PPA 503 - The Public Policy-Making Process: Lecture 6a - Policy Formulation
PPA 503 - The Public Policy-Making Process: Lecture 6a - Policy Formulation
PPA 503 - The Public Policy-Making Process: Lecture 6a - Policy Formulation
Making Process
Lecture 6a Policy
Formulation
Policy Formulation
Formulation develop a plan, a method, or
a prescription for alleviating some need.
Research interpret the results.
Review review and discuss alternatives.
Projection Determine consequences and
feasibility.
Selection Refine and make a formal selection.
Test the results.
No guarantees.
Policy Formulation
Types of formulation.
Rational planning systematic.
Subjective reacting haphazard.
Guidelines.
Formulation need not be limited to one set of actors.
Formulation may proceed without clear definition of the
problem, or contact with affected group.
There is no necessary coincidence between formulation and
particular institutions, though it is a frequent activity of
bureaucratic agencies.
Formulation and reformulation may occur over a long period of
time without ever building sufficient support for any one
proposal.
There are often several appeal points for those who lose in the
formulation process at any one level.
The process itself never has neutral effects.
Policy Formulation
Who is involved?
Sources inside government.
Executive.
President, aides, cabinet.
Goals, priorities leading to boundaries.
Bureaucracy.
Actual development of plans and proposals.
Outside agencies.
Legislature.
Staff and support units.
Outside agencies connected to Congress.
Policy Formulation
Who is involved (contd.)?
Sources outside government.
Policy networks subgovernments discuss.
Washington Information Directory 500 subject areas.
Public service organizations.
Foundations Ford, Rockefeller, Carnegie, Sloan,
Russell Sage, Mellon.
Research organizations Brookings, American
Enterprise Institute, Council on Foreign Relations,
Urban Institute, RAND Corporation.
Universities, especially Research I universities.
Citizen organizations Common Cause, Nader groups,
League of Women Voters.
Policy Formulation
Institutional limits on policy formulation.
Constitutional limits.
Separation of powers.
Federalism.
Bicamericalism.
Checks and balances.
Existing policy relationships.
Drive for predictability.
Networks of contacts and interactions.
Clientele or constituency relationships are established and protected.
All agencies and committees require support and have typically found means for
gaining that support.
Definite pattern of communication exists within, between, and outside existing
units.
Means are developed for defining problems and formulating proposals. These
means strongly accommodate the interests presently served.
These networks difficult to break.
Change is possible.
Normal change is incremental.
But, dramatic change can restructure the network.
Policy Formulation
Functions Rational Subjective
Types of Planners Reactors
formulation:
External Issue Integrative Sequential
methods Relationship
Policy windows.
An open policy window is an opportunity for advocates to
push their pet solutions or to push attention for their
special problems.
They have pet solutions and wait for problems to arise
that they can attach their solutions to or for political
events to make their solutions more saleable.
Windows are opened by events in the political stream or
in the problem stream.
Sometimes windows open predictably; sometimes they
open unpredictably.
The scarcity and short duration of policy windows makes
them a powerful magnet for problems and proposals.
Open windows provide opportunities for linkages.