Public Policy PDF
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Uploaded by GlamorousLivermorium
University of Guyana
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Summary
This document outlines different perspectives on public policy. It details various definitions, discusses factors influencing policies, and presents typologies of public policies. It also touches upon the concepts of market and government failure.
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# What is Public Policy? - Laws and regulations which are made by legislative statesmen and implemented by public administration personnel. *Woodrow Wilson* - The outcome of the struggle in government over who gets what. *Clarke E. Cochran et al.* - Political decisions for implementing programmes t...
# What is Public Policy? - Laws and regulations which are made by legislative statesmen and implemented by public administration personnel. *Woodrow Wilson* - The outcome of the struggle in government over who gets what. *Clarke E. Cochran et al.* - Political decisions for implementing programmes to achieve societal goals. *Cochrane and Malone* - The sum of government activities, whether acting directly or through agents to influence the lives of citizens. *Guy Peters* - Public policy is anything government chooses to do. *Anderson* - What governments choose to do or do not do. *Thomas Dye* Public policy is what the government chooses to do, or not to do. It is a decision made by government to either act, or not act in order to resolve public problems. # Why Public Policy? - It is a response to domestic public problems. - Poor infrastructure - Poor health care and health care systems - Corrupt police force - Corrupt and incompetent government officials - Speeding on the public thoroughfares - Unemployment - Brain drain - Influx of migrants - Poor water supply - Inflation - Discrimination - Crimes - Drug abuse - **Market failure:** Inefficient distribution of public goods and services. - **Government failure:** Where government's intervention in the market to resolve an issue thereby making the situation worse. # How do we recognise a public problem? Public problem consist of three elements. - **They involve facts and values**: - The problem must be evidential. - Liberty - Equality - Community/Social Order - Prosperity When people argue about how best to solve a public problem, they are likely to align the facts that support their values. **Problem:** Speeding on the roadways **Facts:** Speeding has been the root cause for 80% of road accidents. Speeding accounts for 60% of road fatalities. **Values:** Existential # Elements of a Public Problems? - Public problems affect people as public citizens rather than as private individuals; and >> Deciding whether to sell your car is a private problem because it affects you as a private individual. Deciding what the speed limit should be on a street or a highway is a public problem because how fast a person drives can affect the safety of other citizens. - Public problems occur in public settings, such as communities, rather than in private settings. >> Allowing your dog to roam in your house is a private matter, but allowing your dog to roam in your neighborhood is a public matter. # Definition Contextual Expansion - What governments choose to do or do not do. *Thomas Dye* How can we add: Preservation of political life, domestic sphere and relief to their constituents? **What governments choose to do or do not do within the domestic sphere primarily to preserve their political lives and to bring relief to the masses, particularly their constituents.** # Contexts of Public Policy - **Government context:** If a policy looks unsuitable to government, it will either be dropped or forced to go through changes. - **Political context:** Policies are influenced by the views of political parties. - **Economic context:** Response to an economic crisis. # Contexts of Public Policy cont'd - **Cultural context:** This entire element is connected to how citizens think and show support for policies. - **Social context:** Responses to the current social conditions. E.g. crimes, unemployment etc # Typologies of Public Policies Theodore Lowi (1964) divided these typologies into three categories: - **Distributive policy:** Government funding into public goods or services. - **Redistributive policy:** Manipulates the allocation of wealth and other valued items. (Taxes, welfare distribution programmes) - **Regulatory policy:** Meant to govern the conduct of businesses to keep the market efficient. (Minimum wage)