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This article explores the results of regulatory reform in OECD countries, emphasizing the importance of regulatory quality over deregulation. It highlights the benefits of reform, such as consumer benefits, improved competitiveness, flexibility, innovation, job creation, and regulatory protections. The article also examines sectoral effects and economy-wide impacts of regulatory reforms.
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Growth, Flexibility and Protection: The Results of Regulatory Reform in OECD Countries Scott H. Jacobs Jacobs and Associates, An international firm specializing in regulatory reform With partners in the Americas, Europe, and East Asia
OECD Regulatory Reform Principle Regulatory quality, not deregulation, is the driving principle behind reform today • Deregulation where markets work better than governments • Re-regulation and new regulatory institutions where markets cannot work without governments • More efficient government and social regulations to achieve high standards of health, safety and environmental protection at lower economic cost
I. Benefits of Regulatory Reform Boosts consumer benefits reducing prices for services and products such as electricity, transport, and health care, and by increasing choice and service quality. Improves competitiveness Reducing the cost structure of exporting and upstream sectors in regional and global markets. Fosters flexibility and innovation Reduces risk of crisis due to external shocks Increases job creation by creating new job opportunities, and by doing so reducing fiscal demands on social security, particularly important in aging populations. Maintains and increases regulatory protections in areas such as health and safety, the environment, and consumer interests by introducing more flexible and efficient regulatory and non-regulatory instruments, such as market approaches. Supports sustainable, non-inflationary growth
Sectoral effects of regulatory reforms Price reductions in real terms (%) Road transport Germany 30 France 20 Mexico 25 United States 19 Airlines United Kingdom 33 Spain 30 United States 33 Australia 20
Sectoral effects of regulatory reforms Price reductions in real terms (%) Electricity Norway (spot market) 18-26.2 United Kingdom 9-15.3 Financial services United Kingdom 70.4 United States 30-62.4 Telecommunications Finland 66.5 Japan 41.6 United Kingdom 63.6 Mexico 21.5 Korea 10-30.7
I. Benefits of Regulatory Reform Boosts consumer benefits reducing prices for services and products such as electricity, transport, and health care, and by increasing choice and service quality. Improves competitiveness Reducing the cost structure of exporting and upstream sectors in regional and global markets. Fosters flexibility and innovation Reduces risk of crisis due to external shocks Increases job creation by creating new job opportunities, and by doing so reducing fiscal demands on social security, particularly important in aging populations. Maintains and increases regulatory protections in areas such as health and safety, the environment, and consumer interests by introducing more flexible and efficient regulatory and non-regulatory instruments, such as market approaches. Supports sustainable, non-inflationary growth
Economy-wide effects of regulatory reform GDP, long term effects (%) USA0.9 Japan 5.6 Korea 8.6 Germany 4.9 Netherlands 3.5 France 4.8 Greece 9-11 Sweden 3.1 UK 3.5 Spain 5.6 Source: OECD: various reports, 1997-2000
Understandingregulatory reform Reform, well co-ordinated and planned, is not an ideological act, nor simply a concession to stronger markets that accelerates painful structural change. Instead, it is a means of managing necessary change so as to ease disruption and develop new opportunities for economic and social progress.