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104/04 

 

8 December 2004

 

Advancing Regulatory Reform in Europe


Better regulation holds the key to jobs and growth in Europe, according to a new joint statement on regulatory reform agreed yesterday. The statement was signed by the Chancellor, the Secretary of State for Trade and Industry, and the Finance and Economics Ministers of Ireland, the Netherlands, Luxembourg, Austria and Finland.

 

The joint statement, endorsed by the six consecutive Presidencies of the European Union during 2004, 2005 and 2006, highlights the important advances made in reforming EU regulation since the launch of the original Four Presidency statement in January of this year. It presents further concrete proposals to reduce the economic burden of EU regulation. 

  

The joint statement, Advancing regulatory reform in Europe, notes both the EU’s achievements over the past year, and the challenges that lie ahead if Europe is genuinely to put in place a world-class regulatory framework. In particular, it calls for further action to:

 

  • reduce the administrative burden associated with EU regulation, with regulatory impact assessments to measure and explain administrative costs by the end of 2005;
  • ensure that new regulations are effectively scrutinised for their impact on competitiveness, with a cross-cutting role for the EU’s Competitiveness Council of Ministers;
  • tackle economic burdens in the stock of existing EU law, with further action taken in 2005 to identify priority areas for simplification;
  • establish clear and measurable objectives and goals for monitoring and controlling the economic and administrative burden of EU law;
  • strengthen business input into the regulatory process, for example through a new standing business taskforce to advise on reform and report annually to the EU institutions;
  • develop new arrangements for formal external audit and quality control of EU regulatory impact assessments;
  • enhance pre-legislative consultation, including through greater use of Green and White Papers; and
  • ensure non-legislative options get stronger consideration in EU policy discussions.

The statement builds on the announcements in last week’s Pre-Budget Report on changes to relieve regulatory burdens on businesses in the UK, including the interim report of the Hampton Review, the extension of common commencement dates, and systematic post-implementation reviews.

 

The is available to download below in Adobe Acrobat Portable Document Format (PDF). If you do not have Adobe Acrobat installed on your computer you can download the software free of charge from the Adobe website. For alternative ways to read PDF documents and further information on website accessibility visit the HM Treasury accessibility page.

PDF file of Advancing Regulatory Reform in Europe (433KB)

Notes for Editors

 

1. In January 2004, the Finance Ministers of Ireland, the Netherlands, Luxembourg and the UK, representing the four consecutive EU Presidencies during 2004 and 2005, released a joint initiative on regulatory reform in Europe.

 

2. The March 2004 European Council of Heads of State and Government welcomed the four Presidency initiative on better regulation and called on the
Council of Ministers and the European Commission to pursue a programme of actions to drive it forward over the course of the year.

 

3. Today’s joint statement updates and refreshes the January initiative, presenting new proposals for reform and extending the initiative to include Economics and Competitiveness Ministers, as well as the Austrian and Finnish governments who will assume the Presidency of the European Union in 2006.

 

4. Media enquiries should be addressed to Will Straw at the Treasury press office on 020 7270 4420.

 

5. Non-media enquiries should be addressed to the Treasury Correspondence and Enquiry Unit on 020 7270 4558 or by e-mail to public.enquiries@hm-treasury.gov.uk

 

6. This press release and other Treasury publications and information are available on the Treasury website. If you would like Treasury press releases to be sent to you automatically by e-mail you can subscribe to this service from the press release site on the website.

 

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