05/08/2010

Call For Public To Nominate 'Red Tape' Cuts

People across the UK are being encouraged to nominate laws or regulations they want to see scrapped in a bid to cut bureaucracy.

Today's announcement by the Business Secretary, Vince Cable, is part of a comprehensive package of measures to support the Government's drive to tackle unnecessary red tape.

It will provide the opportunity for the public and businesses to tell the Government which onerous regulations they believe should be removed or changed through the 'Your Freedom' website.

It also means that any new 'interference' in businesses and third sector organisations will have to meet much more rigorous tests before being introduced.

The measures will help transform the relationship between people and government by changing how regulations are drawn up, introduced and implemented.

From 1 September, a groundbreaking new One-in, One-out system will begin.

When ministers seek to introduce new regulations that impose costs on business or the third sector, they will have to identify current regulations with an equivalent value that can be removed.

The new rule has been designed to apply initially to domestic legislation affecting businesses and the third sector, with ministers intending to expand the system in due course.

To reinforce this radical new approach to how Whitehall will introduce new laws and regulations, and to ensure that the costs of red tape are being properly addressed across the entire British economy, the Government has also agreed a set of Principles of Regulation that It has also asked the independent Regulatory Policy Committee (RPC) to perform the role of externally scrutinising the evidence and analysis supporting new regulatory proposals, prior to policy decisions being made.

It will also analyse proposals for the implementation of EU legislation.

The Government will engage earlier in the Brussels policy process; take strong cross Government negotiating lines; and work to end so-called 'gold-plating' of EU regulations so that when European rules are transposed into UK law it is done without putting British business at a competitive disadvantage to other European-based companies.

Business Secretary Vince Cable said: "Together these measures represent a fundamental shift in how Whitehall has traditionally used regulation as a way to command and control.

"We have to move quickly delivering credible and meaningful reductions in the burdens that hinder hard-pressed businesses and charities. We have to create a common sense approach in the way we think about new laws.

"By ensuring regulation becomes a last resort, we will create an environment that frees business from the burden of red tape, helping to create the right conditions for recovery and growth in the UK economy."

(BMcC/GK)

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