Title: Congressional Oversight Overlooked: Police Patrol vs. Fire Alarms
1Congressional Oversight Overlooked Police
Patrol vs. Fire Alarms
- Mathew McCubbins
- Thomas Schwartz
- AJPS, 28 (1) 165-179 February 1984
2To what extent has Congress neglected its
oversight responsibility?
- Common sense approach
- Despite a large and growing executive branch,
Congress has done little or nothing to oversee
administrative compliance with legislative goals. - Congress has largely lost control of the
executive branch. - Congress has allowed the executive branch not
only to grow but to grow irresponsible (stylized
fact).
3The authors question this common sense
- What has appeared to scholars to be a neglect of
oversight, they argue, really is a preference for
one form of oversight over another, less
effective form. - The authors develop a simple model of
congressional choice of oversight policy. In
fact, they model the choice by policy makers of
an optimal enforcement strategy, given
opportunity costs, available technology, and
human cognitive limits.
4The Model
- Congressional oversight policy concerns whether,
to what extent, and in what way Congress attempts
to detect and remedy executive branch violations
of legislative goals.
5Two forms or techniques of oversights
- Police Patrol
- Centralized, active and direct. At it own
initiative, Congress examines a sample of
executive-agency activities with the aim of
detecting and remedying any violations of
legislative goals and, by its surveillance,
discouraging such violations.
6Two forms or techniques of oversights
- Fire-Alarm
- It is less centralized, and involves less active
and direct intervention than police patrol
instead of examining a sample of administrative
decisions, Congress establishes a system of
rules, procedures and informal practices that
enable individual citizens and organized
interest-groups to examine administrative
decisions, to charge for violations and seek
remedies from agencies, Courts and Congress
itself. - Congresss role consists in creating and
perfecting this decentralized system and,
occasionally, intervening in response to
complaints.
7Precaution
- This distinction between police-patrol and
fire-alarm oversight should not be confused with
the distinction between formal (regular) and
informal (incidental) oversight. - Both can involve direct and active surveillance
rather than response to alarms
8Assumptions
- Technological
- Congress can choose either form of oversight,
police-patrol or fire-alarm, or a combination of
the two, making tradeoffs between them in two
circumstances - When writing a legislation
- Sunset reviews (police-patrol)
- Public hearings (fire-alarm)
- When it evaluates an agencys performance
- Oversight hearings to patrol for violations
- Wait for alarm to signal for violations
9Assumptions
- Motivational (reelection or blame shirking
models) - Legislator seeks to take as much credit as
possible for the net benefits enjoyed by his
potential supporters whose support can help him
win reelection. Likewise, he seeks to avoid as
much blame as possible for the net costs born by
his potential supporters.
10Assumptions
- Institutional
- Executive agencies act as agents of Congress and
specially of those subcommittees on which they
depend for authorizations and appropriations.
11Three consequences
- Congressmen tend to prefer fire-alarm oversight
to police-patrol because the former provides much
credit than the latter for three reasons. - Under police-patrol, legislators time is largely
wasted, so they incur opportunity costs - Under police-patrol, legislators examine just a
sample of executive actions. So, they are likely
to miss violations that harm their potential
supporters and opportunities to claim credit. - Much of the fire-alarm costs are borne by the
citizens and interest groups rather than by
congressmen themselves
12Second consequence
- Congress will not neglect its oversight
responsibility - Fire-alarm oversight serves congressmens
interests at a little cost. - Others bear most of the costs.
- When potential supporters complain of a
violation, a congressman gains credit if he/she
eliminates the cause.
13Third consequence
- Congress will adopt an extensive and somewhat
effective policy of fire-alarm oversight while
largely neglecting police-patrol oversight.
14Literatures misperception
- Complexity
- Because public policy issues are so complex,
Congress has had to delegate authority and now is
unable to oversee. - Good government
- Delegation is a Congress attempt to divorce
policy from politics better served by an
unaccountable bureaucracy. Thus there is no
necessity of over sighting something
nonpolitical. - Decentralization
- Because congressional decisions are made on the
subcommittee level with narrow jurisdiction,
general oversight tend to be weak.
15Alternative explanation
- What appear to be a neglect of oversight can be
explained as a preference by congressmen for
fire-alarm over police-patrol oversight. - Scholars have focused only on a single for of
oversight they have looked only for
police-patrol oversight, ignoring the fire alarm
activities.
16Effectiveness of Fire-Alarm Oversight
- The authors do not contend that the most
effective oversight policy is likely to contain
no policy-patrol features, only that fire-alarms
techniques are likely to predominate - They also do not contend that a predominant
fire-alarm policy is more likely to serve the
public interest, only that it is likely to secure
greater compliance with legislative goals. - A external complain gives Congress the
opportunity to spell out its goal more clearly - Police-patrol miss many violation because it
works with a sample of cases
17Criticisms
- Citizens harmed by violations of legislative
goals are not always represented by organized
groups and, hence, cannot always sound a loud
alarm to secure a redress of grievances. - Fire-alarm oversight tends to be Particularistic
because it emphasizes the interests of
individuals and interest-groups than those of the
public in general. In other words, they tend to
be decentralized and incentive-based oversight
policies.
18Authors response
- Nowadays even disadvantage groups often have
public spokesmen. - Congress pass legislation, as part of its
fire-alarm policy, that help disorganized groups
to act collectively. - Constituency-services provide voice for
individual citizens against administrative
agencies - If fire-alarm can be biased in many ways, it is
also true with police-patrol.
19Implications How bureaucratic discretion
increased?
- The ostensible shifting of legislative
responsibility to the executive branch may simply
be the responsible adoption of efficient
legislative techniques and the responsible
acceptance of human cognitive limits both
facilitated by the fire-alarm system.
20Implication the choice of regulatory policy
- When it decides for regulatory issues, congress
tends to choose one of two types of regulatory
instruments command-and-control and
incentive-based instruments. - Paradoxically, Congresss very preference for
fire-alarm oversight entails a preference for
command-and-control regulatory policy.
21Conclusion
- The widespread perception that Congress has
neglected its oversight responsibility is a
widespread mistake. - In fact, a decentralized and incentive-based
control mechanism, fire-alarm, has been found
more effective.
22Learning from OversightFire Alarms and Police
Patrol Reconstructed
- Arthur Lupia
- Mathew McCubbins
- JLEO, 10 (1) 96-125 April 1994
23Introduction
- This article is about the consequence of
delegation - When are delegation and abdication equivalent?
- What are the conditions under which delegation to
the bureaucracy produces more effective
governance?
24Delegations drawback
- Bureaucrats that possesses both expertise and
policy-making authority can also take actions
that makes legislators worse off than if they had
never delegated. - In this case, the act of delegation is equivalent
to abdication
25Objective
- The authors depart from previous scholarship
(bureaucratic dominance versus congress
dominance) by deriving, as opposed to assuming,
conditions under which legislators can adapt
successfully to bureaucratic expertise.
26Two forms of oversight
- Police-patrol
- Centralized and direct approach to overcome
hidden knowledge. - It is likely to be an effective way for
legislators to track bureaucracies. However it is
also likely to be very costly in terms of time
and resources. - Fire-alarm
- Relatively passive, indirect and decentralized
however, has cost advantages since the third part
bears the costs of learning about bureaucratic
activities.
27To understand the consequences of delegation
- It is necessary to determine the conditions under
which legislators can learn from police-patrol or
fire-alarm. - It is important to bear in mind that people who
are given the opportunity to play the role of
fire-alarm are also given an opportunity to
benefit from their ability to deceive
legislators. - In short, false alarms are always possible!
28Puzzle
- If police-patrol is costly and fire-alarm is
disingenuous, then legislators may be unable to
adapt to the potentially deleterious consequences
of bureaucratic expertise. Thus, delegation and
abdication may well be equivalent! - The authors argue that even running such risks,
it is not sufficient to equate delegation with
abdication
29Conditions for learning
- Levitator's ability to observe costly action by a
bureaucratic agent who possesses expertise
actions speak louder than words - The existence of a cost associated with making
particular statements penalty for lying as the
potential loss in a valued reputation for
honesty. If the penalty is large enough, than one
can infer that a statement must be true. - Similarity of preferences over outcomes between
politicians and information provider
30Theory
- When legislators can create the conditions for
learning, they can create incentives for
bureaucrats to act in accordance with legislative
interests. - In the absence these conditions for learning, the
prospect of such legislative discipline
disappears and delegation has the same
consequences as outright abdication.
31Consequences of delegation two key issues
- Agenda control
- If agents offer just recommendations (take-it-or
leave-it) versus fait accompli - The extent of agency expertise
- It is assumed that bureaucrats possess knowledge
about their policy choices that legislators do
not. - Oversight is the cornerstone of legislative
efforts to efface bureaucratic expertise.
32A model of delegation and police-patrol oversight
- Multistage, single shot game between two players
a bureaucratic agent and a legislative principle. - The agents task is to propose change in policy
at a certain cost. - The legislative principals task is to choose
between agent policy proposal (offer) or the SQ. - The location of agents ideal point may be known
only by the agent (agents private information) - Police-patrol oversight represents the
principals decision to take costly action that
informs it about the location of the agents offer
33Learning from police-patrol oversight
- If the A expects the P to engage in
police-patrol oversight, then the A knows that
the P will have the ability to distinguish
proposal that are better or worse than the SQ.
Thus, the only way that the A has to recover
its proposal cost is to make a proposal that is
better for the P than the SQ. As a result,
employing police-patrol ensures that the
consequences of delegation are positive for the
principle. - In contrast, when does not expect the principal
to undertake police-patrol oversight, the
consequences of delegation for the principal can
be detrimental. - The benefits from police-patrol oversight are
highest when the principal is uncertain about
which of SQ or the O will provide a larger
payoff.
34Learning from costly effort
- In general, one person can learn about a second
persons hidden knowledge by observing the choice
that the second makes when some of the second
persons actions are costly. - That is the choice made by the person must be
sufficient valuable to the second person so that
the expected gain from this choice outweighs the
costs - The presence of observable and costly action can
improve the consequences of delegation for the
principle
35The Model of Fire-alarm Oversight
- Although police-patrol oversight is costly,
fire-alarm may mislead legislators. - How can one differentiate lying from truthful
fire-alarms? - The authors model situations in which legislators
receive signal from informed parties (bureaucrats
or constituents). - The agent may or may not have the same policy
preferences of the principle - A single fire-alarm chooses whether or not to
signal the principal about the consequences of
agencys policy. - The principal then decides to accept or reject
the agents proposal. - If the principal obtains enough information from
oversight activities it can influence the
consequence of delegation (i.e. policy choice).
Otherwise, delegation is equivalent to abdication.
36The Model of Fire-alarm Oversight
- Fire-alarm oversight is not always beneficial to
Congress unless constituents and interest-groups
are not lying. The assumption that the statements
by the fire-alarm will always be informative to
Congress is not true.
37Conditions for learning from fire-alarm oversight
- The existence of penalties for lying on the
fire-alarm - If expected payoff of lying is larger than of
telling the truth, a penalty of lying can reduce
fire-alarms incentive to lying. - The perceived degree of similarity between the
fire-alarm and the principals preferences can
reduce the incentive for misleading. - The agent is more likely to tell the truth.
38Conclusions
- The ability to learn can make the principal
discern better or worse proposal by the agent and
this prevents the agent making a worse proposal. - The conditions for learning from fire-alarms can
be generated by the structure and process of
bureaucratic decision-making and the process of
oversight itself. - That is, the legislators ability of designing
institutions that produce these conditions
affects the whether delegation is more effective
governance or is equal to abdication