Abstract

Cutting red tape has been topical in Dutch debates on legislative politics ever since the beginning of the 1990s, but has gained impetus – since 2003 – in the political arena as the combined consequence of the regulatory reform policies of the Balkenende II-IV administrations (2003-2010) to innovate the Dutch economy and efforts to meet the European Lisbon Agenda. The general aim of these policies is to simplify the regulatory environment by cutting red tape and making law more practicable, thus fostering economic growth. The new elements of these policies – compared to the recent pre-2000 past - are the focus on a precise definition of the regulatory administrative burden, the detailed quantification thereof, and the prefixed reduction targets. With these elements the Dutch reform policy aligns with – OECD-inspired – initiatives throughout Europe aiming at the reduction of red tape caused by legislation. Arguably these policies have met with some success: a 20% red tape reduction was achieved by the end of 2007. Encouraged by this success the present Balkenende administration has raised the stakes by fixing a new, additional, reduction target of 25%. This contribution will focus on critical success factors for the Dutch reform policies and the overall effects of these policies for legislation, its implementation and enforcement. It does so from a predominantly legal point of view. The article questions how Dutch success rates of better regulation are affected by tough political choices (is better regulation instrumental to tough political choices, or are the best results yielded by avoiding political choices?). A second critical success factor discussed is the question whether the law of diminishing returns will apply to the most recent episode of Dutch reform policies The contribution concludes with the hypothesis of the Sisyphus paradox, according to which risk management (Better Regulation Commission 2006) and legal protection, on the one hand, and the desire for business enabling legislation, on the other, lead to a perpetual cycle resulting in the constant production of red tape and the parallel need to reduce this.

Highlights

  • Regulation comes with consequences: simple comme le beau jour

  • When we speak about an administrative burden most of the time we imply unnecessary, disproportional or excessive burdens caused by legislation

  • The Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) takes the following view: ‘The viability of business activities depends on the market opportunities present, but it is influenced by legislation, regulations and the administrative requirements governments impose in implementing public policies

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Summary

Why combat red tape?

As was indicated in the first section modern market-based political societies are subject to semiautonomous processes of legislative proliferation. Since most of this information cannot be harvested on the basis of voluntary cooperation by citizens, organisations and citizens are required by law to satisfy the Government’s increasing thirst for information These information obligations include data statistics, annual accounts, tax forms, labour safety evaluations, and many more. Institutions and citizens, it was felt, are vexed by repetitive, overlapping information requests: sometimes the exact same information is required by different government agencies and at different times each year, only using slightly different definitions, making it increasingly difficult for citizens and companies to comply This to the detriment of businesses, entrepreneurship and the competitiveness of the Dutch economy. The Netherlands Bureau for Economic Policy Analysis has calculated that diminishing the administrative burdens by 25% in health care would ‘liberate’ 24,000 man-years for actual care.[16]

Simplifying the regulatory environment: recent history in the Netherlands
Methodology for determining the size of administrative burdens: the SCM model
Prevention and reduction
Screening the legislative stock
First results
Embedding impact assessment in the Dutch legislative process
Critical factors and the Sisyphus paradox
Findings
10. An outlook
Full Text
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