Assessing the Impact of Regulatory Impact Assessments
Agenda, Vol. 16, No. 3, 2009
9 Pages Posted: 30 Nov 2011
Date Written: September 7, 2009
Abstract
The idea of an Regulatory Impact Assessment (RIA) is to make regulation more efficient and effective by having its designers justify the reasons for implementing a new regulation, consider the costs and benefits of different options at an early stage and take a community-wide perspective of their effects, to ensure that the benefits to society (broadly conceived) of a regulation are greater than the costs (also broadly conceived) and to encourage the design and adoption of the regulation with the greatest net benefit. RIAs have proved popular with governments trying (or trying to be seen) to improve the quality of their regulation. International studies, however, question whether an RIA process improves regulatory outcomes.
In Australia too, the results of RIA requirements have been disappointing. Although the focus of regulatory-review inquiries has been on improving the incentives of regulatory agencies, the central regulatory monitor can lack the incentive to carry out policies to improve the regulatory process. In Australia the OBPR is the central monitor. The RIA process has often provided it with poor incentives.
Some recent evidence on OBPR decisions suggests that if improving the regulatory process is to be more than wishful thinking, the process must take account of, and improve, the incentives and constraints that face decision-makers, including those in the OBPR.
If the RIA process is to be kept, there are a number of practical reforms that could make it more transparent and increase the incentives of all participants to improve the analysis of proposed regulations.
Keywords: Regulatory impact assessments, Regulatory impact statements, regulation reform
JEL Classification: L51
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
0 References
0 Citations
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
- Citations
- Citation Indexes: 1
- Usage
- Abstract Views: 958
- Downloads: 81
- Citations
- Citation Indexes: 1
- Usage
- Abstract Views: 958
- Downloads: 81