Class 3: Structure of the Welfare State and Policymakers Flashcards

1
Q

What is the problem?

A

The very basis of social policy is the belief that there is a problem that needs to be addressed by government

Many social conditions never become problems

How does a society decide what is a problem and what is merely a condition?

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2
Q

From “problem” to “on the agenda”

A

Once a condition is recognized as a problem – how does this problem become part of the governmental agenda?

John Kingdon (Poli/Sci scholar) notes several ways that problems are recognized and become part of the governmental agenda.

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3
Q

Power of problem definition

A

A condition becomes a problem when recognized by a significant number of people or a number of significant people

Vexing conditions can remain and persist but never become defined as a problem

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4
Q

Carol Weissert (Poli/Sci Scholar)

A

“Successfully defining conditions as problems (smog, learning disabilities, global warming, etc.) is perhaps the most important single step in obtaining policy change.”

“Problem definition is the very engine of change because it is the essence of power.”

“Problems are inherently political because they are not simply out there waiting to be solved; they must be formulated and defined, using political skill to mobilize support for the desired position.”

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5
Q

Getting on the agenda

A

Officials keep track of indicators over time
•Poverty rates in sub-groups, marriage rates, birth rates, high school graduation rates, rates of disease infection
•Costs of programs like Medicaid or Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF)

Changes in these indicators or a large magnitude may catch official attention

A focusing event like a disaster, personal experience, crisis or symbol

The most effective way to get a problem on the agenda is to have an incoming president seize and articulate the problem as necessary to address

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6
Q

Getting on the agenda: Indicators

A

According to the CDC
•In 1998, 30 million adults (18-64) did not have health insurance coverage
•In 2010, 42 million adults (18-64) did not have health insurance coverage

These are statistics about magnitude which show an increasing trend in adults who lack health insurance coverage over more than a decade

Providing context for the Affordable Care Act

These data were very important in the healthcare reform

Of primary importance, however, was an incoming president with a mandate (election promise), social capital and the oval office to move this legislation forward

This is the first significant healthcare legislation since Medicare and Medicaid in the 1960’s

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7
Q

Getting on the agenda: Focusing event

A

Can be dramatic events that force the political system to respond directly
•9/11

Can be political movements that attempt to alter the debate
•Widespread protests around the country/world

A president’s first “90 days” are when
•Executive orders as a both symbolic and practical step to tie in with campaign talk
•This is driven by candidates, political parties, journalistic coverage and constituent pressure

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8
Q

Political power and groups

A

Theories can help us think about the exercise of power in the political arena.
•Power to influence political actors and their agenda

We turn our attention to group function, power and politics to skillfully position ourselves to understand the dynamic process involved in policy formulation

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9
Q

Pluralism

A

Pluralism: a core political science theory about how groups function in our political system
•adherents believe the political process is dominated by a number of autonomous groups that compete in an open political system; professional organizations, trade unions, business and financial lobbies

These various groups go about attempting to secure their policy preferences

the result of this competition among groups produces observed policies

pluralists hold that there is equality in political opportunity

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10
Q

Pluralism and power

A

Pluralists are concerned with
•Potential power; ability to turn resources into power (resources: cash, skills, prestige, legal authority, access, etc)
•Actual power;A can force B to do X;A can block B from gaining X

Pluralists suggest
•resources and potential power are widely distributed throughout society
•some resources are available to all (vote, sign petition, contact legislator, etc.)
•at any given political moment potential power exceeds actual power

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11
Q

Elite theory

A

C. Wright Mills wrote an influential book called the “Power Elite”, published in 1956

the term power elite was used to describe a relatively small, loosely knit group of people who tend to dominate American policymaking
•bureaucratic, corporate, intellectual, military, and government elites who control the principal institutions in the U.S. and whose opinions and actions influence the decisions of policymakers

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12
Q

Mills on the Elite theory

A

“The powers of ordinary men are circumscribed by the everyday worlds in which they live, yet even in these rounds of jobs, family and neighborhood they often seem driven by forces they can neither understand nor govern. ‘Great changes’ are beyond their control, but affect their conduct and outlook none the less. The very framework of modern society confines them to projects not their own, but from every side, such changes now press upon the men and women of the mass society, who accordingly feel that they are without purpose in an epoch in which they are without power.”

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13
Q

Characteristics of the power elite

A

Mills suggests the small group of individuals who hold pivotal government, industry and economic posts dominate and control political power
•form a tight-knit group, closely collaborate and move between government and pivotal industries; this movement and collaboration produce a concentration of power and worldview among these actors

Examples:
•Henry Paulson: Secretary of the Treasury under George W. Bush (July 2006-January 2009); CEO of Goldman Sachs (1999-2006)
•William Summers: Secretary of the Treasury under Bill Clinton (1999-2001); Director of the White House National Economic Council for Barack Obama (2009-2010); President of Harvard (2001-2006); Chief Economist at the World Bank (1991-1993)

shared attitudes and beliefs among these actors ensure that
•regardless of political party
•in spite of seeming “bickering” among elites

all basically agree on some fundamental tenets
•primacy of free-enterprise system
•profit motive
•private property
•maintain the unequal distribution of wealth
•sanctity of private economic power

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14
Q

How does this concentration occur?

A

Theorists suggest the following mechanisms:
•read the same newspapers
•live in the same neighborhoods
•join the same clubs
•send kids to same schools (often private, legacy admissions)
•share churches and charitable activities
•intermarry

Political scientists, Thomas Dye, notes that
•54% of corporate leaders, 42% of highest ranking politicians went just 12 private colleges

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15
Q

Groups, power, money and democracy

A

Can democracy exist without interest groups?
•how to harness political will?

Are all citizens equal in organizing interest groups?
•why or why not? what might some of the constraints be?

Are interest groups too powerful?
•how would you know?

Pluralist idea: as an individual in a democracy, one has little power
•find like minded folks and organize, fund-raise, lobby and your group can have an impact on policy

Power elite idea:
•a limited group of powerful actors across important government, industry and military sectors so constrain the; scope of the issue; the agenda; levers of power; resources that the masses are left with little power in a severely limited policy scope

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16
Q

Where does the money come from?

A

PAC: political action committee
•PAC represent labor, business or ideological interests
•Can contribute $5,000 to elect or defeat a candidate per election cycle
•Can contribute up to $15,000 annually to national party committee

17
Q

Super pacs

A

newer type of political action committee formed after 2 key federal court decisions which found that placing limitations on individual and corporate contributions to be unconstitutional violations of the First Amendment right to free speech

18
Q

Federal decision that gave rise to super pacs

A

SpeechNow.org v. Federal Election Commission: a federal court found restrictions on individual contributions to organizations seeking to influence elections to be unconstitutional

Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission: this U.S. Supreme court decision decided that limits on corporate and union spending to influence elections was unconstitutional

Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote:“We now conclude that independent expenditures, including those made by corporations, do not give rise to corruption or the appearance of corruption.”

Justice John Paul Stevens wrote in his dissent:“At bottom, the Court’s opinion is thus a rejection of the common sense of the American people, who have recognized a need to prevent corporations from undermining self government since the founding, and who have fought against the distinctive corrupting potential of corporate electioneering since the days of Theodore Roosevelt.”

19
Q

What can super pacs do?

A

Super PACS can raise unlimited money from corporations, associations and individuals, unions and spend that money to advocate for candidates
•Super PACS must report donors to the FEC
•Super PACS do not donate directly to candidates
•Super PACS are barred from working directly with a candidate campaigns

20
Q

Other spending groups

A

527 non-profit organization (named for the section of the IRS code), tax exempt status political committee
•national, state a local level
•these groups advocate publicly for defeat or election of a candidate
•created 25 years ago, changes in IRS law broadened the types of groups eligible for tax-exempt status, this changed allowed groups to gain political committee status under tax law without the more rigorous regulation under federal election law
•very few financial restrictions: no limits on contributions or spending
•open to all contributors: individual, unions, corporations
•rules vary by state
•527s cannot coordinate with or contribute to a federal candidate, they are free, however, to portray federal candidates as needed to portray message
•must disclose donors

501(c) nonprofit operations: can engage in political activities as long as it is not their primary purpose
•not required to disclose donors
•contributions are tax-deductible

21
Q

Budget and policy

A

HOW DO WE PAY FOR WHAT WE CHOOSE TO DO?

A MENTOR ONCE TOLD ME THAT ALL SHE NEEDED TO UNDERSTAND A COUNTRY’S SOCIAL WELFARE POLICY WAS A COPY OF THE BUDGET
•WE ARE WHAT WE ARE WILLING TO PAY FOR.

22
Q

FY 2018 Budget Figures

A

The budget proposes about $4.1 trillion in spending in FY 2018

Spending is in 3 categories
•Mandatory (63%) - $2.58 trillion
•Discretionary (30%) - $1.21 trillion
•Interest on Federal Debt (8%)- $316 billion

23
Q

Total Budget

A

First thing to notice:
•These are very, very, very large numbers so small changes in a percentage from one year to the next are quite consequential.
•Mandatory spending will change very little unless Congressional action fundamentally alters the legal framework for Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid.
•The only way in which this portion of the budget changes dramatically is if congress changes the nature of the program. Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid account for the vast majority of Mandatory Spending.

24
Q

FY 2018 Budget Plan

A

The President’s budget, “A New Foundation for American Greatness” notes:
•Ending the cap on Military spending
•As you can note from the discretionary spending chart, this budget notes $679 billion or 59% of the discretionary budget for Military spending
•This is about a 5% increase or about 53.8 billion from FY 2016

25
Q

FY 2018- Discretionary spending cuts/increases

A

Between the FY2016 and FY2018 proposed budgets, cuts/increases are proposed for:
•Military – increase about 54 billion
•Food and Agriculture – cut about 2.3 billion
•Energy and Environment – cut about 13.6 billion
•International Affairs – cut about 12.6 billion
•Transportation – increase about 1.6 billion
•Science – decrease about 1 billion
•Health – decrease about 7.6 billion
•Housing and Community – decrease about 16.2 billion
•Education – decrease about 13.1 billion
•Veteran’s Benefits – increase about 8.5 billion