Public Policy Analysis…
From my limited experience and an even more limited knowledge, I think I understand the equation for good policy analysis.
Obviously, one needs to know what a policy is and how to analyse it, before getting to good analysis. How does one know what is a policy and discern between the good and the bad?
We all experience policy affecting our lives everywhere – a “no smoking in public” policy affects non-smokers and smokers differently. This example can be extended to countless vagaries of our everyday life – food, sex, shelter, automobiles, fashion, technology – everywhere. Therefore, our first perception of policy is created by what we experience in life.
Then, a few of us choose to study public policy at a professional school – we learn about human nature, policy frameworks, decision criteria and stakeholder analysis. We use such tools to analyse and develop policy – I call these tools as knowledge. We also can note traces of bias in our policy-making and policy-analysis based on what we already know as mentioned in the previous paragraph.
Finally, we all use common sense – creating policies that safeguard the basic requirements of humans have high amounts of common sense in them. However, common sense being uncommon and intangible, we cannot compare humans and policies on this aspect; we have to include this in the equation though.
Therefore,
Policy Outcome = Experience (X) * Knowledge (Y) * Common Sense (Z)
With Z being the same for all (because of its intangibility and therefore, its unmeasurability) and Y being common for the two types of population (the ones who study policy & the ones who do not), X should be the factor that differentiates better policy makers from the ones that are not as good. Even if the argument that the quantum of Y could be different (that some people learn more than others (the A+s vs. the B-s)) is considered, the magnitude of change in Y can be considered to be negligible vis-a-vis the magnitude of X – A B- probably means that one studied 500 pages less than the one who got an A+; however, the difference between one who spent 10 years working with policies, when compared with someone who has never seen a real life policy, I hope my argument holds good.
So what is the point? Common sense cannot be measured and anyways cannot be improved, so let us forget that. As public policy students we all get an equal shot at Y – let us try to maximise that; but in the end, it is X that is going to matter and decide what the Outcome of our Policies look like. Let us focus on X, even if it means a little less Y (Cost-benefit Analysis).
And therefore: I need more practical learning in my Public Policy Program.
Hence proved.



