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Introduction to policy analysis

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Title: Introduction to policy analysis


1
Introduction to policy analysis
  • What to think about when you want to examine the
    content and impact of a policy

2
Thinking about creating a new policy
  • Definition of the Problem
  • Cause of the problem identifying the causal
    chain
  • Target Population
  • Consequences of the Problem
  • Ideology and its relationship to policy solutions
  • Criteria for setting policy goals (generally
    derived from ideology/values).
  • Gainers Losers (Political, Social, Monetary
    Gains)

3
Role of ideology
  • Ideology is a set of assumptions about how the
    world works.
  • Most of the time ideologies are not tested
    empirically. If they are tested and verified, we
    would call them theories.
  • Ideologies are often associated with political
    parties.
  • For example, policy decisions could be based on
    the following principles
  • 1) Individual Responsibility
  • 2) Social Responsibility, especially for
    people in need.
  • A politician that adopts the Individual
    Responsibility approach might argue against new
    taxes and for reducing social programs.
  • A politician that adopts the Social
    Responsibility approach might argue that new
    taxes are necessary to support programs for the
    poor.
  • The Individual Responsibility approach is often
    used to argue against government intervention.
    Social Responsibility approach is often used to
    argue for more government programs.

4
Causal Chain
Limits on Involuntary Commitment Reductions in
mental health funding
People with mental illness
Fewer mental health institutions and outpatient
facilities
Increases in homeless-ness
More mentally ill people on the streets
5
MOST SOCIAL POLICY IS BASED ON THE RATIONAL OR
PROBLEM-SOLVING MODEL
  • Problem identification
  • Assessment
  • Goal Setting
  • Implementation
  • Evaluation

6
Social Policy Analysts use a variety of methods
to choose among alternative goals or intervention
plans
  • Review of the available theoretical and research
    literature to identify appropriate interventions
    that have been assessed as effective.
  • Best practices disseminated by other agencies and
    planning groups.
  • Decision trees
  • Conceptual, visual, or mathematical models.
  • Principle of Transitivity If A gt B and Bgt C,
    then A gt C.
  • Cost benefit or cost effectiveness analysis.
  • Analysis of the distributional impact of the plan
    (what groups will benefit or lose).

7
Gainers Losers
  • Costs for Social Programs are seldom shared among
    different groups in society.
  • Social Policies should have some benefits for the
    public at large, but may favor some groups over
    others.
  • Policy analysts and social planners use the
    principle of pareto optimality in the
    decision-making process.
  • The principle states that in all social programs,
    the gains should outweigh the costs of programs.
    In addition, the principle suggests that people
    who benefit disproportionally from a program
    should compensate the losers.
  • However, some policy analysts believe that it is
    sufficient that policies and programs simply meet
    the standard of potential pareto optimality
    i.e. that rather than actually give compensation
    to the losers, a program or policy should be
    adopted if the people who benefit can potentially
    compensate the losers because their benefits are
    so large.

8
This principle is put into operation by
government agencies and businesses by conducting
cost-benefit or cost-effectiveness Analysis
  • In cost-benefit analysis, the benefits of social
    policies should outweigh the costs. Policy
    analysts look at a number of different program
    outcomes and evaluate them in terms of costs and
    benefits.
  • In cost-effectiveness analysis, policy analysts
    examine the costs of various policy options and
    their potential impacts. The lowest cost program
    that has the highest impact is the one chosen for
    implementation.
  • Problems issues with these approaches costs are
    expressed in dollars. Some social costs and
    benefits can not be converted into dollars. For
    example, quality of life, mental health, or the
    beauty of a national park cannot be assigned
    dollar values.
  • Also, the method may not take into account
    unexpected costs or side-effects of the program
    (externalities) and it may be difficult to
    estimate costs and benefits overtime.
  • In addition, the method does not really help to
    identify how benefits should be distributed
    across different demographic or income groups.
    Distributional decisions are usually made
    (non-rationally) in the political process.

9
Distributional Effects in Cost-benefit Analysis
(adopted from Stokey Zeckhauser, 1978)
Benefits Costs Net Benefits
Project 1
Landlords 100,000 50,000 50,000
Tenants 30,000 40,000 -10,000
Whole Society 130,000 90,000 40,000
Project 2
Landlords 40,000 80,000 -40,000
Tenants 40,000 10,000 30,000
Whole Society 80,000 90,000 -10,000
10
In analyzing policies or proposing new ones, we
take into account judicial decisions.
  • Three branches executive, legislative, judicial.
  • Legislative branch passes laws executive
    (president, governor) may sign or veto laws and
    implements policy. Judiciary interprets laws and
    regulations.
  • Standards used to interpret laws are inherent in
    the Bill of Rights and the Constitution.
  • Does the law uphold individual and state rights
    identified in the Bill of Rights and the
    Constitution.
  • Two layers of courts Federal and State.
  • Federal judges are appointed (District and
    Supreme Court judges). U.S. Senate must confirm.
  • State courts have a mix of appointed (by the
    governor) and elected judges.

11
Controversies about the judicial branch
  • Judges are supposed to make impartial decisions.
  • Might be difficult in cases in which judges are
    elected (they accept campaign donations)
  • Since judges are appointed by politicians, the
    President or Governor may make appointments based
    on political ideology.
  • Since judges are called upon to assess government
    policy, the person who appoints them might have a
    vested interest in appointing judges that will
    make decisions that support existing policies or
    government decisions. The legislative branch may
    refused to confirm judges that they feel are
    partisan or that have made previous decisions
    that run counter to a particular political
    partys ideology or vested interests.
  • Judges do make decisions based on ideology. One
    philosophical approach is strict
    constructionism the belief that laws must be
    interpreted in a manner that is consistent with
    the intent of the founding fathers. Other judges
    believe that changes in social values and
    technology can be used to make new interpretation
    of rights granted in the constitution.

12
In deciding whether a law is Constitutional
Judges take into account
  • Judicial precedent how have similar cases been
    decided by the court?
  • Procedural rights due process do people have
    equal access to benefits, jobs, services, voting,
    and legal protections? For example, do people
    have the right to appeal government decisions?
  • Have people been previously granted substantive
    rights by a piece of legislation that cant
    legally be withdrawn by government?
  • Does the law violate any of the rights identified
    by the Bill of Rights. Difficulty in
    interpretation by the courts relates to
    implementation or procedures used to put the
    policy into operation. Another difficulty in
    interpretation involves understanding of what
    those rights actually mean. Courts have held that
    certain rules can be used to regulate the
    exercise of those rights. In some cases, the
    rights of some individuals can conflict with the
    rights of others. In addition, our understanding
    of rights can change over times due to
    differences in social values or changes in
    technology.

13
FRAMEWORK FOR UNDERSTANDING JUDICIAL DECISIONS
(FROM CANNON AS CITED IN CHAMBERS WEDEL,2005,
P. 38)
  • Whether and in what way new judicial decisions
    negate earlier legislation.
  • The degree to which earlier judicial precedents
    are altered.
  • Determining what specific policy consequences
    follow from a judicial decisions.
  • How new judicial decisions affect administrative
    discretion (it might alter how the policy is
    implemented courts can facilitate consent
    degrees when someone sues the government both
    parties must agree to abide by the decision).

14
When analyzing judicial impacts it should be
noted
  • That since there are courts in each state and
    federal courts serve different regions of the
    country, different courts can make different
    decisions on similar issues.
  • Most court decisions can be appealed except for
    matters that go to the U.S. Supreme Court.
  • Even the Supreme Court may re-examine cases
    considered settled.
  • Especially for laws affecting individual rights,
    new court cases can affect how the laws are
    interpreted and enforced. Consequently, some laws
    are constantly changing. This is called case
    law. Therefore, government agencies, private
    businesses, and nonprofit agencies need to keep
    updating their knowledge of these changes in
    order to be in legal compliance. This is
    particularly true about laws affecting the
    hiring, firing, and retention of staff.

15
More on policy analysis
  • Analysts look at the current or potential impact
    of laws and policy.
  • Analysts choose the criteria to be used for
    examining laws and policies.
  • Often these criteria are based on value
    assumptions about how laws should work. The value
    assumptions are closely linked to ideology and
    political philosophy.
  • Policy analysts use values such as equity,
    equality, adequacy, efficiency, and
    constitutional rights (freedom of speech, freedom
    of the press, etc). Effectiveness or the ability
    of a policy to produce the intended outcome is
    also a criteria. Policy analysts must also
    consider whether a policy outcome is feasible
    (economically, politically, or likely to receive
    public support).
  • Policy analysts also try to determine
    externalities who or what is likely to be
    affected by unintended side effects of the
    policy.

16
Using the problem-solving (rational) model,
policy analysts choose among a number of
different options with different effects
17
ASPECTS OF POLICIES TO BE CONSIDERED WHEN
CHOOSING THE MOST APPROPRIATE POLICY (AS
DESCRIBED IN JANSSON)
  • Mission or purpose
  • Level of Government or Specific Agency that is
    responsible for policy implementation/oversight
  • What type of organization should actually deliver
    the program (government, nonprofit, for-profit)?
  • How should funding be delivered (for example,
    direct federal, or federal to state to agency)?
  • How much money should be provided?
  • What type of services should be delivered?
    Theoretical framework for service delivery?
  • What type of staffing should be required?
  • Should beneficiaries pay some of the costs of
    services.
  • Should access to services to restricted or
    rationed?
  • Should organizations serving similar clientele or
    offering the same programs be required to
    collaborate with one another.
  • Should some administration practices be a
    condition for funding?
  • Who should be responsible for monitoring the
    implementation of the program/policy?

18
Policy analysts may
  • Consider options for a number of types of
    programs or
  • Consider options for each of the policy/program
    components involved in implementation.
  • Value criteria are used to choose among the
    options.
  • The policy analyst can use mathematical models
    such as cost-benefit analysis, can establish a
    formula for ranking each item, or use research
    data, information on best practices, or previous
    program evaluations to choose among the various
    options.
  • Questions to be addressed are whether the
    policies uphold the value criteria. Does the
    policy meet some of the criteria and not others.
    Which option meets most of the criteria?
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