February 18, 2013

Group-led policy agenda and agenda setting

Presented by J. B. Nangpuhan II (MPA Student) for the class (Public Policy) of Dr. J. K. Seo at Chonnam National University, South Korea. 2011
 
I.        AGENDA SETTING
What is agenda? Agenda is a list of items to be discussed at a formal meeting[1]. Agenda setting, in a brief but broad description, is about the recognition of a problem on the part of the government[2]. Before a policy choice can be made, a problem in society must have been accepted as a part of the agenda for the policymaking system – that is, as one member of the set of problems deemed amenable to public action and worthy of the attention of policymakers[3]. Thus, agenda setting is crucial in policymaking.
As with all the portions of the policymaking process, agenda setting is an intensely political activity because it involves bringing into the public consciousness an acceptance of a vague social problem as something government can, and should, attempt to solve. In agenda setting, the policy analysts is less a technician and more a politician, by understanding the policymaking process and seeking to influence that process towards a desired end.
Problems do come on and off the active policy agenda and tend to remain for a long period of time. In the United States, an example of a problem being excluded after a long period of time is the problem of poverty. Poverty was perceived not as a public problem in the US but because of the publication of Michael Harrington’s The Other America and the growing mobilization of poor people brought the problem of poverty to the agenda and indirectly resulted in the launching of a war for its eradication[4]. This is how crucial an important public issue should be put first on the agenda.

A.      What Causes An Issue To Be Placed On The Policy Agenda?
The cause is a perception that something is wrong and that the problem can be solved by public action.
Issues also seem to go through an “issue attention cycle” in which they are the objects of great public concern for a short period and generate some response from the government. It is followed by more sober realism about the costs of policy options and the difficulty of making effective policy. After that, a period of declining public interest follows as the public seizes in a new issue.
 
B.      Kinds Of Agendas
The agendas exist only in a collective judgment of the nature of public problems or as fragments of written evidence such as legislation introduced, the State of the Union message of the president, or notice of intent to issue regulations appearing in the Federal Register[5]. There are two kinds of agenda (Cobb and Elder) identified in the American government: the (a) systemic agenda and the (b) institutional agenda. The systemic agenda consists of all issues that are commonly perceived by members of the political community as meriting public attention and as involving matters within the legitimate jurisdiction of existing governmental authority. This is the broadest agenda of the government. An example of systemic agenda is the issue of abortion, whether to outlaw abortion or to provide public funding for it, while others regard abortion as a personal choice.
The institutional agenda is the set of items explicitly up for active and serious consideration of authoritative decision-makers. These are the issues that those in power actually are considering acting on. In other words, systemic agenda is an agenda for discussion while the institutional agenda is an agenda for action, indicating that the policy process dealing with the problem in question has begun[6].
A number of institutional agendas exist – as many as there are institutions. As an institution broadens in scope, the range of agenda concerns also broadens, and the supporters of any particular agenda will have to fight to have it placed on a legislative or executive agenda. Some older and more familiar issues will generally find a ready place on institutional agendas.
Under institutional agendas, some issues are considered cyclical issues (i.e., issues that happen every year) and recurrent issues (i.e., issues previously failed to decide policy choices). An example of a cyclical issue is the adoption of a new annual budget of the government. One recurrent issue is the adoption of inflation targets.
 
C.      Characteristics Of Problems: How Problems Are Accepted As Part Of The Agenda?
1.       The effect of the problem
This is the first aspect of a problem that can influence its placement on an agenda – how it affects and how much. That means the extremity (the more serious the effects of the problem, the more likely it is to be placed on an agenda); concentration (public action can be produced if the problem is secluded in one area); range (the more people affected by a problem, the greater the probability that the issue will be placed on the agenda); and visibility (this is called the “mountain climber problem” – i.e. society appears willing to rescue a stranded mountain climber but will not so much of controlling automobile accidents) of problems.
2.       Analogous and spillover agenda setting
The more a new issue can be made look like an old issue, the more likely it is to be placed on the agenda. This is especially true in the United States. Analogous is the equivalency of another issue to an old issue.
3.       Relationship to symbols
The more closely a particular problem can be linked to certain important national symbols, the greater is its probability of being placed on the agenda. That means, a problem will not be placed on the agenda if it is associated with negative values or symbols (although there are exceptions). For example, the positive symbol of defense in the US highlighted the weaknesses of elementary and secondary education when the Soviet Union launched Sputnik 1 – the first artificial satellite to be put on earth’s orbit by Russia in 1957[7]. Thus, the National Defense Education Act was enacted.
4.       The absence of private means
This does not mean that the private sector is unable to solve problems, but that the problem cannot be controlled by the institution itself. Hence, the inability of institution to produce effective and equitable solutions may be sufficient to place an issue on the public agenda. Examples are public goods and externalities (e.g. pollution).
5.       The availability of technology
Problems, in general, will not be placed on the public agenda unless there is a technology believed to be able to solve the problem. One way of regarding the role of technology in agenda setting is the “garbage-can model” of decision making – in which solutions find problems rather than vice versa[8].
 
II.      GROUP-LED POLICY AGENDA: Who Sets The Agenda?
Establishing an agenda for a society, or even for one institution, is a manifestly political activity. Control of the agenda gives substantial control over ultimate policy choices. In the United States, there are three important theoretical approaches to the exercise of political power:
1.       Pluralist approaches
This is the dominant and undisputed approach to policymaking in the US. This approach assumes that policymaking in government is divided into a number of separate arenas and that those who have power in one arena do not necessarily have the power over the others. An example is the American Medical Association, which may have a great deal of influence over health legislation but has little influence on education or defense policy. These groups may not win every time; they can always have an influence in either present or future policy decisions.
2.       Elitist approaches
These approaches are contradictories of pluralist approaches. They assume the existence of “power elite” who dominate public decision making and whose interests are served in the policymaking process. In the US elitist analysis, the same interests in society consistently win, and these interests are primarily those of the upper and middle classes and of the whites[9]. The idea of the elitist approach is that while all individuals in a democracy certainly have the right to organize, elitist theorists point to the relative lack of resources (e.g., time, money, organizational ability, and communication skills) among members of the working and lower economic classes. The concept of “nondecisions”[10] is important in this approach, a decision that results in suppression or thwarting of a latent or manifest challenge to the values or interests of the decision-maker. In short, nondecisionmaking – a decision not to alter the status quo – is a decision.
3.       State-centric approaches
These approaches conform quite well to the iron-triangle conception of American government but would place the bureaucratic agency or the congressional committee in the center of the process, not the pressure group. The environment, in a state-centric analysis, is filled with “pressured groups”, not with pressure groups. State-centric approach emphasizes the role of specialized elites within government but, unlike elitist theory, they do not assume to pursue policies for their personal gain. Certainly, their organizations may obtain a larger budget and more prestige from the addition of a new program, but the individual administrator has little or no opportunity to appropriate any of that increased budget.
State-centric approach places the major locus of competition over agenda setting in government itself. Bureaucratic agencies must compete for legislative time and for budgets; committees must compete for attention for their particular legislative concerns; and individual congressmen must compete for consideration of their own bills. Bureaucrats and legislators within government are most relevant in pushing agenda items, rather than interests in the society.
 
A.      Which Approach To Policymaking And Agenda Formation Is Best?
The simple answer is all of them.
Policymaking for certain kinds of problems and issues can be described by one approach than another. For instance, policies that are very much the concern of government itself (e.g., civil service laws) can be heavily influenced by state-centric policymaking. Powerful economic interests would be best understood by an elite analysis, like energy policies. Finally, policy areas with a great deal of interest-group activity and relatively high levels of group involvement might be best understood by means of the pluralist approach, like education. 
 
III.    POLICY FORMULATION
Policy formulation narrows the consideration of the problems placed on the agenda and to prepare a plan of action intended to rectify the problem. This after the political system has accepted a problem as part of the agenda for policymaking. 
 
A.      Who Formulates the Policy?
Policy formulation is also very much a political activity. However, expertise begins to play a large role given that the success or failure of a policy instrument will depend to some degree on its technical characteristics, as well as its political acceptability. Let’s take a look into the sources of policy formulation:
1.       The Public Bureaucracy
Government bureaucracies are central to policy formulation. Even if programs are formally presented by congressmen or the president, it is quite possible that their original formulation and justification came from a friendly bureau.
2.       Think Tanks and Shadow Cabinets
These are organizations of professional analysts and policy formulators who usually work on contract for a client in government – often an agency in the bureaucracy. Two dominant traditional think tank organizations in the US are: Brookings Institution and American Enterprise Institute. Universities also serve as think tanks for government. This is true especially for the growing number of public policy schools and programs across the country.
3.       Interest Groups
Aside from identifying problems and applying pressure to have them placed on the agenda, successful interests groups have to supply ready cures to the problems.
4.       Congressmen
Individual congressmen are also a source of policy formulation. However, not all congressmen have the courage to be involved in policy formulation.
 
B.      How to Formulate Policy?
Policy formulation relies on two fields: factual information and knowledge of causation. Table 1 below demonstrates possible combinations of the knowledge of causation and basic factual information about policy problems.
 
                                 Table 1. Kinds of Policy Formulation[11]

Information
Knowledge of Causation
High
Low
High
Low
Routine
Craftsman
Conditional
Creative
Based on the table above, the simplest type of policy to make is a routine policy – an incremental adjustment of existing policies with adequate information and an acceptable theory of causation. In formulating conditional policies, there may be sufficient information but inadequate understanding of the underlying processes of causation. Craftsman policy formulations have a model of causation for the problem but lack information, like defense policies. Creative policy formulation lacks both information and knowledge of causation.
Some aids to policy formulation include: cost-benefit analysis and decision analysis. The concept of cost-benefit analysis is to reduce all the costs and benefits of a proposed government program to a quantitative, economic dimension and then to compare available alternative policies, with those economic considerations being paramount. Projects whose total benefits exceed their total costs are deemed acceptable and then choices can be made among the acceptable projects, generally leading to the adoption of the project with the greatest net total benefit (total benefits minus total cost).
Decision analysis is geared toward making policy choices under conditions of less certainty[12]. “Decision tree” is an ideal type of decision analysis in which choices will be made using a tree-like graph or model of decisions and their possible consequences, including chance event outcomes, resource costs, and utility[13].
 
IV.   CONCLUSION
All the aids that government can use in formulating policy still do not create an underlying approach to policy design. American politics tends toward incremental solutions to problems rather than the imposition of any frameworks of the use of design ideas of policy. Important problems such as poverty, crime, maleducation, and the like still lack any clear definitions of causes, much less solutions. These important political realities should not prevent the student of policy from attempting to understand the problems of society in a less haphazard fashion than is sometimes used in government or from advocating innovative program designs for solving those problems.

[1] Oxford Dictionaries (2011). http://oxforddictionaries.com/definition/agenda
[2] Michael Howlett, M. Ramesh (2003). Studying Public Policy: Policy Cycles and Policy Subsystems, Second Edition. Canada: Oxford University Press. pp. 120-121.
[3] B. Guy Peters (1993). American Public Policy: Promise and Performance. “Agenda Setting and Public Policy” pp. 470
[4] B. Guy Peters (1993). American Public Policy: Promise and Performance. “Agenda Setting and Public Policy” pp. 470
[5] This statement applies to United States government, it might be different in other countries.
[6] Michael Howlett, M. Ramesh (2003). Studying Public Policy: Policy Cycles and Policy Subsystems, Second Edition. Canada: Oxford University Press. pp. 133.
[8] Michael D. Cohen, James G. March, and Johan P. Olsen (1972) “A Garbage Can Model of Organizational Choice,” Administrative Science Quarterly 17: 1—25.
[9] C. Wright Mills (1961) The Power Elite (New York: Oxford University Press).
[10] Peter Bachrach and Morton Baratz (1970) Power of Poverty (New York: Oxford University Press
[11] B. Guy Peters (1993). American Public Policy: Promise and Performance. “Agenda Setting and Public Policy” pp. 487
[12] Moshe F. Rubenstein (1975) Patterns of Central Banks: Austerity and Unemployment in Europe,” Journal of Public Policy 8: 21-48

2 comments:

Unknown said...

Thank you for this informative post.

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