Incrementalism is commonly employed in
politics,
engineering,
software design,
planning and
industry. Whereas it is often criticized as "fire fighting", the progressive improvement of product designs characteristic, e.g., of
Japanese engineering, can create steadily improving product performance, which in certain circumstances outperforms more orthodox planning systems. Another example would be in small changes that make way for a bigger overall change to get past unnoticed. A series of small steps toward an agenda would be less likely to be questioned than a large and swift change. An example could be the rise of gas prices, the company would only raise the price by a few cents every day, instead of a large change to a target price overnight. More people would notice and dispute a dramatic, 10% increase overnight, while a 10% increase over a span of a week would less likely be even noticed, let alone argued. This can be applied in many different ways, such as, economics, politics, a person's appearance, or laws.
Examples In the 1970s, many countries decided to invest in
wind energy.
Denmark, a small country of around 5 million people, became a world leader in this technology using an incremental approach, while more formal design processes in the
US,
Germany and the
United Kingdom failed to develop competitive machines. The reason for the difference of approach was that the Danish wind industry developed from an agricultural base, while the American and UK wind industries were based on
hi-tech aerospace companies with significant
university involvement. The resource allocation of local authorities is riddled with politics and provides the underlying methods of incrementalism in the negotiation process of putting together local authority priorities. Looking the United States Federal Budget is a back and forth negotiation between politicians and provides great insight of incremental change. Every year a new budget must be formed to allocate funds to the agencies such as the DoD and government programs such as Social Security and Medicare. The amounts with which are decided gradually change based on the importance as well as efficiencies and inefficiencies of agencies or priorities. == Related concepts ==