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Domestic Policy

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Title: Domestic Policy


1
Domestic Policy
2
The Policy-Making Process
  • Agenda Building identifying a problem and
    getting it on the agenda.
  • Policy Formulation the debate that occurs among
    government officials and the public in the media,
    in Congress, and through campaigns.
  • Policy Adoption selection of a strategy for
    addressing the problem from among the solutions
    discussed.
  • Policy Implementationthe administration of the
    policy adopted
  • Policy Evaluation. Groups evaluate the policy to
    determine if it has had the desired impact. The
    feedback also evaluates unintended consequences
    of the policy adoption.

3
Health Care
  • The Rising Cost of Health Care
  • Advanced Technology diagnostic machinery is very
    expensive
  • The government funds about 45 percent of health
    care spending, private insurance provides about
    35 percent, and the rest is picked up by
    individuals or charity.
  • Medicare Medicare, a federal health-insurance
    program that covers U.S. residents over the age
    of sixty-five. The costs are met by a tax on
    wages and salaries.
  • Medicaid, a joint state-federal program that
    provides medical care to the poor (including
    indigent elderly persons in nursing homes). The
    program is funded out of general government
    revenues.

4
Medicare
  • In 1965, Medicare did not cover medicine.
  • Beginning in 2006, the Medicare program will
    begin paying part of the cost of medicines.
  • Medicare is the second-most expensive federal
    program after Social Security.
  • To contain costs, the government has placed caps
    on payments for procedures, with mixed results.
  • Some health care providers now will not serve
    Medicare clients.
  • The Uninsured
  • 15 percent of the population lacks health
    insurance.
  • 35 percent of working Hispanic Americans lack
    coverage.


5
The Uninsured Employed.
  • Smaller businesses often find it hard to supply
    health insurance to their employees, as it costs
    9,000 or more per employee.
  • A health catastrophe for such a person, however,
    could force them into bankruptcy.
  • Shifting Costs to the Uninsured.
  • A special problem is that many health care
    providers charge the uninsured steeply higher
    rates for services than the insured, because
    insurance companies and the government have the
    power to negotiate lower prices for their
    clients.

6
Alternatives
  • National Health Insurance. The United States is
    the only advanced industrial country that does
    not have a system of universal health insurance
    run by the government.
  • Such systems have lower administrative expenses
    than the U.S. system, but may have trouble
    controlling spending on unnecessary procedures.
  • The Canadian System. The Canadian system is
    sometimes cited as a possible model, but Canada
    bans supplemental insurance, a non-starter in the
    U.S.
  • National Health Insurance in the United States?
    President Bill Clinton made a major attempt to
    push a national health insurance plan through
    Congress, but failed.
  • Another Alternative A Health Savings Account.
    This plan has been passed by Congress under
    George W. Bush.
  • It allows people to create tax-free savings
    accounts for health-care expenses, providing the
    participant also buys a high-deductible insurance
    policy.

7
Percentage of Total National Income Spent on
Health Care in the U.S.
8
Cost of Health Care in Economically Advanced
Nations
9
Life Expectancy in the U.S.
10
Poverty and Welfare
  • Income transfers, transfers of income from some
    individuals in the economy to other individuals
    done by the government.
  • The Low-Income Population.
  • To define poverty, the government devised a
    system beginning in 1963 that defined poverty
    based on family income in comparison to the cost
    of a nutritious food plan.
  • Since 1969 the government has revised the formula
    based on changes in the consumer price index
    (CPI).
  • In an attempt to assist these families, the
    government made transfer payments to them in the
    form of programs like food stamps and housing
    vouchers.

11
The Antipoverty Budget
  • In an effort to resolve some of the most
    pressing problems of poverty, the federal
    government has established a variety of programs.
  • The 2005 budget allocated about 396 billion, or
    about one-sixth of all federal expenditures, to
    programs that support persons of limited income
    (scholarships included).
  • Of this amount, 188 billion, or almost half, was
    for Medicaid.
  • The states were expected to contribute an
    additional 142 billion to Medicaid.

12
Basic Welfare.
  • Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC)
    provided aid to children in poverty.
  • This program was administered by state
    governments but was financed by the federal
    government.
  • This program was eliminated by the Welfare Reform
    Act of 1996 and replaced with Temporary
    Assistance to Needy Families (TANF).
  • TANF is a state-administered bloc grant program.
  • The states, not the national government, now bear
    the burden of any increased welfare spending.
  • The Welfare Reform Act of 1996 had several key
    components.
  • Importantly it provided for devolution of the
    welfare system.
  • Most welfare recipients are now limited to two
    years of assistance at one time, with a lifetime
    limit of five years.
  • The act sought to reduce the number of people
    receiving benefits and in fact the number has
    been cut about in half.

13
Other Forms of Government Assistance
  • Supplemental Security Income (SSI) was
    established as part of Social Security in 1974 to
    provide a minimum income for the aged, the blind,
    and the disabled.
  • Food Stamps are designed to help provide adequate
    nutrition for low-income families.
  • The Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) helps
    lower-income workers by providing a rebate on
    Social Security taxes.

14
Homelessness
  • Many advocates for the homeless argue that the
    Welfare Reform Act has exacerbated the problem.
  • Estimates are that on any given night there are
    anywhere from 230,000 to 750,000 people who are
    homeless.
  • The fastest growing sub-group of the homeless is
    families.
  • What are solutions to homelessness?

15
The Official Number of Poor in the U.S.
16
Immigration
  • The Continued Influx of Immigrants. Immigration
    rates are now higher than they were a few decades
    ago.
  • About a million people a year immigrate to this
    country.
  • Four out of five immigrants come from Latin
    America or Asia.
  • Late in the twenty-first century immigration
    could help lead to the United States becoming a
    majority-minority country.
  • Immigration has certain economic benefitsfor
    example it may make it easier to fund Social
    Security in future years.

17
Immigration and Americas Security.
  • Student VisasThen and Now.
  • Many of the hijackers who destroyed the World
    Trade Center and attacked the Pentagon were in
    the country on student visas.
  • New Security Guidelines.
  • The government has therefore made it harder to
    obtain student visas, a problem for many colleges
    and universities.

18
Crime in the Twenty-First Century
  • Crime in American History
  • Crimes Committed by Juveniles
  • The Cost of Crime to American Society
  • The Prison Population Bomb
  • The Incarceration rate the number of persons
    held in jail or prison for every 100,000 persons
    in a particular population group
  • International Comparisons At 701 for men and
    women together, the United States has the highest
    reported incarceration rate of any nation on
    earth
  • Prison Construction
  • Effects of Incarceration

19
Crime In History
  • Crime has always been considered a problem in
    American society.
  • After rising for many years, violent crime rates
    have come down over the last ten years.
  • The reasons for this are not clear.
  • One explanation might be the large number of
    perpetrators who have been sent to prison,
    putting them out of commission.
  • High spending on law enforcement has also been
    suggested as a reason.
  • One study even claimed that legalized abortion
    has had a major effect by reducing the population
    likely to commit crimes.

20
Crimes Committed by Juveniles
  • These crimes have been a special concern, though
    juvenile crime rates are dropping as well.
  • Curfews and boot camps are two solutions that
    have been advanced.
  • Increasingly, young offenders are being tried as
    adults, especially for violent offenses.

21
The Prison Population Bomb
  • Stiff sentences are now national policy.
  • In 2002, the number of persons held in jail or
    prison exceeded two million for the first time.
  • In 1990, the figure was only 1.1 million.
  • The Incarceration Rate.
  • Key term Incarceration rate, the number of
    persons held in jail or prison for every 100,000
    persons in a particular population group.
  • Today, the rate for U.S. men is 1,309 and for
    U.S. women, 113.
  • Among the most-frequently incarcerated
    demographic group, non-Hispanic black men aged 25
    to 29, the rate is a stratospheric 12,877.
  • At any given time, almost 13 percent of this
    group is in jail or prison.

22
  • Prison Construction
  • It follows that prison construction is a booming
    business.
  • In 1923, there were only 63 prisons in the entire
    country.
  • Since 1980, Texas alone has built 120 new
    prisons, Florida 84, and California 83.
  • Effects of Incarceration
  • A majority of all persons arrested each year are
    arrested for drug offenses.
  • From twenty to forty million people may violate
    the drug laws each year.
  • The supply of potential prisoners seems virtually
    limitless.

23
Violent Crime Rates
24
Homicide Rate
25
Theft Rates
26
Incarceration Rates for Selected U.S. Population
Groups, 2002
27
Crime in the Twenty-First Century (cont.)
  • Federal Drug Policy
  • Money spent on federal drug interdiction programs
    had not met with much success, as illegal drug
    consumption in the U.S. has remained steady.
    State and local governments, however, have been
    attempting new remedies to curtail the drug
    problem.
  • Confronting Terrorism
  • Counter-terrorism strategies will necessarily be
    a part of federal government policy for years to
    come.

28
Environmental Policy
  • Environmentalism. Early in the twentieth century,
    environmentalism was focused on wilderness land
    use issues.
  • Conservation was a policy under which natural
    resources should be used, but not abused.
  • Preservation called for natural preserves that
    are isolated from the effects of human activity.

29
  • The Environmentalist Movement.
  • Beginning in the 1960s, a new movement arose that
    was more focused on pollution. A series of
    well-publicized pollution catastrophes helped
    bring attention to the problem.
  • Ecology.
  • In the 1970s, some environmentalists began to
    advocate policies that were a radical elaboration
    of the old preservationist philosophy.
  • Many even claimed that the human race itself was
    the problem.

30
Cleaning Up the Air and Water
  • The public had a growing awareness of
    environmental problems throughout the 1970s and
    1980s.
  • oil spills
  • toxic waste sites
  • The following polices reflect the concern the
    government has had for the need to protect the
    environment.

31
The National Environmental Policy Act.
  • This was enacted in 1969 in an attempt to set
    national standards for assessing the impact that
    major federal projects (construction of roads,
    buildings, etc.) would have on the environment.
  • Such projects could not be started without first
    receiving an environmental impact statement
    (EIS).
  • Curbing Air Pollution
  • The 1990 amendments to the Clean Air Act of 1963
    constitute a comprehensive policy mandating
    cleaner air in urban areas.
  • Utility plant emission levels are monitored and
    the plants must significantly reduce the amount
    of carbon monoxide emissions.
  • Automobile manufacturers must reduce emissions of
    nitrogen oxide progressively until 2007.

32
Water Pollution
  • The Clean Water Act of 1972 amended the Federal
    Water Pollution Control Act of 1948.
  • The Clean Water Act sought
  • to make waters safe for swimming, protect fish
    and wildlife, and
  • eliminate the discharge of pollutants into the
    water.
  • The Clean Water Act has proven controversial,
  • because of its broad definition of wetlands
  • because of the migratory bird rule
  • which ruled any waters suitable for use by
    migratory birds were subject to regulation as
    wetlands.

33
Cost-Effective Solutions
  • One method of supporting cost-effective solutions
    was part of the Clean Air Act of 1990.
  • As a result, the sulfur dioxide emissions are
    made by the companies that reap the greatest
    economic advantage from their right to emit.
  • As a result of legislation, air and water
    pollution is down dramatically from what it was
    three or so decades ago.
  • Lead content in the air is 3 percent of what it
    was.
  • Sulfur dioxide is down by four-fifths.

34
Regulating Hazardous Waste
  • Superfund, created in 1980 and modified in 1986,
    is a program to clean up leaking hazardous-waste
    disposal sites.
  • Superfund has been controversial because costs
    can be recovered from any persons who may be
    legally responsible.
  • Clean-ups have been very expensive and have
    resulted in large legal expenses as well.

35
The Endangered Species Act (ESA)
  • Passed in 1973, ESA made it illegal to kill,
    harm, or otherwise take a species listed as
    endangered or threatened.
  • The government could prevent landowners from
    engaging in development that would harm a listed
    species.
  • Restrictions on development and on property
    rights in general have made ESA controversial.

36
Global Warming
  • In the 1990s, climate scientists determined that
    CO2 emissions were causing the earth to warm up
    due to a greenhouse effect.
  • The results are most noticeable in the arctic and
    Antarctic.
  • The Kyoto Protocol
  • In 1997, a meeting in Kyoto, Japan, drew up a
    treaty to limit CO2 emissions.
  • The treaty did not place restrictions on
    developing nations.
  • As a result, the U.S. Senate opposed the treaty
    in a resolution and President Bush refused to
    submit it.
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