delivery • extensive guidance on the use of research and evidence in the evaluation of policy • links to a wide range of research resources and tools from the UK and around the world • http://www.policyhub.gov.uk/

  19. Sources • Prime Minister’s Strategy Unit "...providing the Prime Minister and Government departments with a capacity to analyse major policy issues and design strategic solutions...“ • http://www.strategy.gov.uk/

More Related