Sometimes a sentence grabs you with its simple elegance. In a WSJ article written by Jason L. Riley, entitled “The State against Blacks”, he quotes his interviewee, Walter Williams as saying, “I learned (as a graduate student) that you have to evaluate the effects of public policy as opposed to intentions.” Let me repeat that.
You have to evaluate the effects of public policy as opposed to intentions.
Most laws and public policies start out with good-intentioned politicians trying to live up to their role in promoting the general welfare of our people under the terms of the Constitution. Here are some examples.
Health care. Provide for the millions of un-insured people in this country.
Housing. Make housing affordable to all our citizens.
Energy. Achieve energy independence.
Education. Provide high quality education to all.
Individual rights. Equality in all things.
Environment. Provide a clean and healthy environment for the people.
These are just a few examples of the good public policy goals that well-intentioned politicians try to accomplish for the people of this country. Although we can all agree that all are laudable intentions, it is important to measure the effects in order to evaluate just how well they have promoted the general welfare of the people under our Constitution. I’ll take them one at a time.
Health care. Effect: Will place the best health system in the world under the control of big government. Many think that is a good thing. More think not.
Housing. Effect: Good intentioned legislation and regulation designed to make affordable housing available to most Americans led to the housing bubble, crash, and the current recession.
Energy. Effect: After fifty years, more dependent on foreign oil. (See Environment, below)
Education. Effect: An education system that loses ground every year in performance ratings.
Individual rights: Effect: The murder of thousands of unborn children a year.
Environment: Effect: Regulation of the air we breathe out. Loss of jobs by the thousands.
Don’t get me wrong, I am not just anti-government, as perhaps the list above would indicate. There have been other public policies that have been very successful, when judged by their effects. For example, Social Security (at least to this point), OSHA, National Park System, Airline De-Regulation, NASA, the development of the Internet, and many, many others.
The only problem with measuring public policy by its effects, and not its intentions, is that intentions are here and now, and effects are measured only in the future. For example, the arguments against Obama care are couched in what the opponents think will happen in the future. To paraphrase Nancy Pelosi, “We have to wait until it happens before we’ll know if it is as bad as we think.”
By that time, it will be too late.
JP
You have to evaluate the effects of public policy as opposed to intentions.
Most laws and public policies start out with good-intentioned politicians trying to live up to their role in promoting the general welfare of our people under the terms of the Constitution. Here are some examples.
Health care. Provide for the millions of un-insured people in this country.
Housing. Make housing affordable to all our citizens.
Energy. Achieve energy independence.
Education. Provide high quality education to all.
Individual rights. Equality in all things.
Environment. Provide a clean and healthy environment for the people.
These are just a few examples of the good public policy goals that well-intentioned politicians try to accomplish for the people of this country. Although we can all agree that all are laudable intentions, it is important to measure the effects in order to evaluate just how well they have promoted the general welfare of the people under our Constitution. I’ll take them one at a time.
Health care. Effect: Will place the best health system in the world under the control of big government. Many think that is a good thing. More think not.
Housing. Effect: Good intentioned legislation and regulation designed to make affordable housing available to most Americans led to the housing bubble, crash, and the current recession.
Energy. Effect: After fifty years, more dependent on foreign oil. (See Environment, below)
Education. Effect: An education system that loses ground every year in performance ratings.
Individual rights: Effect: The murder of thousands of unborn children a year.
Environment: Effect: Regulation of the air we breathe out. Loss of jobs by the thousands.
Don’t get me wrong, I am not just anti-government, as perhaps the list above would indicate. There have been other public policies that have been very successful, when judged by their effects. For example, Social Security (at least to this point), OSHA, National Park System, Airline De-Regulation, NASA, the development of the Internet, and many, many others.
The only problem with measuring public policy by its effects, and not its intentions, is that intentions are here and now, and effects are measured only in the future. For example, the arguments against Obama care are couched in what the opponents think will happen in the future. To paraphrase Nancy Pelosi, “We have to wait until it happens before we’ll know if it is as bad as we think.”
By that time, it will be too late.
JP
8 comments:
Great commentary, JP. But, despite the claims of the egomaniacal Algore, the Internet grew kind of haphazardly out of MILNET, didn't it? It wasn't consciously developed by the government (otherwise they'd never have let us use it).
PS - Almost forgot, I wanted to leave you a link so you can get your laugh for the day:
http://bloviatingzeppelin.blogspot.com/2011/01/ripped-from-todays-screaming-headlines.html
Cheers.
Yes Bob, the internet kind of grew out of nowhere, but at least the politicians knew enough to let it alone. It was a government program at the start, thanks to some pretty bright bureaucrats. Problem is, now that it has changed the very world we live in, the assholes want to control it.
JP, I've just enrolled myself among your admirers. Great blog.
Anastasia, I am honored, given the quality of your writing. I tried to find a place on your website to become a follower of yours--couldn't find one so I settled for putting you on my blogroll so I wouldn't miss one of your blogs. Appreciate the follow and best of everything to you.
JP
I added you to my Sites I frequent on my homepage. Good writing
Thank you Ronin. Do you have a web site?
Sorry, Ronin, I found your site and added it to my blog roll too. Excellent site you have there.
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