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Strategic Foresight in U.S. Agencies - New America

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Report / In Depth

Strategic Foresight in U.S. Agencies

An Analysis of Long-term Anticipatory Thinking in the Federal Government

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Abstract

U.S. public policy has often been myopic, sacrificing long-term needs to short-term interests. This short-termism not only reduces economic performance, threatens the environment, and undermines national security—to name but a few consequences—it also leaves the United States vulnerable to surprise and limits its ability to manage crises, such as the COVID-19 pandemic. The question is, what to do about it?

Answering that question requires that we understand the causes of short-termism. This report argues that it is, in part, a mechanism for coping with the uncertainty of the future and that reducing myopia requires providing policymakers tools for managing that uncertainty. Specifically, it maintains that the practice of strategic foresight—the rigorous examination of imagined alternative futures to better sense, shape, and adapt to the emerging future—can put boundaries around future uncertainty while enabling better strategy in the present.

As evidence, it provides a detailed case study of the U.S. Coast Guard’s “Project Evergreen,” a cyclical scenario planning exercise, and it explores the proliferation of strategic foresight techniques throughout the federal government, while noting that they remain under-utilized. It concludes by calling for a national-level foresight organization that reports directly to the president.

Acknowledgments

Thank you to the dozens of people, in particular members of the U.S. Coast Guard, who lent me their expertise and recounted their experiences. I am indebted to John Kamensky for reading this report in its entirety and making many valuable suggestions, as well as to several reviewers who wished to remain anonymous but who sharpened the section on the U.S. national security establishment. Parts of this report draw on my doctoral work at Harvard Business School, and I would like to extend my gratitude to Professors Amy Edmondson and Robin Ely for their mentorship and guidance. Thank you also to the team at New America, particularly Peter Bergen and David Sterman, for making this report possible, as well as to the Smith Richardson Foundation for its support. Finally, in the interest of transparency, I should note that I operate a foresight consultancy, Event Horizon Strategies, and state that it has no business pending with the agencies I profiled.

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