Deregulation or simplification will in themselves impose costs on industry in the short term. Regulators should make every effort to limit the costs of compliance with the rules, for example by communicating planned changes in advance, grouping sets of changes together, and minimising the frequency of changes to those where a compelling need and a significant cost benefit has been articulated. That said, regulators should not let short-term costs, or the views of market participants who have ...
Deregulation or simplification will in themselves impose costs on industry in the short term. Regulators should make every effort to limit the costs of compliance with the rules, for example by communicating planned changes in advance, grouping sets of changes together, and minimising the frequency of changes to those where a compelling need and a significant cost benefit has been articulated. That said, regulators should not let short-term costs, or the views of market participants who have already adapted to existing arrangements, limit the scale of their ambition when finding opportunities to genuinely simplify the regulatory framework wit Type: conclusion | Number: 5 | Paragraph: 30 | Response status: under_consideration Government response: We are mindful that our interventions impose costs on the firms that we regulate. We seek to balance these costs with delivering a strong system of regulation that offers long- term certainty to markets and consumers. This is vital to the UK’