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Ruv Draba's avatar

I was glad to read this article, Matt. It's a pithy summary that would be good to trot out when chatting to policy analysts, and I want to bookmark it.

But in determining what policy ends up implemented (and how), I think there are social factors that matter more than the psychology of policy-design.

Regardless of how well policy is designed (and you can do a great job of making it evidentiary and designing it for robust implementation), policy-selection is generally prioritised on sociopolitical factors. That's patently true in democratic legislature (notorious for hiding how the sausage is made), but you can equally find the same in business and community policy (think body corporates, social clubs and sporting groups.)

Outside academia and the idealised world of policy analysis I can think of very few examples where policy-selection is based purely on evidence of cost-efficacy, even where that evidence exists.

If I had to distill it, I'd say that while policy validity might have a lot to do with robust evidence, consensus-building seldom does.

Or to unpack mechanisms more, you could look at the political science pub, *The Dictator's Handbook: Why Bad Behaviour is almost always good politics* (2011) The 'bad behaviour' described centres on the deliberate implementation of bad policy. It explains how selection mechanisms work against policy-evidence but optimise cronyism, regardless of what decision-making system is used.

TL;DR: Psychological bias matters; 'small p' political objectives matter more.

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