« New administrative law articles | Main | Statutory interpretation: Birk on public choice textualism »

November 29, 2010

Policy: State regulation report card from the Institute for Policy Integrity

From the Institute for Policy Integrity at NYU School of Law, Jason A. Schwartz, 52 Experiments with Regulatory Review:  The Political and Economic Inputs into State Rulemaking (November 16th, 2010).

Nearly twenty percent of the American economy is regulated by state governments. But there are major concerns about how regulatory decisions are made. Although states routinely regulate industries whose economic footprints climb into the hundreds of millions of dollars, these rules are often made ad hoc, risking inefficient results that limit public benefit.

After more than a year of research, surveys, and analysis, Policy Integrity is the first to compile the regulatory practices of all fifty states (plus D.C. and Puerto Rico) in one document. Comparing each set of laws and guidelines on paper to direct feedback from leaders on the ground, the report assigns states a grade based on an evaluation of the quality of their review process. The results of “52 Experiments with Regulatory Review,” which finds signficant flaws with state level regulatory review, indicate that billions of dollars and important environmental and public health protections are at risk. States earned an average grade of “D+” with the lowest possible grade being a “D-.”

Download the report as a PDF file here. EMM

November 29, 2010 in Agency Decisionmaking, State Agencies & Cases, Think Tank Reports | Permalink

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d8341bfae553ef0134899c2761970c

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Policy: State regulation report card from the Institute for Policy Integrity:

Comments

Post a comment