The Policy Making Process

Sydney Kellas
19 Jan 201609:22

Summary

TLDRThe policy-making process involves multiple groups, both public and private, contributing to the creation and evolution of policies. Key steps include agenda-setting, policy formation, adoption, implementation, evaluation, and potential revision. Different types of politics—majoritarian, interest group, client, and entrepreneurship—determine who benefits and bears the cost of policies. Factors like pork barrel legislation and logrolling influence the motivations behind policy creation. The growing role of bureaucracy and state innovations also shape policies. The process aims to address public issues effectively, balancing benefits and costs across various groups.

Takeaways

  • 📝 Policies do not create themselves; they result from contributions by various public and private groups through the policy-making process.
  • 📋 The political agenda consists of issues that people believe require governmental action, like abortion legality and gun control.
  • 💸 A cost is any burden people believe they must bear if a policy is enacted, and a benefit is a satisfaction people will enjoy if a policy is adopted.
  • ⚖️ There are five types of public policy: congressional statutes, presidential actions, court decisions, budgetary choices, and regulations.
  • 📈 The policy-making process has six steps: agenda-setting, policy formation, policy adoption, policy implementation, policy evaluation, and policy revision.
  • 🔍 Policy adoption happens when lawmakers formally choose a policy solution, typically through legislation or rules.
  • 🏛️ Policies can involve four types of politics: majoritarian (where almost everyone benefits and pays), interest group, client, and entrepreneurial politics.
  • 🚧 Policy entrepreneurs are activists who create political coalitions for policies benefiting unorganized interests, often in entrepreneurial politics.
  • 👥 Pork barrel legislation and logrolling are common motivators in policymaking, where legislators aim to please constituents for reelection.
  • 🔄 The bureaucracy is not just reactive but also plays a significant role in policy innovation and development.

Q & A

  • What is the policy-making process?

    -The policy-making process is the method by which policies are created and evolve over time through the contributions of various groups, both public and private.

  • What is the political agenda?

    -The political agenda consists of issues that people believe require governmental action, such as the legality of abortion and gun control.

  • What is the difference between a cost and a benefit in policy-making?

    -A cost is a burden that people believe they must bear if a policy is enacted, while a benefit is a satisfaction people believe they will enjoy if a policy is adopted. Both can be monetary or non-monetary.

  • What are the five types of public policy?

    -The five types of public policy are congressional statute (laws passed by Congress), presidential action (decisions by the President), court decisions (opinions of the courts), budgetary choices (taxes or expenditures), and regulations (rules adopted by agencies).

  • What is agenda-setting in the policy-making process?

    -Agenda-setting is the first step in the policy-making process, where public attention focuses on a public problem or issue, often influenced by the actions and words of public officials.

  • What happens during policy formation?

    -During policy formation, policymakers, including legislators and bureaucrats, develop strategies, whether legislative, regulatory, or programmatic, to address the identified problem.

  • What is the role of policy evaluation in the policy-making process?

    -Policy evaluation involves reviewing the policy from inside and outside the government to assess whether it is effectively addressing the problem it was designed to solve.

  • What is majoritarian politics?

    -Majoritarian politics is a type of policy where almost everybody benefits and almost everybody pays for the costs of the policy.

  • What is pork barrel legislation?

    -Pork barrel legislation refers to laws that provide tangible benefits to a legislator's constituents in various districts or states, often in exchange for votes.

  • What is logrolling in the legislative process?

    -Logrolling is when a legislator supports a proposal favored by another legislator in exchange for support on their own legislation.

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Étiquettes Connexes
Policy MakingPolitical AgendaCost-BenefitRegulationsPublic PolicyAgenda SettingPolicy AdoptionPolicy ImplementationPolicy EvaluationPolitical Cartoons
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