Debating the Independent Retrospective Review of Regulations

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The Regulatory Review features the debate over an independent process for reviewing existing rules.

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Advocates and critics of regulation make familiar but competing claims. Either regulations hamper economic growth, or their inadequacies contribute to economic failures. Either regulations stifle innovation, or they are needed to keep us safe.

Of course, all of these claims could be at least partly true, at least with respect to specific types of regulation or different types of public problems. But so far, authoritative answers have remained far too elusive.

Calls for looking back to determine regulation’s positive and negative effects have grown over the last several years. One salient concern centers on the problem of keeping bad regulations on the books. Another focuses on the cumulative burdens created when new rules are piled on top of existing rules.

For at least the last couple of decades, Presidents have attempted to address the problem of regulatory accumulation through executive action calling upon government agencies to review and evaluate the efficacy of their existing stock of rules. The current administration, for example, has launched a major regulatory “lookback” initiative.

More recently, some members of Congress have started discussing possible legislation that would establish a new, independent commission dedicated to the retrospective review of regulations. Such a commission would help determine whether certain existing regulations should be repealed.

The most recent of these legislative proposals is called the “Searching for and Cutting Regulations that are Unnecessarily Burdensome Act” – or the SCRUB Act. Although just a draft bill that has not yet been formally introduced in Congress, the SCRUB Act has already been debated in a legislative hearing convened in February by a House subcommittee. Furthermore, in the House and the Senate similar bills have been introduced that would create a “Regulatory Improvement Commission” to investigate whether certain existing rules ought to be repealed.

How wise are these legislative proposals? Should an independent commission be charged with determining if specific regulations should be “scrubbed?” In this series, The Regulatory Review brings together a varied group of commentators who debate the desirability of an independent process for retrospective review of regulation.

The series features essays on the SCRUB Act model. Taken together, the essays lay bare a full range of viewpoints. The authors represent virtually every side of the debate: those who support the SCRUB Act; those who favor the general approach but see better alternatives; and those who oppose altogether to the idea of charging an independent entity with the task of reviewing and “scrubbing” existing regulations. We begin by featuring the case for such independent review, and then we follow with commentary against the SCRUB Act and its general approach.


It’s Past Time to Address Regulatory Duplication

May 19, 2014  |  Sam Batkins

The House Judiciary Committee recently released draft legislation to address regulatory duplication. The SCRUB Act would establish an independent commission to examine rules that “are not justified by the benefits.” Scrutinizing duplication through retrospective review is a critically important task.


Congressional Action Needed to Deal with Regulatory Accumulation

May 20, 2014  |  Patrick A. McLaughlin

The existing regulatory process keeps most people’s attention focused on new rulemakings, but some recent legislative proposals have helpfully contemplated changes to that process that would increase the role for retrospective review of the existing stock of regulations.


A Politically and Technically Feasible Approach for Handling Regulatory Accumulation 

March 21, 2014  |  Michael Mandel & Diana Carew

Regulatory accumulation threatens the pace of innovation and growth in America, yet previous attempts to address it have proven unsuccessful. That is why we propose a new approach.


The Real “Tsunami” in Federal Regulatory Policy 

May 22, 2014  | Rena Steinzor

The federal regulatory system is in crisis. For the past several decades, a damaging set of mandates has continued to pile up on the books: “lookback” or “retrospective review” requirements.


An Independent Commission Should Suggest, Not Determine, Rule Rescissions

May 23, 2014  |  Ronald M. Levin

The SCRUB Act contains some particularly ill-considered provisions….Although the Regulatory Improvement Act is drafted with greater restraint, ultimately both bills share some of the same inherent flaws.

Photo credits: Architect of the Capitol.