Economic Knowledge and the Scientization of Policy Advice

Johan Christensen analyses appointments and citation patterns in Norwegian advisory commissions in economic policy over the last 45 years in the journal Policy Sciences

Abstract

The growing role of economic expertise in contemporary policy-making has received increasing scholarly attention. Yet, so far, this discussion has only been tenuously linked to relevant debates in public policy and administration, such as the work on policy advisory systems. The article attempts to bridge this gap by examining the changing reliance on academic economic knowledge within policy advisory bodies. It does so by analysing appointments and citation patterns in Norwegian advisory commissions in economic policy over the last 45 years. The analysis shows a marked increase in the number of academic economists appointed to commissions and in citations to economic literature. Moreover, it reveals an orientation towards the most prestigious outlets of the international economics discipline. This development can be interpreted as a scientization of policy advice in the economic field, that is, a growing reliance on academic expertise for analysis and arguments about public policy.

Full info

Johan Christensen
Economic knowledge and the scientization of policy advice

Policy Sciences, Volume 51, Issue 3, pp 291–311
DOI: 10.1007/s11077-018-9316-6

Open Access

Published Oct. 29, 2018 10:28 AM - Last modified Jan. 29, 2022 5:38 PM