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The top down policymaking model:

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Title: Public Policy - Lecture 2 Author: Fernandez Last modified by: anonymous Created Date: 7/26/2001 1:28:00 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The top down policymaking model:


1
The top down policymaking model
  • A model of how elites translate their values,
    goals, preferences into policy. This can be
    seen at different stages of the policy process
  • The policy formulation process
  • The leadership selection process
  • The Interest Group Process
  • Opinion Making process
  • Policy Legitimation process
  • Policy Implementation
  • Policy Evaluation Process

2
Counter-argument to the Top Down Model
  • THE BOTTOM-UP PROCESS MODEL
  • Median voter model-competitive elections
  • Pluralist model-competing interest groups
  • Responsible party model - policy divergent parties

3
So where to we start our top down analysis?
  • George Bush? Bill Gates? George Soros?
  • No
  • We study Institutions, Organizations, and Groups

4
Policy Formulation
  • Policy Formulation occurs from the top downwhen
    institutional leaders, primarily in business,
    finance, and the media, begin to complain about
    societal developments they perceive as
    threatening to their own values or interests.

5
A Political Institution is a web of relationships
lasting over time, and an established structure
of power.
  • Media institutions
  • Banking institutions
  • Rules and Regulations as institutions
  • Distribution and regulation of airwaves
  • Rules governing PACs
  • Universities, Foundations, Think tanks as
    institutions

6
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7
  • THE INTERPLAY BETWEEN VALUES, POLITICAL
    INSTITUTIONS, AND POLICY OUTCOMES
  • Certain political institutions in government
    promote different behavior

8
  • Types of government behavior
  • responsive (to societal needs)
  • representative (to public demands)
  • bargaining (negotiating between conflicting
    interests)
  • coercion (maintain stability through the use of
    force)
  • manipulation (acquiescence via misinformation
    bait and switch)
  • symbolic politics (rhetoric v. action)

9
  • The Role of Institutions
  • Clingermayer and Feiock (2001) state simply,
    first and foremost, institutions matter because
    they affect the behavior of policy makers.
  • Similarly, institutions influence how
    policymakers respond to public opinion and
    interest groups. Rational choice theorists, like
    Downs (1957) and Buchanan (1967), suggested early
    on that scholars should examine how preferences
    and institutions interact and affect public
    policy. They argued that preferences alone
    cannot predict policy outcomes.

10
  • Political institutions influence the policy
    process by limiting the nature and scope of
    political actions and choices (Bickers and
    Williams 2001 41) by placing constraints on
    political actors (i.e., rules and norms), or by
    insulating political elites from public
    pressures.
  • Heclo (2000) argues that much of the written
    Constitution helps keep the citizenry at arms
    length from the governing process (p. 18).

11
  • Examples of these institutions may include
    election rules on who and when people can vote or
    rules that are placed on judges discretion in
    sentencing. Some studies assume that certain
    political mechanisms are designed to link citizen
    demands with policy actions (Downs 1957
    Barrilleaux and Miller 1988),

12
  • While other scholars have observed, that
    democratic institutions in the United States may
    be decreasingly compatible with democratic norms
    (Hartley and Russett 1992 Jacobson and Shapiro
    2000). Whether it is the dominance of incumbents
    in elections, bureaucratic autonomy, declining
    voter participation, or special interest
    influence, various scholars contend that
    democratic mechanisms are not functioning as
    conceived by democratic theory or models
    (Ginsberg 1990).

13
What is a political institution?
  • A Political Institution is a web of relationships
    lasting over time, and an established structure
    of power.

14
  • What is a Political Institution? Examples?
  • Constitutional
  • Electoral
  • Administrative
  • Legislative
  • Executive
  • Judicial
  • Statutory
  • Cultural
  • Etc., etc., etc.

15
  • Institutional setting that might promote
    representation
  • Federalism
  • Elections every two years
  • Ballot Initiatives
  • Judicial Elections
  • Term limits

16
Institutional settings/rules that might reduce
representation
17
  • Jacobson (2001) argues that the structure of the
    U.S. Congress and congressional elections creates
    incentives for symbolic position taking, leading
    to a type of responsiveness without collective
    responsibility. These incentives potentially
    lead to policy decisions and outcomes incongruent
    with constituent preferences.

18
  • Non-elected Bureaucracies
  • Legislative Committees
  • Life tenure for judicial officials
  • FED
  • Staggered elections
  • Term limits?
  • Registration requirements

19
  • Neo-Institutionalism v. the Limits of
    Institutions
  • Much of the political science literature holds
    institutions as important, if not the primary,
    factors in politics and political behavior. But
    institutions are only as strong as we are. And
    even the best laid plans have limitations.
    (Yugoslavia, Hiati, Lebanon, Iraq?)

20
  • Kenneth Arrows Possibility Theorem
  • Arrow showed that it is impossible to produce a
    social choice mechanism that doesnt violate the
    basic conditions of democratic choice
  • Universal admissibility of individual preference
    orderings All policy alternatives are on the
    table/agenda
  • Citizens Sovereignty citizen preferences matter
  • Unanimity Unanimous choices always win
  • Independence of Irrelevant Alternatives the
    introduction of a third alternative doesnt
    effect the preference ordering of a set of two
    choices.
  • Nondictatorship no single group should be able
    to determine a social choice outcome.

21
  • A simple example of the limitation of
    institutions in solving collective action
    problems (policy disagreements)
  • Three Legislators with differing preferences on
    whether a bridge should be built, a road or
    neither (status quo)
  • Official 1 BpRpS
  • Official 2 RpSpB
  • Official 3 SpBpR

22
  • Need a two stage voting process because if we
    have a one stage process it ends in a three way
    tie

23
  • One possible outcome
  • Agenda 1
  • vote 1 B vs R B wins
  • vote 2 B vs S S wins
  • Remember
  • Official 1 BpRpS
  • Official 2 RpSpB
  • Official 3 SpBpR

24
  • Agenda 2
  • vote 1 B vs S S wins
  • vote 2 S vs R R wins
  • Remember
  • Official 1 BpRpS
  • Official 2 RpSpB
  • Official 3 SpBpR

25
  • Agenda 3
  • vote 1 R vs S R wins
  • vote 2 R vs B B wins
  • Remember
  • Official 1 BpRpS
  • Official 2 RpSpB
  • Official 3 SpBpR

26
  • What does this mean?
  • Institutions may be incapable of producing
    stable, predictable outcomes
  • William Riker the political entrepreneur /
    strategic politician (helps) determine the
    outcome by setting the agenda, introducing a
    third alternative, etc.
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