The biggest
problem with modern politics is that people never experience good policy. Or
bad for that matter.
If you go out to
eat this evening, you’ll have a clear experience. You might love your dinner
and think it’s reasonably priced. You’ll decide to go back the next day or next
month but you will act on what you’ve learned. In theory, politics is similar
but in practice it’s not. When it comes
to policy, you don’t actually experience it.
To take an obvious
example, let’s say that you fund development and education in a poor
neighborhood. Let’s say that you sustain this investment long enough – at least
a decade or two – that it actually impacts the kids growing up in that
neighborhood. So much, in fact, that those kids end up making double what their
parents made – even adjusted for inflation. This policy is a raging success.
But what does it
really mean to say that you’ve increased the earnings of a 7 year old? Their
peak earning years will probably be about 40 years away. Worse, if you just
look, say, 15 years out you might actually see lower earnings because these
kids – unlike their parents – are still in school in their early 20s and not
making any money. Even worse (yes, it gets worse) given they’ve followed jobs
for young professionals, there is a very good chance that they won’t be living
in that same neighborhood when they do hit their peak earning years. How would
voters in an area ever “experience” that return on investment?
And of course it
gets even more complicated. Education initiatives can change a dozen times in the
dozen years that kids are in K-12. It’s tough to see the impact of programs
that are discontinued before teachers have even adapted their curriculum to the
initiative. The introduction of new technology like personal computers or
nanotech can cause productivity and wages to rise regardless of education
policy and the proliferation of outsourcing can cause wages to fall. There’s
never just one thing going on and that makes it difficult for the average
person to know what difference policies made.
There’s an old quip about
the guy who didn’t have 20 years of experience but instead had one year
experience 20 times. In politics, it is worse. Whether the policy is economic
development, education, environmental, or urban or family planning, the
long-term effects of policy rarely are clearly experienced.
For me, that's just one more reason that systems thinking and systems simulation has to be popularized and taught. It's not enough to let the experts benefit from running models that simulate reality. We could "experience" policy but it would take far better and easier to navigate simulations than anything we have now. Perhaps in a generation people play policy simulations the way that simulate policies the way that Millennials played video games.
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