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Politics and Policy Implementation in the Third
World
Policy Content and Context in Implementation
Background: "Explicit considerations of the frequent
disparity between goals and outcomes in the implementation of public
policy in the Third World
have tended to focus more narrowly
on the administrative apparatus and procedures of implementing bureaucracies
or on the characteristics of bureaucratic officials"(p.4) rather
than considering the how the characteristics of the policies and
programmes themselves or the characteristics of the political contexts
(esp. in the Third World) affect or relate to implementation problems
or successes.(p.5)
Aim: to explore "how and why content and contextual
variables intervene in the implementation process in the Third World"(p.6).
Specifically:
(i) "What effect does the content of public policy have on
its implementation?" (p.5)
(ii) "How does the political context of administrative action
affect policy implementation?" (p.5)
On implementation: viewed by Grindle as "an ongoing
process of decision making by a variety of actors, the ultimate
outcome of which is determined by the content of the program being
pursued and by the interaction of the decision makers within a given
politico-administrative context"(p.5-6)
"In general, the task of implementation is to establish a
link that allows the goals of public policies to be realised as
outcomes of governmental activity. It involves, therefore, the creation
of a 'policy delivery system,' in which specific means are designed
and pursued in the expectation of arriving at particular ends"(p.6)
The ends being specified by policies ("broad statements of
goals, objectives and means"p.6) and the means being action
programmes designed to achieve them. So holds that the outcomes
of specific programs "also serve as partial measures of the
success or failure of overall policy implementation"(p.6) [policy
is as policy does notion, but recognising the complexity of the
interaction and the blurring of policy & programme distinction
in practice].
In considering success or failure not interested in the programme
design and whether it was appropriate / sound, but their capacity
to deliver, as designed. So implementation starts "only when
general goals and objectives have been specified, when action programs
have been designed, and when funds have been allocated"(p.7).
These formulation decisions "are integral factors in determining
how successfully the programs themselves will be delivered"(p.8)
On the content of policy: determines what political activity
will be stimulated by the implementation process:
- Opposition depends on eg. collective vs divisible benefits
and affect 'implementability' of programs.(p.8-9)
- Degree of behaviour change required of intended beneficiaries
(eg new technologies?) (p.9)
- Long-range vs. immediate and visible advantages to participants
(p.9)
- Number of decision-makers/units required for implementation
(e.g. implementing education policy requires more involvement
of street-level bureaucrats than monetary policy) (p.9)
- Capacity of bureaucratic agencies to manage programs successfully,
including expertise, personnel, political (elite) support, resources
etc. (p.10)
- Whether goals are stated clearly or ambiguously (p.10)
- Consensus about goals amongst political and administrative officials
(p.10)
On the context of policy: the environment in which programme
is being pursued and its intended impact on the social, political
or economic context (p.10). Relevant factors include:
- Power, interests and strategies of actors involved, from national
to local level, and conflicts within and between these different
actors and groups implementers, elites and beneficiaries
- Compliance and responsiveness of elites, implementing
agencies, street-level bureaucrats, beneficiaries and potential
losers (p.12). "The problem for policy administrators is
to ensure an adequate amount of responsiveness to provide flexibility,
support, and feedback, while at the same time maintaining enough
control over the distribution of resources to achieve the stated
goals"(p.13)
- Institutions and regime characteristics "the extent
to which political regimes and administrative organisations have
the power to implement policies they are committed to"(p.14).
Includes Qs about decentralisation without sufficient central
power (loss of control without sanctions/rewards to elicit compliance);
type of political regime and level of responsiveness;
- also environmental influences such as "ideology, culture,
political alliances and payoffs, and international events"(p.14)
and impact of other public policies and priorities.
On context of politics and implementation in the Third World:
- greater competition due to resource scarcity (p.15)
- remote and inaccessible policy-making process, meaning contestation,
demand and influence occurs at output rather than input stage
(p.15)
- less representation and weaker structures for aggregating and
arbitrating interests (p.16)
- limited communication, education, experience to support broad
interest representation or policy formulation responsive to needs
of majority rather than elite/s (p.16)
- limited channels/processes for participation (viewed by political
leaders as "illegitimate or inefficent") yet many policies
have direct distributive/redistributive implications (p.17)
All these mean that (a) there will be many who have a direct interest
in policy (b) that influence will only be possible at the implementation
stage and (c) that adjustment will be necessary at implementation
stage anyway to adapt to local specifics. Result is that people
"focus their demand making efforts on officials and agencies
empowered to distribute benefits, or on politicians who may have
influence on individual allocations"(p.18) and participation
is structured on individualised demands through factions, patron-client
relationships, ethnic ties etc. at local level, often beyond reach
of central control where policy formulated.
"This means that the implementation process may be the major
arena in which individuals and groups are able to pursue conflicting
interests and compete for access to scarce resources. It may even
be the principal nexus of the interaction between the government
and the citizenry
Moreover, the outcome of this competition
and interaction can determine both the content and the impact of
the programmes established by government elites, and thus influence
the course of a country's development."(p.19)
Fig.1.2: Critical Choices in the Implementation Process: The politico-administrative
context impacts on:
- choices made about policy & program definition and their
effects on subsequent implementation efforts
- choices made about implementation strategy and their consequences
for program delivery
- choices made about who benefits resource allocation and
their consequences for groups and individuals in the society.
(p.21)
Findings from the case studies:
Links between policy formulation to implementation:
- Aspects of the political environment influenced how programs
were initially defined and suggested the "extensive influence
of nondecisions on the implementation process"(p.22)
- policies with extensive political support and promotion at the
formulation phase but which remain poorly defined "will result
in a failure to achieve any useful development advance" (p.23)
- goals must be clear, unambiguous, and agreed upon by political
& administrative officials at all government levels (p.23).
Failure to do so at top has result of shifting power downwards
in the political system during implementation as conflicts occur
at lower implementing levels.(p.24)
How implementing strategies are chosen and variables determining
success or failure of program goals:
- Need to consider "not only the political acceptability
of various programs, but also their political attractiveness to
national decision makers"(p.26). "careful strategic
thinking about the specific content of the program can enhance
its political attractiveness"(p.28)
- "that under conditions of fragmented political power, decentralisation
is not a useful strategy for achieving policy goals, and its failure
may have consequences for its future as a strategy"(p.29)
- But if programs are both distributive and measurable, they "may
strengthen the hand of central authorities and allow them to permit
extensive decentralised responsibility for implementation"(p.29)
- Determinants of success or failure influenced by type of policy
pursued (e.g. divisible/collective benefits)
- "Decisions made about how to go about implementing a program
must take both political realities and program objectives and
criteria into consideration"(p.30)
Deciding who gets what:
- Need to "integrate considerations of both the influence
of regime type and the impact of politics on the local level in
the determination of who will have influence over resource allocation
processes"(p.30)
- "the capacity of low-income groups to acquire benefits
from their governments may be strictly limited in an environment
that minimises the influence of numbers on political decision
making through the elimination of open elections and rotation
of political leadership"(p.30)
- "there is an enduring structure of relationships between
the bureaucracy and the political system in which it is embedded
and to which it is responsive"(p.31) e.g. bureaucracies in
authoritarian regimes seem to be responsive primarily to the regime
itself rather than low-status clienteles.
- Content affects level of conflict which impacts allocation decisions
esp. re: redistributive policies
- "Resources allocated for the achievement of specific program
goals may be reallocated at the site of implementation in order
to achieve more pressing and general regime goals" eg political
peace(p.31).
- Thus "political realities may dictate that distributive
policies are implemented effectively only when they do not threaten
interests whose support is essential to the regime."(p.32)
- Closed political processes effectively prohibit access of low-income
sectors to demand making channels.
Conclusions: the CS's "underscore the variable nature
of the implementation process in a setting of political conflict
due to the scarcity of available resources, the wide range of actors
involved, and the willingness or capacity of various regimes to
be responsive to demands. Importantly, the studies indicate that
the content of public programs can be considerably affected during
their execution due to the nature of political participation, demand
making, and bureaucratic response."(p33-34)
(Notes by Lin Cotterrell)
| Author: |
Grindle, Merilee S. |
| Publisher: |
Princeton University Press, Princeton, New Jersey |
| Date: |
1980 |
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