Impact assessment
Policy Impact Assessments (IAs) are formal, evidence-based procedures that assess the economic, social, and environmental effects of public policy.[1] They have been incorporated into policy making in the OECD countries and the European Commission.
Key types of impact assessments include global assessments (global level), policy impact assessment (policy level), strategic environmental assessment (programme and plan level), and environmental impact assessment (project level). Impact assessments can focus on specific themes, such as social impact assessments and gender impact assessments.
IAs can improve legislation by:[2]
- Informing policy makers about potential economic, social, and environmental ramifications
- Improving transparency so that contributions to sustainability and "better regulation" are disclosed and special interest lobbying is discouraged
- Increasing public participation in order to reflect a range of considerations, thereby improving the legitimacy of policies
- Clarifying how public policy helps achieve its goals and priorities through policy indicators
- Contributing to continuous learning in policy development by identifying causalities that inform ex-post review of policies
Procedure
The department which is responsible for the policy proposal usually has to carry out the IA. Although the purpose and orientation of IA procedures differ, IA guidelines in the various jurisdictions all follow a similar set of steps to be followed by desk officers:
- Planning of the IA
- Carrying out the impact analysis
- Consultation of affected stakeholders and the general public
- Coordination with affected departments
- Summary and presentation of findings in a report
- Forwarding findings to decision makers
- Publication of the IA report (not in all countries)
The analytical steps, which mainly relate to step 2, can be set out as i. Problem definition ii. Definition of policy objectives iii. Development of policy options iv. Analysis of impacts v. Comparison of policy options and recommendation of one option vi. Defining monitoring measures.
Methods
Throughout the IA process, methods can be used for support. In recent years governments have increasingly invested in developing and applying methods and tools for IA.[3][4] Depending on usage, IA methods can be classified as methods for
- Scoping (e.g., checklists)
- For qualitative analysis (e.g., focus groups)
- For quantitative analysis (e.g., life-cycle assessment, material flow accounting, modelling)
- Aggregation and comparison of options (e.g., cost–benefit analysis)
- Analysing coherence (e.g., Gender IA)
- Supporting participation and involvement (e.g., internet consultation)
- Data presentation and involvement (e.g., GIS)
- Monitoring and evaluation (e.g., indicators)[5]
See also
References
- Adelle, Camilla; Weiland, Sabine (2012). "Policy assessment: the state of the art". Impact Assessment and Project Appraisal. 30 (1): 25–33. doi:10.1080/14615517.2012.663256.
- Jacob, Klaus; Ferretti, Johanna; Guske, Anna-Lena; Turnpenny, John; Jordan, Andrew; Adelle, Camilla (2011). "Sustainability in Impact Assessments A Review of Impact Assessment Systems in selected OECD countries and the European Commission" (PDF). OECD. SG/SD(2011)6/FINAL. Retrieved 2012-12-10.
- Podhora, Aranka; Helming, K; Adenäuer, L.; Heckelei, T.; Kautto, P.; Reidsma, P.; Rennings, K.; Turnpenny, J.; Jansen, J. (2013). "). The policy-relevancy of impact assessment tools: Evaluating nine years of European research funding". Environmental Science & Policy. 31: 85–95. doi:10.1016/j.envsci.2013.03.002.
- Nilsson, Mans; Jordan, Andrew; Turnpenny, John; Hertin, Julia; Nykvist, Björn; Russel, Duncan (2008). "The use and non-use of policy appraisal tools in public policy making: an analysis of three European countries and the European Union". Policy Sciences. 41 (4): 335–355. doi:10.1007/s11077-008-9071-1.
- LIAISE – Network of Excellence. "LIAISE KIT – Knowledge for Decision Making". Retrieved 2013-05-05.