BIS: Business Secretary unveils measures that will help deliver the government’s commitment to cut a further £10 billion of red tape.

Comprehensive measures that will help deliver the government’s commitment to cut a further £10 billion of red tape were unveiled today (3 March 2016) at the BCC annual conference by Business Secretary Sajid Javid. The UK already has the lowest burden of regulation in the G7, according to the World Economic Forum. Businesses from across the country have been responding to the Cutting Red Tape review programme to identify further areas in need of reform.   Business Secretary Sajid Javid said:

This government is delivering on its commitment to free firms from £10 billion of heavy-handed over-regulation and build a more productive Britain. Hundreds of businesses responded to our Cutting Red Tape reviews and we are taking decisive action based on their experiences. Whenever we need to introduce new rules, we will consider their impact and make savings elsewhere. Through the Enterprise Bill, we are extending the scope of our deregulation target to cover the actions of regulators, going further than ever before to tackle troublesome red tape.

A One-in, Two-out rule was introduced by the previous administration, which was the first in recent history to reduce the overall burden of regulation on business. The move to One-in, Three-out for new government legislation raises the bar and will help drive delivery of the £10 billion target.

Results from the Cutting Red Tape reviews into the Care, Energy and Waste sectors highlight a range of issues that businesses face when dealing with regulation and its enforcement and implementation.

Actions agreed by government and regulators to help ease these burdens include:

  • the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs will publish new business-focused guidance into the definition of waste and revised guidance for the environmental permitting regime. Delays and unnecessary burdens associated with the permitting system cost legitimate businesses millions of pounds each year.
  • the Department of Health and the Department for Communities and Local Government will lead a programme of work to make sure that the multiple interventions made by public bodies that deal with care homes are targeted, proportionate and co-ordinated. It will seek to make it clear what each agency does, and why.

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