One issue in public life is mission creep, the gradual and often unintended expansion of an entity’s goals, operations, scope or activities beyond the original core mission. It is a big issue for non-profits, but sometimes for logical reasons.
When an issue is essentially “solved,” a non-profit can disband, as it has succeeded, or institutional vested interests can find a new problem to solve. In other cases, growth itself seems to become its own driver, as the logic seems to be, “if we are doing good things now, how much more impact could we have if we were bigger?”
The new goals may serve the interest of the employees or the management of the organization, who would otherwise be “out of their jobs.”
In cases where the organization’s original goals are already achieved or when the original goals are no longer necessary, goal displacement means organizations direct their energies elsewhere.
For example an organization which was initially intended to fight polio would find a new disease to fight once the vaccine for polio is invented.
There are other implications for donors and citizens who are not inside an organization, though. There are lots of problems we need, or should work to fix. So spending resources on problems that are already largely “fixed” is wasteful.
Spending “too much” on problems with less social or economic impact likewise is wasteful; as would be the case of directing excessive effort and resources on one problem, no matter how important, to the exclusion of many other equally-pressing issues.
For example, some might argue we need to devote serious resources and effort to global warming, even if that means other things (eradicating malaria, improving general health, sanitation or water quality, building more housing, eliminating infant mortality) take a back seat.
It might seem obvious this is not a good idea.
We might see some relevance, in that regard, around the “problem” of quality internet access.
There was a time when “quality” internet access (based on downstream speed) was a bigger problem in the U.S. market. That is not to say there are no issues, but useful internet access does not seem to be much of a problem for most potential users.
And though we often focus on “supply” issues, “demand” also matters, as some customers choose not to buy fixed network internet access, while others use substitutes. And since price and speed are correlated, customers make decisions all the time about the tradeoff between price paid and typical speed received.
Making quality internet access available is one problem. Choices consumers make is a separate issue.
To the extent there are problems, those tend to deal with supply: is quality access available? What consumers choose to buy is not the same “problem,” indeed is simply consumer choice.
We sometimes see data that suggests customers who buy very-low-speed services are a “problem.” Maybe, maybe not. It’s a problem if the option of buying higher speed services is unavailable. It is not a problem if a consumer makes a rational buying decision.
One sees this when looking at speed tiers purchased and other variables such as household income, age, educational status or geography. One might argue that supply is a bigger problem in rural areas, but not much of a problem in urban areas.
Many observers note that incomes tend to be lower in rural areas, which can affect demand. The cost of networks in rural areas also is higher, which affects supply.
And household income is a major driver of buyer behavior. Wealthier households tend to buy more-capable speed tiers, just as they tend to buy more and “better” goods in general.
The other notable demand issue is that a growing percentage of customers seem to buy mobile services as a product substitute for fixed network broadband. That might be especially true of lower-income households and households of younger people.
In other niche cases, such choices might also happen for single-user households or homes in rual areas where there are fixed network supply issues.
The broader point is that internet access, generally speaking, is a problem that is mostly “solved” for most potential users and buyers, though some issues remain.
As with always, the amount of effort or priority we “should” be devoting to such issues should be proportional to “where” and “why” the problems may continue to exist, tailoring solutions in ways that solve the problems in an efficient way.
Once supply issues are overcome, we might not want to exert prior levels of effort to take on new missions such as “encouraging” use of the internet, which might not be a substantial problem, or one that really needs much subsidy and effort.
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