MEANING OF POLICY ANALYSIS
Policy analysis is a technique used in public administration to enable civil servants to examine and evaluate the available options to implement the goals of elected officials. … Analysis of existing policy, which is analytical and descriptive—i.e., it attempts to explain policies and their development.
Policy analysis is a technique used in public administration to enable civil servants to examine and evaluate the available options to implement the goals of elected officials. It has been defined as the process of “determining which of various policies will achieve a given set of goals in light of the relations between the policies and the goals.”[1] Policy analysis can be divided[by whom?] into two major fields:[2]
- Analysis of existing policy, which is analytical and descriptive—i.e., it attempts to explain policies and their development.
- Analysis for new policy, which is prescriptive—i.e., it is involved with formulating policies and proposals (for example: to improve social welfare).
The areas of interest and the purpose of analysis determine what types of analysis are conducted. A combination of two kinds of policy analyses together with program evaluation would be defined as policy studies.[3] Policy analysis is frequently deployed[by whom?] in the public sector, but is equally applicable to other kinds of organizations, such as nonprofit organizations and non-governmental organizations. Policy analysis has its roots in systems analysis, an approach used by United States Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara[4] in the 1960s.
Approaches
Various approaches to policy analysis exist. The analysis ‘for’ policy (and/or analysis ‘of’ policy) is the central approach in social science and educational policy studies. It is linked to two different traditions of policy analysis and research frameworks. The approach of analysis ‘for’ policy refers to research conducted for actual policy development, often commissioned by policymakers inside the bureaucracy (e.g., senior civil servants) within which the policy is developed. Analysis ‘of’ policy is more of an academic exercise, conducted by academic researchers, professors and think tank researchers, who are often seeking to understand why a particular policy was developed at a particular time and assess the effects, intended or otherwise, of that policy when it was implemented.[5]
There are three approaches that can be distinguished: the analysis-centric, the policy process, and the meta-policy approach.[2]
Analysis-centric
The analysis-centric (or “analycentric”) approach focuses on individual problems and their solutions. Its scope is the micro-scale and its problem interpretation or problem resolution usually involves a technical solution. The primary aim is to identify the most effective and efficient solution in technical and economic terms (e.g. the most efficient allocation of resources).
Policy process
The policy process approach puts its focal point onto political processes and involved stakeholders; its scope is the broader meso-scale and it interprets problems using a political lens (i.e., the interests and goals of elected officials). It aims at determining what processes, means and policy instruments (e.g., regulation, legislation, subsidy, etc.) are used. As well, it tries to explain the role and influence of stakeholders within the policy process. In the 2010s, “stakeholders” is defined broadly to include citizens, community groups, non-governmental organizations, businesses and even opposing political parties. By changing the relative power and influence of certain groups (e.g., enhancing public participation and consultation), solutions to problems may be identified that have more “buy in” from a wider group. One way of doing this followed a heuristic model called the policy cycle. In its simplest form, the policy cycle, which is often depicted visually as a loop or circle, starts with the identification of the problem, proceeds to an examination of the different policy tools that could be used to respond to this problem, then goes on to the implementation stage, in which one or more policies are put into practice (e.g., a new regulation or subsidy is set in place), and then finally, once the policy has been implemented and run for a certain period, the policy is evaluated. A number of different lenses can be used during evaluation, including looking at a policy’s effectiveness, cost-effectiveness, value for money, outcomes or outputs.
Meta-policy
The meta-policy approach is a systems and context approach; i.e., its scope is the macro-scale and its problem interpretation is usually of a structural nature. It aims at explaining the contextual factors of the policy process; i.e., what are the political, economic and socio-cultural factors influencing it. As problems may result because of structural factors (e.g., a certain economic system or political institution), solutions may entail changing the structure itself.
Methodology
Policy analysis uses both qualitative methods and quantitative methods. Qualitative research includes case studies, interviews with community members. Quantitative research includes survey research, statistical analysis (also called data analysis), model building. A common practice is to define the problem and evaluation criteria; identify and evaluate alternatives; and recommend a certain policy accordingly. Promotion of the best agendas are the product of careful “back-room” analysis of policies by a priori assessment and a posteriori evaluation.
Dimensions for analyzing policies
There are six dimensions to policy analysis categorized as the effects and implementation of the policy across a period of time. Also collectively known as “Durability” of the policy, which means the capacity in content of the policy to produce visible effective compatible change or results over time with robustness.[6]
Effects
Effectiveness
What effects does the policy have on the targeted problem?
Unintended effects[7]
What are the unintended effects of this policy?
Equity[8]
What are the effects of this policy on different population groups?
Implementation
Cost
What is the financial cost of this policy (some analysts also include tax credits in this analysis)?
Feasibility
Is the policy technically feasible?
Acceptability[9]
Do the relevant policy stakeholders view the policy as acceptable?
The strategic effects dimensions can pose certain limitations due to data collection. But the analytical dimensions of effects directly influences Acceptability. The degree of acceptability is based upon the plausible definitions of actors involved in feasibility. If the feasibility dimension is compromised, it will put the implementation at risk, which will entail additional Cost. Finally Implementation dimensions collectively influence a policy’s ability to produce results or impacts.
Five “E” approach
One approach to policy analysis is the “five E approach”, which consists of examining a policy in terms of:[citation needed]
- Effectiveness: How effective ?
- Efficiency: How efficient ?
- Ethical considerations: Ethically sound ?
- Evaluations of alternatives: How good ?
- Establishment of recommendations for positive change: What can be established ?
Framework
Policies are considered as frameworks that can optimize the general well-being. Theses are commonly analyzed by legislative bodies and lobbyists. Every policy analysis is intended to bring an evaluative outcome. A systemic policy analysis is meant for in depth study for addressing a social problem. Following are steps in a policy analysis:[10]
- Defining the problem assessed by the policy.
- Assessing Policy objectives and its target populations.
- Studying effects of policy.
- Policy implications: Distribution of resources, changes in services rights and statuses, tangible benefits.
- Alternative policies: Surveying existing and possible policy models that could have addressed the problem better or parts of it which could make it effective.
Evidence based models
Many models exist to analyze the development and implementation of public policy. Analysts use these models to identify important aspects of policy, as well as explain and predict policy and its consequences. Each of these models are based upon the types of policies.
Types
- Government (e.g. federal, provincial, municipality Policies adopted within public institutions (e.g. hospitals, child care centers, schools)
- Workplace (e.g. policies that govern employees and employee-manager relations)
Some evidence supported models are:
Governments
Public policy is determined by a range of political institutions, which give policy legitimacy to policy measures. In general, the government applies policy to all citizens and monopolizes the use of force in applying or implementing policy (through government control of law enforcement, court systems, imprisonment and armed forces). The legislature, executive and judicial branches of government are examples of institutions that give policy legitimacy. Many countries also have independent, quasi-independent or arm’s length bodies which, while funded by government, are independent from elected officials and political leaders. These organizations may include government commissions, tribunals, regulatory agencies and electoral commissions.
Process model
See also: policy cycle
Policy creation is a process that typically follows a sequence of steps or stages:
- Identification of a problem (also called “problem definition”) and demand for government action. Different stakeholders may define the same issue as different problems. For example, if homeless people are using illegal drugs such as heroin in a city park, some stakeholders may define this as a law enforcement issue (which, in their view, could be best solved if police presence in the park is stepped up and if the individuals using illegal drugs are arrested and punished); on the other hand, other stakeholders may view this as a poverty and public health issue (which, in their view, could be best solved if public health nurses and government medical doctors and substance abuse counsellors were sent to the park to do outreach with the drug-using individuals, and encourage them to voluntarily enter “detoxification” or rehabilitation programs).
- Agenda setting
- Formulation of policy proposals by various parties (e.g., citizen groups, congressional committees, think tanks, interest groups, lobby groups, non-governmental organizations).
- Policy selection/adoption and legal enactment of a selected policy by elected officials and/or houses of representatives. At this stage, policy legitimation is conferred upon the selected policy solution(s).
- Policy implementation, which involves civil servants putting the selected policy option into practice. Depending on the choice made by the executive or legislative branch, this could involve creating new regulation (or removing existing regulations), creating new laws, creating a new government program or service, creating a new subsidy or grant, etc.
- Policy evaluation. After the policy has been in place for a year or several years, civil servants or an independent consulting firm assesses the policy, to see if the goals were achieved, if the policy was implemented effectively, etc.
This model, however, has been criticized for being overly linear and simplistic.[12] In reality, stages of the policy process may overlap or never happen. For example, in some cases, a political Also, this model fails to take into account the multiple factors attempting to influence the process itself as well as each other, and the complexity this entails.
For public institutions
One of the most widely used model for public institutions are of Herbert A. Simon, the father of rational models. It is also used by private corporations. However, many criticise the model due to characteristics of the model being impractical and relying on unrealistic assumptions. For instance, it is a difficult model to apply in the public sector because social problems can be very complex, ill-defined and interdependent. The problem lies in the thinking procedure implied by the model which is linear and can face difficulties in extraordinary problems or social problems which have no sequences of happenings.
Rational model
See Rational planning model for a fuller discussion
The rational model of decision-making is a process for making sound decisions in policy-making in the public sector. Rationality is defined as “a style of behavior that is appropriate to the achievement of given goals, within the limits imposed by given conditions and constraints”.[13] It is important to note the model makes a series of assumptions, such as: ‘The model must be applied in a system that is stable’; ‘The government is a rational and unitary actor and that its actions are perceived as rational choices’; ‘The policy problem is unambiguous’; ‘There are no limitations of time or cost’.
Furthermore, in the context of the public sector policy models are intended to achieve maximum social gain. Simon identifies an outline of a step by step mode of analysis to achieve rational decisions. Ian Thomas describes Simon’s steps as follows:
- Intelligence gathering — A comprehensive organization of data; potential problems and opportunities are identified, collected and analyzed.
- Identifying problems — Accounting for relevant factors.
- Assessing the consequences of all options — Listing possible consequences and alternatives that could resolve the problem and ranking the probability that each potential factor could materialize in order to give a correct priority to said factor in the analysis.
- Relating consequences to values — With all policies there will be a set of relevant dimensional values (for example, economic feasibility and environmental protection) and a set of criteria for appropriateness, against which performance (or consequences) of each option being responsive can be judged.
- Choosing the preferred option — The policy is brought through from fully understanding the problems, opportunities, all the consequences & the criteria of the tentative options and by selecting an optimal alternative with consensus of involved actors.[14]
The model of rational decision-making has also proven to be very useful to several decision making processes in industries outside the public sphere. Nonetheless, there are some who criticize the rational model due to the major problems which can be faced & which tend to arise in practice because social and environmental values can be difficult to quantify and forge consensus around.[15] Furthermore, the assumptions stated by Simon are never fully valid in a real world context.
Further criticism of the rational model include: leaving a gap between planning and implementation, ignoring of the role of people, entrepreneurs, leadership, etc., the insufficiency of technical competence (i.e. ignoring the human factor), reflecting too mechanical an approach (i.e. the organic nature of organizations), requiring of multidimensional and complex models, generation of predictions which are often wrong (i.e. simple solutions may be overlooked), & incurring of cost (i.e. costs of rational-comprehensive planning may outweigh the cost savings of the policy).
However, Thomas R. Dye, the president of the Lincoln Center for Public Service states the rational model provides a good perspective since in modern society rationality plays a central role and everything that is rational tends to be prized. Thus, it does not seem strange that “we ought to be trying for rational decision-making”.[16]
Incremental Policy
See Incrementalism for a fuller discussion
An incremental policy model relies on features of incremental decision-making such as: satisfying, organizational drift, bounded rationality, and limited cognition, among others. Such policies are often called “muddling through” & represent a conservative tendency: new policies are only slightly different from old policies. Policy-makers are too short on time, resources, and brains to make totally new policies; as such, past policies are accepted as having some legitimacy. When existing policies have sunk costs which discourage innovation, incrementalism is an easier approach than rationalism, and the policies are more politically expedient because they don’t necessitate any radical redistribution of values. Such models necessarily struggle to improve the acceptability of public policy.
Criticisms of such a policy approach include: challenges to bargaining (i.e. not successful with limited resources), downplaying useful quantitative information, obscuring real relationships between political entities, an anti-intellectual approach to problems (i.e. the preclusion of imagination), and a bias towards conservatism (i.e. bias against far-reaching solutions).
For workplace
There are many contemporary policies relevant to gender and workplace issues. Actors analyze contemporary gender-related employment issues ranging from parental leave and maternity programs, sexual harassment, and work/life balance to gender mainstreaming. It is by the juxtaposition of a variety of research methodologies focused on a common theme the richness of understanding is gained. This integrates what are usually separate bodies of evaluation on the role of gender in welfare state developments, employment transformations, workplace policies, and work experience.
Group model
This policy is formed as a result of forces and pressures from influential groups. Pressure groups are informally co-opted into the policy making process. Regulatory agencies are captured by those they are supposed to regulate. No one group is dominant all the time on all issues. The group is the bridge between the individual and the administration. The executive is thus pressured by interest groups.
The task of the system is to
- establish the rules of the game
- arrange compromises and balance interests
- enact compromises in policy
- enforce these compromises
Other major types of Policy Analysis:-
This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (January 2015)
- Empirical, Normative Policy Analysis. b) Retrospective/Prospective Analysis. c) Prescriptive and Descriptive Analysis
Techniques used in policy analysis
This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (January 2015)
- Cost Benefit Analysis
- Management by Objectives (MBO)
- Operations Research
- Decision making based on Analytics
- Program Evaluation and Review Technique (PERT) & Critical path Method (CPM)
Evaluation
The success of a policy can be measured by changes in the behavior of the target population and active support from various actors and institutions involved. A public policy is an authoritative communication prescribing an unambiguous course of action for specified individuals or groups in certain situations. There must be an authority or leader charged with the implementation and monitoring of the policy with a sound social theory underlying the program and the target group. Evaluations can help estimate what effects will be produced by program objectives/alternatives. However, claims of causality can only be made with randomized control trials in which the policy change is applied to one group and not applied to a control group and individuals are randomly assigned to these groups.[17][18][19]
To obtain compliance of the actors involved, the government can resort to positive sanctions, such as favorable publicity, price supports, tax credits, grants-in-aid, direct services or benefits; declarations; rewards; voluntary standards; mediation; education; demonstration programs; training, contracts; subsidies; loans; general expenditures; informal procedures, bargaining; franchises; sole-source provider awards…etc.[20]
Steps for conducting a policy evaluation
Policy evaluation is used to examine content, implementation or impact of the policy, which helps to understand the merit, worth and the utility of the policy. Following are National Collaborating Centre for Healthy Public Policy’s (NCCHPP) 10 steps:[21][22]
Planning
- Clarify the policy
- Engage stakeholders
- Assess resources and evaluability
- Determine your evaluation questions
- Determine methods and procedures
- Develop evaluation plan
Implementation
- Collect data
- Process data and analyze results
Utilization
- Interpret and disseminate the results
- Apply evaluation findings
Policy Analysis
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Policy analysis is the art and science of determining which public policy, from among alternatives, will most likely achieve a determined set of goals. The art of policy analysis involves putting together pieces to determine what will work in public policy. Central to policy analysis is an understanding of the evolutionary process of policy development as policymakers strive to improve the policymaking process in general and specific policies in particular. Policy analysis is the activity of generating knowledge both of and in the policymaking process. Creating such knowledge includes the examination of the causes, consequences, and performance of public policies and programs. Unless this knowledge is shared with decision makers and the relevant public, the process of policy analysis is unfinished.
Policy analysis is a relatively young field of study. Traditionally, institutions and the processes of public policymaking were the primary concern of social scientists and political scientists. In 1951 sociologist Daniel Lerner (1917–1980) and political scientist Harold Lasswell (1902–1978) introduced the concept of “the policy sciences.” Their work is often cited as the foundation for the evolution of how public policies are studied. Over time, the traditional approach expanded to include analysis of the content and process of actual policies, a discipline that is now commonly referred to as policy analysis.
Policy analysis, a part of the larger field of policy studies, evolved and developed in the 1960s and 1970s. Various stimuli have been cited as promoting the growth of the field. Social concerns over civil rights, women’s liberation, the Vietnam War (1957–1975), the politics of the Middle East, rising energy costs, inflation, and environmental protection were among the stimuli. The expanding relationship between government and the academic community, along with government’s increasing reliance on the assistance of the academic community for developing methods of maximizing output in the face of diminishing resources, also facilitated the expansion of the field. Additionally, government offered expanding research funding and job opportunities as it sought assistance in addressing the above-mentioned social issues. New analytical and interdisciplinary methods allowed academics and think tanks to capitalize on government expansion. The Keynesian revolution in economics (1930s and 1940s) is one such development. This revolution allowed for public sector intervention in the economic decision-making process. Applied policy research continues to play a major role in contemporary government decision making around issues of efficiency, effectiveness, and equity.
Although heavily influenced by the disciplines of political science, policy analysis is eclectic as it borrows from and lends to a myriad of academic disciplines. Economics, for example, contributes cost-benefit analysis and models relating to the optimal allocation of resources. Policy analysis also incorporates the emphasis in economics on prescriptive conclusions. Psychology lends to policy analysis the research paradigm of experimental and control groups and various techniques of statistical inference. Additionally, psychology provides theories and insights on the application of rewards and punishment as tools for promoting specific behaviors. Sociology’s concern with social problems has also added to the development of the study of public policies. In addition, the comparative analysis of public policies has roots in anthropology, geography, and history.
Methods of policy analysis vary from analyst to analyst. Various schools of thought, such as behaviorist, post-behaviorist, and rational choice theory, among others, influence analysts in terms of what types of questions are asked and what methods are employed to answer these questions. Public policy analysts rely on a number of different approaches. Analysts can take an empirical approach, designed to primarily determine the causes and consequences of public policies. A central goal of such an approach is to understand a policy problem. Such an approach tends to yield more descriptive and predictive information. An analyst can also use an evaluative approach, where the central question concerns the value or worth of past or future policy prescription. Finally, analysts using a normative approach ask what should be done. Their work thus yields more prescriptive types of knowledge. Analysts can also study policy content or the policy process itself.
Over the years, different methodological tools and approaches have been employed in the analysis of public policy. Theories derived from management, organization development, and psychology, in conjunction with the use of economic and political models, influence the techniques used by policy analysts. Analysts draw from a bank of both qualitative and quantitative methods. These include, but are not limited to, case studies, economic modeling, quasi-experimental approaches, causal-path analysis, operations research, and correlations analysis.