Better regulation in Europe

""Better Regulation" is afoot in Europe. After several transatlantic conflicts over regulatory topics such as the precautionary principle, genetically modified foods, and climate change, Europe and America now appear to be converging on the analytic basis for regulation. In a process...

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Main Author: Wiener, Jonathan B.
Institution:ETUI-European Trade Union Institute
Format: TEXT
Language:English
Published: Durham, NC 2006
Duke University. School of Law
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.labourline.org/KENTIKA-19187518124919057909-Better-regulation-in-europe.htm
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author Wiener, Jonathan B.
author_facet Wiener, Jonathan B.
collection Library items
description ""Better Regulation" is afoot in Europe. After several transatlantic conflicts over regulatory topics such as the precautionary principle, genetically modified foods, and climate change, Europe and America now appear to be converging on the analytic basis for regulation. In a process of hybridization, European institutions are borrowing "Better Regulation" reforms from both the US approach to regulatory review using benefit-cost analysis and from European member states' initiatives on administrative costs and simplification; in turn the European Commission is helping to spread these reforms among the member states. In many respects, the Better Regulation initiative promises salutary reforms, such as wider use of regulatory impact assessments and a reduction in unnecessary bureaucracy. In other respects, the European initiative speaks more of Procrustean deregulation than of better regulation. Meanwhile the European Commission still needs to establish the institutional infrastructure needed to succeed. This paper argues that the European program of "Better Regulation" is well-founded but could be even better if it adopted several strategies: enlarging the scope of impact assessment and benefit-cost analysis toward a broader, "warmer" and more evenhanded application of these tools, with greater attention to multiple risks; moving beyond a narrow focus on cutting administrative costs or simplification for their own sake, toward criteria that address benefits as well as costs; centralizing expert oversight so that impact assessments actually influence decisions, both to say 'no' to bad ideas and 'yes' to good ideas; and undertaking ex post evaluation of policies for adaptive policy revision and for improvement of ex ante assessment methods. These reforms would help Better Regulation achieve its true objective: better, not less or more. In turn, the US could study these European innovations and borrow from them where they prove successful. "
format TEXT
geographic EU countries
USA
id 19187518124919057909_f79711525abb4d35b7409d27834de40a
institution ETUI-European Trade Union Institute
is_hierarchy_id 19187518124919057909_f79711525abb4d35b7409d27834de40a
is_hierarchy_title Better regulation in Europe
language English
physical 63 p.
Digital
Paper
publishDate 2006
publisher Durham, NC
Duke University. School of Law
spellingShingle Wiener, Jonathan B.
administrative reform
cost benefit analysis
EU law
governance
law reform
regulation
Better regulation in Europe
thumbnail https://www.labourline.org/Image_prev.jpg?Archive=131214695949
title Better regulation in Europe
topic administrative reform
cost benefit analysis
EU law
governance
law reform
regulation
url https://www.labourline.org/KENTIKA-19187518124919057909-Better-regulation-in-europe.htm