Policy
Contents
- 1
Impact
- 2
Policy cycle
- 3
Content
- 4
Typologies
- 4.1
Distributive policies
- 4.2
Regulatory policies
- 4.3
Constituent policies
- 4.4
Redistributive policies
- 5
Specific policy types
- 6
Other uses of the term
- 7
See also
- 8
Notes and references
- 9
Further reading
- 10
External links
For
policies regarding Wikipedia, see Wikipedia:List of policies
or Wikipedia:Policies and guidelines.
A policy is a deliberate
system
of principles
to guide decisions and achieve rational outcomes. A policy is a statement of
intent, and is implemented as a procedure or protocol. Policies are generally
adopted by a governance
body within an organization. Policies can assist in both subjective and objective
decision making.
Policies to assist in subjective decision making usually assist senior
management with decisions that must be based on the relative merits of a number
of factors, and as a result are often hard to test objectively, e.g. work-life balance
policy. In contrast policies to assist in objective decision making are usually
operational in nature and can be objectively tested, e.g. password policy.[1]
The term may apply to government,
private sector organizations and groups, as well as individuals. Presidential executive orders,
corporate
privacy policies, and parliamentary rules
of order are all examples of policy. Policy
differs from rules
or law.
While law can compel or prohibit behaviors (e.g. a law requiring the payment of
taxes on income), policy merely guides actions toward those that are most
likely to achieve a desired outcome.[citation needed]
Policy or policy
study may also refer to the process of
making important organizational decisions, including the identification of
different alternatives such as programs or spending priorities, and choosing
among them on the basis of the impact they will have. Policies can be
understood as political, managerial,
financial, and administrative mechanisms arranged to reach explicit goals. In
public corporate finance, a critical accounting policy
is a policy for a firm/company or an industry which is considered to have a
notably high subjective element, and that has a material impact on the financial statements.[citation needed]
Impact
Intended
effects
The intended effects of a policy vary
widely according to the organization and the context in which they are made.
Broadly, policies are typically instituted to avoid some negative effect that
has been noticed in the organization, or to seek some positive benefit.[citation needed]
Corporate purchasing policies
provide an example of how organizations attempt to avoid negative effects. Many
large companies have policies that all purchases above a certain value must be
performed through a purchasing process. By requiring this standard purchasing
process through policy, the organization can limit waste and standardize the
way purchasing is done.[citation needed]
The State of California
provides an example of benefit-seeking policy. In recent years, the numbers of hybrid
cars in California has increased
dramatically, in part because of policy changes in Federal
law that provided USD $1,500 in tax
credits (since phased out) as well as the use of high-occupancy vehicle
lanes to hybrid owners (no loew hybrid vehicles). In this case, the
organization (state and/or federal government) created an effect (increased
ownership and use of hybrid vehicles) through policy (tax breaks, highway
lanes).[citation needed]
Unintended
effects
Policies frequently have side effects
or unintended consequences.
Because the environments that policies seek to influence or manipulate are
typically complex adaptive systems
(e.g. governments, societies, large companies), making a policy change can have
counterintuitive
results. For example, a government may make a policy decision to raise taxes,
in hopes of increasing overall tax revenue. Depending on the size of the tax
increase, this may have the overall effect of reducing tax revenue by causing capital
flight or by creating a rate so high that
citizens are deterred from earning the money that is taxed. (See the Laffer
curve.)[citation needed]
The policy formulation process
theoretically includes an attempt to assess as many areas of potential policy
impact as possible, to lessen the chances that a given policy will have
unexpected or unintended consequences.[citation needed]
Policy
cycle
In political
science, the policy cycle is a tool
used for the analyzing of the development of a policy item. It can also be referred
to as a "stagist approach", "stages heuristic" or
"stages approach". It is thus a rule of thumb rather than the actual
reality of how policy is created, but has been influential in how political scientists
looked at policy in general.[2]
It was developed as a theory from Harold
Lasswell's work.
One version by James E. Anderson, in
his Public Policy-Making (1974) has the following stages:
- Agenda
setting (Problem identification) - The recognition of certain subject as a
problem demanding further government attention.
- Policy
Formulation - Involves exploring a variation of options or alternative
courses of action available for addressing the problem. (appraisal,
dialogue, formulation, and consolidation)
- Decision-making
- Government decides on an ultimate course of action, whether to
perpetuate the policy status quo or alter it. (Decision could be
'positive', 'negative', or 'no-action')
- Implementation
- The ultimate decision made earlier will be put into practice.
- Evaluation
- Assesses the effectiveness of a public policy in terms of its perceived
intentions and results. Policy actors
attempt to determine whether the course of action is a success or failure
by examining its impact and outcomes.
An eight step policy cycle is developed
in detail in The Australian Policy Handbook by Peter Bridgman and Glyn
Davis: (now with Catherine Althaus in its
4th and 5th editions)
- Issue
identification
- Policy analysis
- Consultation
(which permeates the entire process)
- Policy
instrument development
- Building
coordination and coalitions
- Program
Design: Decision
making
- Policy
Implementation
- Policy
Evaluation
The Althaus, Bridgman & Davis model
is heuristic
and iterative.
It is intentionally normative[clarification needed]
and not meant to be diagnostic[clarification needed]
or predictive.
Policy cycles are typically characterized as adopting a classical approach, and
tend to describe processes from the perspective of policy decision makers.
Accordingly, some postpositivist
academics challenge cyclical models as unresponsive and unrealistic, preferring
systemic and more complex models.[3]
They consider a broader range of actors involved in the policy space that
includes civil
society organisations, the media,
intellectuals,
think
tanks or policy research institutes,
corporations, lobbyists,
etc.
Content
Policies are typically promulgated
through official written documents. Policy documents often come with the
endorsement or signature of the executive powers within an organization to
legitimize the policy and demonstrate that it is considered in force. Such
documents often have standard formats that are particular to the organization
issuing the policy. While such formats differ in form, policy documents usually
contain certain standard components including [citation needed] :
- A
purpose statement, outlining why the organization is issuing the
policy, and what its desired effect or outcome of the policy should be.
- An
applicability and scope statement, describing who the policy
affects and which actions are impacted by the policy. The applicability
and scope may expressly exclude certain people, organizations, or actions
from the policy requirements. Applicability and scope is used to focus the
policy on only the desired targets, and avoid unintended consequences
where possible.
- An
effective date which indicates when the policy comes into force. Retroactive policies
are rare, but can be found.
- A
responsibilities section, indicating which parties and
organizations are responsible for carrying out individual policy
statements. Many policies may require the establishment of some ongoing
function or action. For example, a purchasing policy might specify that a
purchasing office be created to process purchase requests, and that this
office would be responsible for ongoing actions. Responsibilities often
include identification of any relevant oversight
and/or governance
structures.
- Policy
statements indicating the specific
regulations, requirements, or modifications to organizational behavior
that the policy is creating. Policy statements are extremely diverse
depending on the organization and intent, and may take almost any form.
Some policies may contain additional
sections, including:
- Background,
indicating any reasons, history, and intent that led to the creation of
the policy, which may be listed as motivating factors. This
information is often quite valuable when policies must be evaluated or
used in ambiguous situations, just as the intent of a law can be useful to
a court when deciding a case that involves that law.
- Definitions,
providing clear and unambiguous definitions for terms and concepts found
in the policy document.[citation needed]
Typologies
Theodore
J. Lowi, famous American political scientist
proposed four types of policy namely distributive, redistributive,
regulatory and constituent in his article 'Four systems of
Policy, Politics and Choice' and in 'American Business, Public Policy, Case
Studies and Political Theory'. Policy addresses the intent
of the organization, whether government, business, professional, or voluntary.
Policy is intended to affect the 'real' world, by guiding the decisions that
are made. Whether they are formally written or not, most organizations have
identified policies.[4]
Policies may be classified in many
different ways. The following is a sample of several different types of
policies broken down by their effect on members of the organization.
Distributive
policies
Distributive policies
extend goods and services to members of an organization, as well as
distributing the costs of the goods/services amongst the members of the
organization. Examples include government policies that impact spending for welfare,
public education,
highways,
and public safety, or a professional organization's benefits plan.
Regulatory
policies
Regulatory policies, or mandates, limit
the discretion of individuals and agencies, or otherwise compel certain types
of behavior. These policies are generally thought to be best applied when good
behavior can be easily defined and bad behavior can be easily regulated and
punished through fines or sanctions. An example of a fairly successful public
regulatory policy is that of a speed limit.
Constituent
policies
Constituent policies create executive
power entities, or deal with laws. Constituent policies also deal with Fiscal
Policy in some circumstances.[citation needed]
Redistributive
policies
Policies are dynamic; they are not just
static lists of goals or laws. Policy blueprints have to be implemented, often
with unexpected results. Social policies are what happens 'on the ground' when
they are implemented, as well as what happens at the decision making or
legislative stage.
When the term policy is used, it may
also refer to:
- Official
government policy (legislation or guidelines that govern how laws should
be put into operation)
- Broad
ideas and goals in political manifestos and pamphlets
- A
company or organization's policy on a particular topic. For example, the
equal opportunity policy of a company shows that the company aims to treat
all its staff equally.
The actions the organization actually
takes may often vary significantly from stated policy. This difference is
sometimes caused by political
compromise over policy, while in other situations
it is caused by lack of policy implementation and enforcement. Implementing
policy may have unexpected results, stemming from a policy whose reach extends
further than the problem it was originally crafted to address. Additionally,
unpredictable results may arise from selective or idiosyncratic enforcement of
policy.[citation needed]
- Causal
(resp. non-causal)
- Deterministic
(resp. stochastic, randomized and sometimes non-deterministic)
- Index
- Memoryless
(e.g. non-stationary)
- Opportunistic
(resp. non-opportunistic)
- Stationary
(resp. non-stationary)
These qualifiers can be combined, so
for example you could have a stationary-memoryless-index policy.
Specific
policy types
- Company Policy
- Communications
and Information Policy is under Information policy
- Human resource policies
- Privacy policy
- Public policy
- Defense policy
- Domestic policy
- Economic policy
- Education policy
- Energy policy
- Environmental Policy
and National
Environmental Policy Act
- Foreign policy
- Forest policy
- Health policy
- Housing policy
- Information policy
- Macroeconomic policy
- Monetary policy
- Plan
- Population policy
- Public policy in law
- Science policy
- Security policy
- Social policy
- Urban policy
- Transportation
policy
- Water
policy
Other
uses of the term
- In
enterprise architecture
for systems design, policy appliances
are technical control and logging mechanisms to enforce or reconcile
policy (systems use) rules and to ensure accountability in information systems.
- In
insurance,
policies are contracts between insurer and insured used to indemnify
(protect) against potential loss from specified perils. While these
documents are referred to as policies, they are in actuality a form of contract
- see insurance contract.
- In
gambling,
policy is a form of an unsanctioned lottery, where players purport to
purchase insurance
against a chosen number being picked by a legitimate lottery.
Or can refer to an ordinary Numbers
game
- In
artificial intelligence
planning and reinforcement learning, a policy prescribes a
non-empty deliberation (sequence of actions) given a non-empty sequence of
states.
- In
debate,
the term "policy" is slang for policy
or cross-examination debate.
See
also
- Blueprint
- Distributive tendency
- Iron triangle
- Mandate (politics)
- Overton window
- Pattern language
- Policy alienation
- Policy analysis
- Policy Governance
- Policy studies
- Political science
- Program evaluation
- Public administration
- Public health
- Public policy (law)
- Public policy schools
- Public services
- Social contract
- Social welfare
- Social work
- Think tank
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