Trust Magazine

The Role of Efficient Regulation in Building Vibrant Economies

In this Issue:

  • Fall 2019
  • Congress Passes the Largest Conservation Bill in a Decade
  • 10 Years After Great Recession Ends States Still Feel Its Effects
  • Philadelphia: A City In Motion
  • What a Difference a Decade Makes
  • The Big Picture
  • Noteworthy
  • The Role of Efficient Regulation in Building Vibrant Economies
  • The World’s Population Is Projected to Nearly Stop Growing by the End of the Century
  • Public Sees Benefits to Resolving Civil Court Cases Online
  • New Jersey Reform Leader Says Better Data Strengthened Bail System
  • Using Data to Help Improve Public Pensions
  • Religious Views on Evolution Depends on How They’re Asked
  • Housing Crunch Sends Bigger Populations to Smaller Towns
  • Return on Investment
  • Improving Public Policy
  • Informing The Public
  • Invigorating Civic Life
  • Screen Time Increasing For Older Americans
  • View All Other Issues
The Role of Efficient Regulation in Building Vibrant Economies

State lawmakers and economic development managers are always looking for opportunities to improve the regulatory climate for businesses. But too often, proposed solutions set up a false choice between growing the economy and adequately protecting public health, the environment, and consumers. The result is an unproductive debate between eliminating as many rules as possible and preserving each one at all costs.

Advocates for less regulation sometimes ignore the important reasons that rules are put in place. Efficient regulatory systems with strong management oversight help to minimize negative impacts while providing fair “rules of the game,” giving businesses less to fear from competitors who might exploit dysfunctional regulatory systems to cut their costs unfairly.

But governments can undermine opportunities for investment and job creation when businesses are forced to spend too much time or money navigating inefficient or unnecessary regulatory processes, or when new projects are delayed or canceled because companies don’t understand how to comply with the rules—or can’t afford to.

As recent research by The Pew Charitable Trusts illustrates, improvements in how regulatory agencies interact with businesses can make launching a company or bringing an innovative product to market quicker and easier. And by administering regulations more effectively and partnering with the private sector, states can lower compliance costs for businesses while still achieving important goals such as protecting the environment and public health.

While states’ attempts to improve how they regulate business are still in the early stages, policymakers now have a wide range of inventive and successful ideas to emulate. In 2017, Colorado agencies reported saving businesses 2.3 million hours, largely by eliminating unnecessary administrative tasks and making the companies’ dealings with the state more user-friendly. For example, the state reached out to large employers of pharmacists and through their insights learned about cumbersome licensing processes that were causing delays in hiring. Ultimately, the state was able to reduce the time to get a pharmacist license from 114 days to 18. “That’s just a lot of time and a lot of efficiency that we didn’t know was being wasted out there,” former Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper said at a Pew-hosted event last November.

In 2015, the Arizona Government Transformation Office brought together officials from 23 agencies to work on 40 permit processes. Even though the subject matter of these permits varied by agency, problems such as incomplete applications, excessive handoffs, internal review loops, and poor tracking were found to be slowing virtually every process. At the end of the project, the office reported that the average time to approve or deny a permit was reduced by more than 60 percent.

Another example comes from the Washington State Department of Commerce, which has developed a worksheet for manufacturing firms exploring site options to help them navigate the city, county, state, and federal regulatory requirements of each potential site. Especially valuable for small manufacturers, it provides guidance on how to work with the various agencies as well as estimates of the time and costs for fulfilling regulatory requirements. It’s estimated that the worksheet can save a manufacturer two months in the process of determining whether a potential site would work.

Paying attention to how regulations are implemented is often inexpensive and can even lower costs for governments while yielding value for businesses. Unfortunately, states are not rigorously measuring the results of regulatory reforms, so we don’t know which new approaches provide the greatest economic benefit.

A long-term commitment to improve regulatory processes and outcomes would include setting goals and then monitoring whether these goals have been achieved.

It’s a commitment that governments can’t afford not to make as they work to build more vibrant economies. As Hickenlooper put it, making regulatory operations more efficient is “powerfully essential for a state to grow its economy.”

This article was previously published on pewtrusts.org and appears in this issue of Trust Magazine.

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