The quality and use of regulatory analysis in 2008.

Jerry Ellig, Patrick A McLaughlin
Author Information
  1. Jerry Ellig: Mercatus Center at George Mason University, Arlington, VA, USA. jellig@gmu.edu

Abstract

This article assesses the quality and apparent use of regulatory analysis for economically significant regulations proposed by federal agencies in 2008. A nine-member research team used a six-point (0-5) scale to evaluate regulatory analyses according to criteria drawn from Executive Order 12866 and Office of Management and Budget Circular A-4. Principal findings include: (1) the average quality of regulatory analysis, though not high, is somewhat better than previous regulatory scorecards have shown; (2) quality varies widely; (3) biggest strengths are accessibility and clarity; (4) biggest weaknesses are analysis of the systemic problem and retrospective analysis; (5) budget or "transfer" regulations usually receive low-quality analysis; (6) a minority of the regulations contain evidence that the agency used the analysis in significant decisions; (7) quality of analysis is positively correlated with the apparent use of the analysis in regulatory decisions; and (8) greater diffusion of best practices could significantly improve the overall quality of regulatory analysis.

MeSH Term

Cost-Benefit Analysis
Government Agencies
Information Services
United States

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0analysisregulatoryqualityuseregulationsapparentsignificant2008usedbiggestdecisionsarticleassesseseconomicallyproposedfederalagenciesnine-memberresearchteamsix-point0-5scaleevaluateanalysesaccordingcriteriadrawnExecutiveOrder12866OfficeManagementBudgetCircularA-4Principalfindingsinclude:1averagethoughhighsomewhatbetterpreviousscorecardsshown2varieswidely3strengthsaccessibilityclarity4weaknessessystemicproblemretrospective5budget"transfer"usuallyreceivelow-quality6minoritycontainevidenceagency7positivelycorrelated8greaterdiffusionbestpracticessignificantlyimproveoverall

Similar Articles

Cited By