According to the Moneyball Principles, government at all levels should help improve outcomes for young people, their families and communities by:
- Building evidence about the practices, policies and programs that will achieve the most effective and efficient results so that policymakers can make better decisions;
- Investing limited taxpayer dollars in practices, policies and programs that use data, evidence and evaluation to demonstrate they work; and
- Directing funds away from practices, policies, and programs that consistently fail to achieve measurable outcomes.
However, NCUA does not practice the Moneyball Principles. The agency does not gather data and evidence to evaluate if credit unions are fulfilling their public policy mission of serving people of modest means.
If Mr. Nussle believes in the Moneyball Principles, he will use his new position as the head of CUNA to focus the agency on gather evidence and data about credit union services to people of modest means.
This information should go beyond the number of members served or the number of credit unions that have a low-income designation.
This will allow policymakers to make better decisions about the credit union tax expenditure and whether it is achieving the desired measurable outcomes.
ncua and cuna don't want stats on their effectiveness, that would lead to accountability for their (lack of) results.
ReplyDeleteread Nussle's quotes in the CU Times article today about lobbyists. says it all. essentially its NOT about the money? really? I guess if youre not getting it done, its about the advocacy - ie - its OUR fault we aren't getting anything done with Congress because WE aren't trying hard enough.
CUNA CEO Nussle's attack on the Senator Coburn's report as misinformed shows that Nussle has no intention to adhere to the principles of Moneyball for Government.
ReplyDeleteGood point, good observation.
DeleteNussle is on the job about 3 months and not very impressive.
Kind of shallow...oh, wait, former congressman. Ok, never mind.