S. These authors believe that public policy making by the mass public is unrealistic because so many people are unlikely to come to any agreement however the elected officials often lose touch with the pulse of the voters. The bureaucratic system which is responsible for implementation of the policies that have been developed is that which keeps check on elected officials. The Bureaucrats have more experience in the policy function and actually end up in the role of policy maker when the elected officials have either intentionally or unintentionally set policies that are vague, and sometimes with the intent of protection of special interests.
Assessment of the Process Using the Thesis of Lindblom and Woodhouse
External forces are the special interest groups and businesses. Lindblom and Woodhouse believe that the most "extra governmental obstruction to democratic, intelligent steering of society is the business sector's influence over public policy. Since private enterprise and democracy have been somewhat inseparable in the U.S. The business groups receive more consideration from the policy-makers in the government than do other groups. Stated is: "Business people usually exercise control without great expenditure of attention of deliberation. They simply operate under circumstances in which both they and government officials know that continued performance depends on business indulgences, benefits, privileges, and incentives." [p.95] Also stated by Lindblom and Woodhouse is: "They warn about " the pernicious effects [of] political inequality" on the policy making process and, "especially the possibility that policy ideas are systematically misshaped by the pro-business cultures of market-oriented democracies."
Stated to be another example of the ineffective process of democracy is the imbalanced state of equality in the current democratic system which includes social inequality but also includes equality to participate. If democracy is to be truly effective then the citizenry must be both active and responsive. Inequality exists due to the difference in individual ability in processing and use of information. Educational and social conditioning favors the 'elite' leaving the largest part of society with the tendency to never question that which fundamentally underpins society therefore keeping them aligned with the issues that are smaller, less important and easier to understand. In fact, there is very little disagreement on the larger issues, and so little that it appears as nonexistent but yet is significant and still so many fail or are kept from delving any deeper into that which actually puts them at a disadvantage in society.
The argument of Lindblom and Woodhouse is that: "The ability of every contemporary democracy to probe social problems and policy options is systematically crippled, undermining both the extent of democracy and the degree of intelligence brought to bear in policy making." Lindblom and Woodhouse (1992) Emphasize that the policy-making role of individual...
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