Public discontent over many of the federal government’s domestic policy efforts has reached alarming proportions. In my recent book, Why Government Fails So Often: And How It Can Do Better, I entertain a number of possible causal explanations, but I focus on the most straightforward one: across many different policy domains, the public perceives poor governmental performance – and generally speaking, the public is correct in this view. This explanation is buttressed by social scientists who have reviewed and assessed federal domestic programs in great detail, producing many data points that in a large number of cases indicate government failure, defined as cost-ineffectiveness. This failure is evident even though the government allocates a...