New approach to ensure regulators and regulation support growth (HTML)
Why linked: HTML version of the same Action Plan — included for completeness.
In response to: A new approach to ensure regulators and regulation support growth
The Regulating for Growth Bill, announced in the King's Speech 2026, would strengthen the statutory Growth Duty on named regulators (including Natural England, the Environment Agency and the Health and Safety Executive), give ministers a new statutory power to issue strategic steers, and create cross-economy 'sandboxing powers' enabling existing rules to be temporarily relaxed for live-market trials of new products and technologies.
The Bill is the legislative vehicle for the Government's Regulation Action Plan agenda — recasting regulator behaviour towards growth and innovation across the economy, with material implications for sandbox-eligible sectors (medicines and medical devices, autonomous maritime/defence, AI) and for the operating model of every regulator inside the strengthened growth duty.
Pre-legislative: announced in the King's Speech on 13 May 2026, building on the October 2025 Regulation Action Plan progress update and the Chancellor's 2026 Mais Lecture commitment to cross-economy sandboxing powers. The Public Accounts Committee has opened an inquiry into 'Regulating for growth' and taken oral evidence on 16 March 2026.
Sets out the Bill's two main limbs: a strengthened Growth Duty (with statutory mandate, reporting and ministerial strategic-steer powers, applied to a named list of regulators including Natural England, EA and HSE) and cross-economy sandbox powers to relax existing rules under strict controls for live-market trials, with successful trials to be quickly embedded in law.
The Government's umbrella policy framework that the Bill is described as building on — sets the direction for regulator growth focus, strategic steers and sandboxing.
Government's umbrella explainer of the Regulation for Growth programme — operational definition of what the Bill is intended to enact.
Establishes the cross-regulator coordination body that the Bill's sandbox powers and strategic-steer mechanism will plug into.
Six-month progress report on the Regulation Action Plan, paired with the Chancellor's 'nearly £6 billion business blitz' announcement; sets up the legislative gap the Bill is intended to fill.
Written ministerial statement by Blair McDougall setting out delivery progress and signalling further legislative action — the WMS that anchors the Bill's lineage in Parliament.
Companion Treasury announcement framing the Bill's policy intent in terms of business-cost reduction.
Announces environmental permitting modernisation following the Corry Review — example of the Bill's strengthened Growth Duty model applied ahead of legislation.
Backbench-driven debate on independent regulatory impact assessment — substantive context for accountability mechanisms the Government Bill may need to address.
PAC report on whether regulators are equipped to adapt to major sectoral change — baseline scrutiny finding that the Bill's strengthened Growth Duty is intended to address.
Live PAC inquiry on whether the regulatory landscape supports growth — the principal Parliamentary scrutiny channel running in parallel with the Bill.
Chancellor's submission to PAC giving the Government's account of Action Plan delivery, setting up the scrutiny terms for the Bill.
Previous Government's progress paper on the Smarter Regulation programme — the direct policy predecessor to Regulation Action Plan and the Bill.
White paper articulating the predecessor policy frame on regulator reform — the legislative scaffolding the current Bill builds on and replaces.
Consultation on revised statutory guidance for the Growth Duty — the policy work that informs the Bill's strengthened Growth Duty limb.
Accepts that emergency legislation should be clear, well-defined and subject to sunset clauses and parliamentary oversight — directly informs the Bill's safeguards and sandbox-trial design.
Worked example of sector-by-sector deregulation paired with Government response; cited in the Action Plan family as a model for the Bill's operating method.
Underlying business-side evidence base on regulatory burden cited in support of the Bill.
BEIS/BRE consultation on the better-regulation framework — the policy lineage that runs into Smarter Regulation and the current Bill.
Final report on the SBEEA 2015 Business Impact Target — the previous statutory burden-target regime that the Action Plan/Bill effectively succeeds.
Brings into force the revised statutory Growth Duty guidance — the current statutory baseline the Bill is intended to strengthen and extend.
Private Member's Bill (Sir Christopher Chope) requiring independent assessment of regulatory costs; sits alongside the Government Bill as a parallel scrutiny vehicle on RIA quality.
Directly underpins the Bill's strengthened Growth Duty limb.
Evidence base the Bill draws on for cross-regulator design.
Precursor consultation on the better-regulation framework that the Bill modernises.
HSE is one of the named lead regulators under the strengthened Growth Duty; the LOLER review is the kind of scope/applicability question the Bill is intended to accelerate.
Same HSE growth-duty pathway — evidence on whether scope/application remains appropriate.
It will give a list of leading regulators such as Natural England, the Environment Agency, and the Health and Safety Executive (HSE), a clear, statutory mandate to prioritise growth…
Why linked: Operationalises the Growth Duty limb of the Bill in the King's Speech briefing.
the Bill will create cross-economy 'sandboxing powers' so that businesses can test cutting-edge new products and technologies safely, prove what works and then scale up delivery of these changes more quickly
Why linked: Sandbox powers are the second pillar of the Bill, announced by the Chancellor in her 2026 Mais Lecture.
The Chancellor today set out the progress that has been made to deliver on the Government's vision for ensuring regulators and regulation support growth
Why linked: WMS HCWS973 framing the legislative trajectory the King's Speech then formalised.
Why linked: HTML version of the same Action Plan — included for completeness.
In response to: A new approach to ensure regulators and regulation support growth
Why linked: King's Speech 2026 Background Briefing Notes explicitly naming 'Regulating for Growth Bill' as a legislative item
The full PDF of the King's Speech 2026 background briefing notes from the Prime Minister's Office, containing dedicated section on the Railways and Passenger Benefits Bill (p.75) setting out the rationale for establishing Great British Railways.
Why linked: Official King's Speech legislative-programme source mentions this thread or its named Bill.
His Majesty’s most gracious speech to both Houses of Parliament.
Why linked: The King's Speech 2026 and official briefing notes announce the Regulating for Growth Bill as part of the government's legislative programme.
The King's Speech 2026 bill to reduce unnecessary regulatory burdens and support innovation-led growth through changes to how regulation is designed and applied.
Why linked: MHRA pre-market medical devices stakeholder impact survey (May 2026) — adjacent regulator activity in one of the Bill's three named sandbox sectors.
MHRA seeks stakeholder evidence on proposed GB pre-market medical device/IVD regulation changes to inform impact assessment; deadline 11:59pm Fri 19 Jun 2026.
Why linked: Solicitors Regulation Authority business plan on regulatory modernisation and improved regulation of legal services aligns with cross-sector regulatory design and application reform within Regulating for Growth scope
We have published our draft Business Plan and funding requirements for 2026/27, setting out our proposed programme of changes to improve how we regulate solicitors and law firms, with a sharper focus on protecting the public from the biggest risks.
Why linked: News item on 'groundbreaking trial' reducing processing times for businesses suggests regulatory efficiency initiative potentially related to burden reduction and modernisation agenda
Businesses see processing times slashed in groundbreaking new trial
Why linked: April 2026 PQ on sector-specific administrative reductions — direct scrutiny on Bill mechanisms.
To ask the Secretary of State for Business and Trade, what assessment he has made of the potential impact of sector-specific administrative cost baselines on measuring the 25% reduction in business compliance costs targeted under the Regulation Action Pla
Why linked: April 2026 PQ on the 25% administration reduction target — direct scrutiny on Bill metrics.
To ask the Secretary of State for Business and Trade, what assessment he has made of the potential impact of the 25% administration reduction target set out in the Regulation Action Plan on the baseline annual compliance costs of small …
Why linked: April 2026 PQ on the Regulation Action Plan and regulatory alignment — direct scrutiny of the Bill's policy area.
To ask the Secretary of State for Business and Trade, what steps his Department is taking through the Regulation Action Plan to align regulatory frameworks with the Modern Industrial Strategy.
Why linked: March 2026 HoL written question on the Action Plan — Lords scrutiny.
To ask His Majesty's Government, with regard to the Action Plan to ensure regulators and regulation support growth, published on 17 March 2025, what assessment they have made of the potential for more novel and contentious funding proposals to drive …
Why linked: Consultation outcome on sunset clauses and emergency legislation—sunset clauses are a legal mechanism explicitly in scope for RFG Bill
The government agrees that the legislative response to emergencies should be clear, well-defined and subject to the appropriate parliamentary oversight. Sunset clauses and duties to report can be useful mechanisms to ensure that this is the case. These have been …
Why linked: Consultation outcome on sunset clauses and emergency legislation—sunset clauses are explicitly in-scope mechanisms
The government agrees that the legislative response to emergencies should be clear, well-defined and subject to the appropriate parliamentary oversight. Sunset clauses and duties to report can be useful mechanisms to ensure that this is the case. These have been …
Why linked: March 2026 PQ on industry discussions on reducing regulatory burden — direct scrutiny of the Bill's policy area.
To ask the Secretary of State for Business and Trade, what recent discussions he has had with industry representatives on reducing regulatory burdens on small businesses.
Why linked: Public Accounts Committee formal evidence session on 'Regulating for growth' inquiry directly related to the Bill
Event type: Formal meeting (oral evidence session) | Committee: Public Accounts Committee | Inquiry: Regulating for growth | Starts: 2026-03-16T15:00:00+00:00 | Ends: 2026-03-16T18:00:00+00:00 | Location: The Grimond Room, Portcullis House | Status: completed
Why linked: March 2026 PQ estimating SMEs affected by regulatory burden — direct PQ on the Bill's quantitative case.
To ask the Secretary of State for Business and Trade, what estimate he has made of the number of small to medium sized enterprises that are planning to close or contract over the 2026-2027 financial year.
Why linked: March 2026 DBT oral session referenced in BTC priorities — committee scrutiny touchpoint.
[ Relevant documents: Thirteenth Report of the Business and Trade Committee, Priorities for the Business and Trade Committee for 2026, HC 1411 ; Oral evidence taken before the Business and Trade Committee on 6 January, on Post Office Horizon scandal: …
Why linked: gov.uk 'Regulation for growth' programme landing page — operational definition of what the Bill is intended to enact.
Understand and engage with the government’s regulation for growth programme, which makes sure that regulation promotes innovation and drives economic growth.
Why linked: PQ on corporate reporting requirements reform for growth—directly relevant to reducing unnecessary compliance burdens
To ask the Secretary of State for Business and Trade, what plans his Department has to reform corporate reporting requirements to support economic growth and competitiveness.
Why linked: PQ on corporate reporting requirements reform for competitiveness—directly relevant to streamlining regulatory compliance
To ask the Secretary of State for Business and Trade, what plans his Department has to reform corporate reporting requirements to support economic growth and competitiveness.
Why linked: Jan 2026 Business Secretary speech on Modern Industrial Strategy and growth — Government framing immediately ahead of the King's Speech.
In a speech to top business leaders the Business Secretary will lay out how the Government’s Modern Industrial Strategy will double down on the UK’s world-leading strengths in 2026 and not only scale up businesses, but keep them anchored in …
Why linked: Parliamentary inquiry on 'Regulating for growth' with substantive content on how regulation affects economic growth and investment
When regulation is carried out well, it can be essential for the promotion of economic growth and investment. Poorly-instituted regulation can depress investment and inhibit growth. There have been nine government initiatives since 2005 aimed at reducing regulatory costs in …
Why linked: Consultation outcome on sunset clauses and emergency legislation oversight—relevant to periodic review and sunset mechanisms in scope
The government agrees that the legislative response to emergencies should be clear, well-defined and subject to the appropriate parliamentary oversight. Sunset clauses and duties to report can be useful mechanisms to ensure that this is the case. These have been …
Why linked: Consultation outcome on sunset clauses and emergency legislation—relevant to periodic review mechanisms explicitly in scope
The government agrees that the legislative response to emergencies should be clear, well-defined and subject to the appropriate parliamentary oversight. Sunset clauses and duties to report can be useful mechanisms to ensure that this is the case. These have been …
Why linked: Letter from the Chancellor and the Secretary of State to PAC on the Regulation Action Plan (21 Oct 2025) — feeds the PAC 'Regulating for growth' inquiry.
Direction: to_committee
Why linked: Letter from Chancellor on Regulation Progress Action Plan - government correspondence documenting regulatory reform implementation
Direction: to_committee
Why linked: Business regulation: business perceptions survey 2024 (Oct 2025) — underlying evidence base on regulatory burden cited in support of the Bill.
Report on a survey of businesses’ views on the extent of regulation in the UK.
Why linked: Filled the "Government deregulation strategy and roadmaps" gap via web research
In response to: A new approach to ensure regulators and regulation support growth
Why linked: Filled the "Government deregulation strategy and roadmaps" gap via web research
An Action Plan setting out the government's approach to regulation and regulators
Why linked: Chancellor's announcement on cutting business bureaucracy and red tape - substantive ministerial statement on regulatory burden reduction aligned with thread scope
The Chancellor will kick off the first ever Regional Investment Summit with a blitz on business bureaucracy announcing further cuts to red tape and promising to save UK firms nearly £6 billion per year by the end of Parliament.
Why linked: Regulation Action Plan Update directly addressing government's vision for regulators and regulation supporting growth - core policy implementation document for Regulating for Growth
UIN: HCWS973 The Chancellor today set out the progress that has been made to deliver on the Government’s vision for ensuring regulators and regulation support growth. The government has published Regulation Action Plan – Progress Update and Next Steps, setting …
Why linked: HSE call for evidence on LOLER scope and application—example of sector-specific regulatory modernisation initiative within 'adjacent material' scope
HSE is gathering information and evidence relating to the Lifting Operations and Lifting Equipment (LOLER) and whether their scope and application are still fit for purpose. This call for evidence aims to gather information and evidence that the HSE will …
Why linked: HSE call for evidence on PSSR scope and application—sector-specific regulatory review to assess fitness for purpose, consistent with RFG modernisation agenda
HSE is gathering information and evidence relating to the Pressure Systems Safety Regulations 2000 (PSSR) and whether their scope and application are still fit for purpose. This call for evidence aims to gather information and evidence that the HSE will …
Why linked: Business and Trade Committee 'Priorities for 2026' written evidence — Committee scrutiny scope including regulatory burden and growth.
The UK economy confronts challenges to growth, weak productivity and fragile investment. Businesses face rising costs, regulatory uncertainty, and a complex trade environment. Yet confidence is central to whether firms invest, recruit and innovate—or hold back. Ahead of the Budget, …
Why linked: Streamlined regulation announcement following Corry Review for environmental permitting modernisation - substantive regulatory modernisation initiative within thread scope
Environmental permitting for industry and energy to be modernised, as part of new plans following the landmark Corry Review
Why linked: Filled the "Sector-specific regulatory modernisation initiatives" gap via web research
In response to: Licensing taskforce report and government response
Why linked: Regulatory Innovation Office announcement - establishment of institutional mechanism to streamline regulation and support innovation, directly aligned with thread scope
Regulatory Innovation Office to partner with Digital Regulation Cooperation Forum to cut red tape, and support fintech innovation, fuelling government plan for Plan for Change.
Why linked: Competition watchdog growth-focused Strategic Steer (May 2025) — first live application of the type of ministerial steer the Bill formalises.
Businesses and consumers will benefit from new growth-focused Strategic Steer set for the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA), in the latest step of the government’s agenda to reform regulation to drive growth as part of the plan for change.
Why linked: Written question to DBT on regulatory cost reduction target - parliamentary scrutiny of regulatory burden reduction commitments
To ask the Secretary of State for Business and Trade, pursuant to the Answer of 8 April 2025 to Question 43474 on Business: Regulation, whether the target to reduce the cost of compliance will be net of the cost of …
Why linked: May 2025 PQ on Action Plan section 2 action 1 — direct scrutiny on Action Plan delivery.
To ask the Secretary of State for Business and Trade, with reference to section 2, action 1 of his Department's policy paper entitled New approach to ensure regulators and regulation support growth, published on 17 March 2025, what methodology his …
Why linked: April 2025 PQ on the regulatory impact of the Employment Rights Bill — RIA practice signalled in the Bill's policy frame.
To ask the Secretary of State for Business and Trade, what assessment his Department has made of the potential impact of the Employment Rights Bill on business confidence and growth.
Why linked: Written question referencing 'New approach to ensure regulators and regulation support growth' policy paper - parliamentary scrutiny of core policy document
To ask the Chancellor of the Exchequer, with reference to section five of the policy paper entitled New approach to ensure regulators and regulation support growth, updated on 31 March 2025, whether she made an assessment of the potential merits …
Why linked: April 2025 PQ on Action Plan implementation by MHCLG — cross-departmental scrutiny on the Action Plan the Bill builds on.
To ask the Secretary of State for Housing, Communities and Local Government, with reference to the policy paper entitled New approach to ensure regulators and regulation support growth, published on 17 March 2025, what steps her Department is taking to …
Why linked: April 2025 PQ on Action Plan implementation by Defra — cross-departmental scrutiny.
To ask the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affair, with reference to his Department’s publication entitled New approach to ensure regulators and regulation support growth, published 17 March 2025, what assessment he has made of the pote
Why linked: Written question on 25% reduction metric for regulatory costs - parliamentary scrutiny of Regulating for Growth targets
To ask the Secretary of State for Business and Trade, pursuant to the Answer of 1 April 2025 to Question 40907 on Business: Regulation, what metric is used for the 25% reduction from 2005 to 2010; whether it was gross …
Why linked: Environmental permit reforms to reduce red tape—sector-specific implementation of regulatory modernisation agenda aligned with Regulating for Growth
UK and Welsh Governments launch joint consultation to reform environmental permitting regulations, supporting UK Government’s Plan for Change
Why linked: Written question referencing 'New approach to ensure regulators and regulation support growth' policy paper - parliamentary scrutiny of regulatory modernisation framework
To ask the Secretary of State for Housing, Communities and Local Government, with reference to section one of the policy paper entitled A new approach to ensure regulators and regulation support growth, published on 17 March 2025, if she will …
Why linked: Written question on DBT methodology for identifying unnecessary regulations - parliamentary scrutiny of regulatory reform approach
To ask the Secretary of State for Business and Trade, what methodology his Department uses to identify potentially unnecessary regulations.
Why linked: PQ on routine independent assessments of regulatory costs—parliamentary scrutiny directly relevant to regulatory impact assessment framework reform
To ask the Secretary of State for Business and Trade, whether his Department plans to require routine independent assessments of regulatory costs.
Why linked: Written question to Secretary of State for Business and Trade on accountability measures for regulatory impact assessments, core to RFG scope
To ask the Secretary of State for Business and Trade, what accountability measures exist for civil servants producing regulatory impact assessments.
Why linked: PQ referencing 'A new approach to ensure regulators and regulation support growth' policy paper—directly cites government regulatory reform strategy
To ask the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, with reference to the policy paper entitled A new approach to ensure regulators and regulation support growth, published on 17 March 2025, which public body will be designated …
Why linked: Written question on abolishing Office of the Regulator of Community Interest Companies—relates to potential regulatory reform via the Bill
To ask the Secretary of State for Business and Trade, what estimate he has made of the potential savings to the public purse of abolishing the Office of the Regulator of Community Interest Companies.
Why linked: Announcement on proposed merger of CIC Regulator to Companies House—relates to regulatory modernisation and restructuring within scope
The proposed merger of the Office of The Regulator of Community Interest Companies to Companies House
Why linked: Feb 2025 PQ on protecting small businesses from regulatory burden — substantive PQ on the Bill's policy area.
To ask the Secretary of State for Business and Trade, what steps he is taking to help protect small businesses from regulatory burden.
Why linked: Letter from Secretary of State on Smarter Regulation Programme—directly relevant to regulatory reform and burden reduction agenda
Direction: to_committee
Why linked: Call for evidence on smarter regulation and regulatory landscape—core consultation input to the Regulating for Growth programme
Call for evidence on what works and what could be improved across the landscape of UK regulators.
Why linked: gov.uk 'Smarter regulation' programme page — operational continuity with the current programme.
This page sets out how the UK government’s smarter regulation programme seeks to reduce burdens on businesses and promote innovation and growth.
Why linked: May 2024 'Brexit freedoms used to slash red tape' announcement — predecessor framing of the Bill's burden-reduction theme.
Business Secretary raises the bar for any new business regulations, in the latest step to help British businesses flourish.
Why linked: Executive summary of the May 2024 Smarter Regulation white paper — analyst-readable shorthand.
Executive summary of the May 2024 Smarter Regulation white paper — analyst-readable shorthand.
In response to: Smarter regulation: delivering a regulatory environment for innovation, investment and gr…
Why linked: Smarter regulation: delivering a regulatory environment for innovation, investment and growth (May 2024 white paper) — predecessor white paper feeding the current Bill.
This white paper covers government’s aims to ensure the UK regulatory landscape delivers a world class service.
Why linked: Smarter Regulation: one year on - substantive policy progress report on regulatory reform programme directly related to Regulating for Growth agenda
This details the progress so far on the government's Smarter Regulation programme, which is designed to re-energise regulatory reform and capitalise on the benefits of Brexit.
Why linked: The Deregulation Act 2015 (Growth Duty Guidance) Order 2024 — current operative statutory growth-duty guidance the Bill will strengthen.
This Order revokes the guidance brought into force under S.I. 2017/268 and brings into force new guidance issued by the Secretary of State under section 110(1) of the Deregulation Act 2015 (“the Act”).
Why linked: Consultation outcome on 'Smarter regulation: regulating for growth' and revised statutory guidance for the growth duty—core to the Bill's regulatory design framework
We’re seeking views on revised statutory guidance for the growth duty.
Why linked: Written question referencing Department for Business and Trade's 'Regulating for Growth Consultation' response, directly on-topic
To ask the Secretary of State for Business and Trade, with reference to paragraph 102 of her Department's response to the Regulating for Growth Consultation, published in February 2024, what her planned timetable is for laying secondary legislation to ext
Why linked: Nov 2023 consultation extending the Growth Duty to Ofgem, Ofwat and Ofcom — informs scope of the Bill's named-regulator list.
We’re seeking views on extending the growth duty to include the following economic regulators: Ofgem, Ofwat and Ofcom.
Why linked: Nov 2023 Chancellor/Secretary letter on Growth Duty reporting — directly informs the Bill's Growth Duty reporting limb.
The government outlines potential approaches to Growth Duty reporting in this letter from the Chancellor and the Secretary of State for Business and Trade to regulators in scope of the Growth Duty, and to Ofgem, Ofwat and Ofcom.
Why linked: Parliamentary debate on Regulatory Impact Assessments Bill—related legislation affecting regulatory appraisal frameworks within scope
Second Reading 12:43:00 Sir Christopher Chope (Christchurch) (Con): This Bill has not had the benefit of being discussed previously, but I think it is a very important issue and I am delighted that we have the opportunity to give it …
Why linked: Plan for Digital Regulation (2023) — sectoral worked example of the cross-economy approach.
The Plan for Digital Regulation sets out the government’s overall approach for governing digital technologies in order to drive growth and innovation.
Why linked: AI regulation: a pro-innovation approach (2023) — sandbox-relevant predecessor white paper for the AI sandbox limb.
This white paper details our plans for implementing a pro-innovation approach to AI regulation. We're seeking views through a supporting consultation.
Why linked: May 2023 announcement on cutting Brexit reporting burdens — earliest articulation of the Bill's underlying policy story.
Plans unveiled to ease costly reporting burdens on business, freeing up companies to focus on growth.
Why linked: May 2023 'Smarter regulation unveiled' announcement — earliest cross-government articulation of the Bill's direction.
Initial package of regulatory reform will reduce unnecessary regulation for businesses, cutting costs and allowing them to compete
Why linked: Alternative 2023 'Smarter regulation to grow the economy' release — covers the same policy pivot.
Alternative 2023 'Smarter regulation to grow the economy' release — covers the same policy pivot.
In response to: Smarter regulation to grow the economy
Why linked: Smarter regulation to grow the economy (May 2023 policy paper) — direct policy predecessor of the Regulation Action Plan and the Bill.
An introduction to the UK government’s vision for regulation.
Why linked: Analysis of post-Brexit regulatory landscape changes—substantive context on regulatory modernisation and harmonisation challenges
The regulatory landscape has changed significantly for many industries following the UK’s exit from the European Union. Witnesses representing business sectors acknowledged the need for effective regulation, but they were clear that it needed to be appropriate and developed by …
Why linked: Better regulation annual report 2021–2022 covering Business Impact Target to reduce regulatory burdens—foundational to RFG Bill's regulatory burden reduction agenda
Annual progress report on the business impact target (BIT) to reduce unnecessary regulatory burdens on business.
Why linked: Business Impact Target annual reports—track record of reducing unnecessary regulatory burdens, directly relevant to RFG Bill context
Annual progress reports on the business impact target (BIT) to reduce unnecessary regulatory burdens on business.
Why linked: ToR for the review of regulation for emerging technologies — informs the Bill's sandbox sector list.
Terms of reference for the review of how the UK can better regulate emerging technologies
Why linked: Business Impact Target Final Report - statutory framework for regulatory burden measurement under Small Business, Enterprise and Employment Act 2015, directly relevant to regulatory appraisal mechanisms in scope
Under the Small Business, Enterprise and Employment Act 2015, a new government is required to set a target for the economic impact on business of qualifying regulatory provisions made during the course of the Parliament – this is the Business …
Why linked: Principles of effective regulation document—foundational guidance on how regulators should adapt and operate, directly relevant to regulatory design reform
Regulators may fail to protect citizens, businesses and the environment if they do not successfully adapt to major changes in their sectors. To remain effective, 6 Principles of effective regulation regulators must adapt and respond to change. Rapid technological development …
Why linked: 2021 consultation on 'Reforming the framework for better regulation' - precursor policy development work on regulatory reform
Our exit from the EU provides us with the opportunity to think boldly about how we regulate and for the first time in a generation, we have the freedom to conceive and implement rules that put the UK first. We …
Why linked: July 2021 plan for innovation-focused digital regulation — sectoral instance of the same policy lineage.
A new plan to boost economic growth and help the country seize the potential of digital technology will be launched.
Why linked: June 2021 Taskforce on Innovation, Growth and Regulatory Reform — substantive policy lineage for cross-economy regulatory reform.
The Taskforce on Innovation, Growth and Regulatory Reform has reported its recommendations to the Prime Minister on how the UK can reshape regulation and seize new opportunities from Brexit.
Why linked: March 2021 PQ referencing the Global Britain, Local Jobs report on regulatory reform — earlier scrutiny in the same lineage.
To ask the Secretary of State for International Trade, with reference to page 25 of the Board of Trade’s Global Britain, Local Jobs report, what current UK regulations she has assessed (a) are not proportionate or (b) place too large …
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The Regulating for Growth Bill, announced in the King's Speech on 13 May 2026 1, is the Government's legislative vehicle for the Regulation Action Plan agenda set out by the Chancellor and the Department for Business and Trade (DBT) since spring 2025 23. It has two main limbs. First, a strengthened statutory Growth Duty on a named list of lead regulators — explicitly including Natural England, the Environment Agency and the Health and Safety Executive — alongside a new ministerial power to issue formal Strategic Steers, with reporting requirements 1. Second, cross-economy 'sandboxing powers' enabling existing rules to be temporarily relaxed for live-market trials, with priority use-cases in medicines and medical devices, Maritime Autonomous Surface Shipping (MASS) and defence technology, and AI 1. The Government frames the Bill as agility reform, not deregulation, preserving consumer, worker and human-rights protections 1. The Public Accounts Committee (PAC) is running a parallel scrutiny inquiry 45.
The Bill is at the pre-legislative scrutiny stage. The King's Speech 2026 background briefing notes 1 confirm the policy design and name three lead regulators; the speech text itself places the Bill in the legislative programme. The Bill builds explicitly on the Regulation Action Plan published in March 2025 2 and updated on 22 October 2025 3, the latter accompanied by then-Minister for Small Business and Economic Transformation Blair McDougall's written ministerial statement HCWS973 4 and the Chancellor's 'nearly £6 billion business blitz' announcement 5. The strengthened Growth Duty extends an existing statutory duty under the Deregulation Act 2015 — the current operative version of the guidance is the Deregulation Act 2015 (Growth Duty Guidance) Order 2024, which followed the April 2024 'Smarter regulation: regulating for growth' consultation outcome on revised statutory guidance 6. The sandbox limb was previewed by the Chancellor in the 2026 Mais Lecture and is intended to generalise the sector-specific sandbox model exemplified by the May 2025 CMA Strategic Steer and the July 2025 Regulatory Innovation Office launch 7. The Public Accounts Committee opened its 'Regulating for growth' inquiry in December 2025 8 and held an oral evidence session on 16 March 2026 9; the Chancellor's October 2025 letter to PAC on Action Plan progress 10 is the Government's principal scrutiny submission.
The May 2026 King's Speech is the headline development 1. In the run-up, the Government press notice 'Businesses see processing times slashed in groundbreaking trial' on 6 May 2026 2 flagged early proof-of-concept claims for the sandbox model. The Government response to the Covid-19 Inquiry Module 2 report (Nov 2025, refreshed March 2026) 34 accepted that emergency legislation should be clear, well-defined and subject to sunset clauses and parliamentary oversight — a design constraint that will inform the sandbox power's safeguards. The PAC oral evidence session on 16 March 2026 5 reopened questions about regulator readiness first raised in the Committee's September 2021 report on regulators adapting to change 6. Earlier in the Action Plan trajectory, the August 2025 environmental permitting modernisation announcement following the Corry Review 7, the August 2025 Licensing Taskforce report 8 and the July 2025 launch of the Regulatory Innovation Office 9 together set out the operating model the Bill is intended to entrench in statute.
The first material milestone is publication of the Bill text, Explanatory Notes and — critically — the Delegated Powers Memorandum 1. The sandbox power is a wide delegated-powers grant: it allows primary and secondary legislation to be temporarily disapplied and successful trials to be 'quickly embedded' in law, so the Delegated Powers and Regulatory Reform Committee (DPRRC) and the Secondary Legislation Scrutiny Committee (SLSC) will be central to its scrutiny. The operative list of regulators in scope of the strengthened Growth Duty is the second item to watch — the Briefing names three 'such as' but does not publish the list 1. Practitioners advising clients in environmental permitting, health and safety, medicines and medical devices, maritime autonomous shipping and defence tech should expect the Government to use ministerial Strategic Steers (on the CMA model ) as non-statutory pre-figurations of the new power. PAC will report on 'Regulating for growth' following its March 2026 oral evidence 2, which will pressure-test the £6bn business-cost claim 3 against measurable outcomes. The MHRA's pre-market medical devices stakeholder impact survey is a leading indicator for medicines-sandbox design. Finally, the interaction with the backbench Regulatory Impact Assessments Bill (Bill 101 2024-25) [61714]4 is worth watching: if Government wants to defuse scrutiny over RIA quality at pace, it may concede ground on independent RIA review.
The principal uncertainty is scope — the King's Speech briefing names three regulators but does not publish the full list, and devolution carve-outs (e.g. Wales-specific regulated-services regulations, separate Scottish frameworks) are not addressed in the corpus. Sandbox safeguards are described in general terms ('strict controls', consumer/worker/human-rights protections) but the operating mechanism for embedding successful trials at pace is undefined, which is a delegated-powers risk. The Government frames the Bill as 'not deregulation', but the strengthened Growth Duty plus the strategic-steer power increase ministerial leverage over independent regulators — that tension was already visible in the May 2025 CMA Strategic Steer. Inferred from corpus gap: no published Government Impact Assessment for the Bill itself is yet in the corpus, and no published list of in-scope regulators is yet available. Inferred from corpus gap: the corpus is also light on substantive third-party (industry-association, civil-society, trade-union) responses to the Bill design, which a fuller briefing would want to cover.
This workspace covers the cross-economy Regulating for Growth Bill and its umbrella programme (Regulation Action Plan, Smarter Regulation predecessor, Better Regulation Framework). It does not cover the King's Speech's separate Small Business Protections (Late Payments) Bill, the substantive content of sector-specific regulations being reviewed under the Bill's logic (e.g. LOLER, PSSR, environmental permitting reforms — referenced only for stakeholder mapping), or financial-services prudential regulation, which is out of scope under the thread definition.
Bills and Acts this regime substantively depends on. Links go to the bill's own thread on this site (where available) and to bills.parliament.uk.
The Bill itself — announced in the King's Speech 2026; not yet introduced and so no Parliament Bill id assigned.
Contains the existing statutory Growth Duty (s.108 et seq.) on non-economic regulators which the Bill strengthens; revised statutory guidance brought into force by the Deregulation Act 2015 (Growth Duty Guidance) Order 2024.
Established the Business Impact Target regime for measuring and reporting the economic impact of qualifying regulatory provisions — the operational predecessor accountability framework superseded by the Regulation Action Plan and the Bill.
Private Member's Bill sponsored by Sir Christopher Chope requiring independent assessment of regulatory costs; runs in parallel to the Government Bill and is the principal backbench scrutiny vehicle on RIA quality.
The Regulating for Growth Bill sits at the apex of a multi-year, multi-instrument programme to recast the relationship between UK regulators and the duty to promote growth. Three doctrinal layers stack underneath it.
First, the duty layer. The Deregulation Act 2015 already imposes a 'growth duty' on a schedule of non-economic regulators to have regard to the desirability of promoting economic growth; statutory guidance was revised in 2024 by the Deregulation Act 2015 (Growth Duty Guidance) Order 2024 [candpk=43255]. The Bill upgrades 'have regard to' into a statutory mandate to prioritise growth, applies it to a named list including Natural England, the Environment Agency and the Health and Safety Executive, and bolts on reporting requirements and a new statutory ministerial power to issue strategic steers — a power the Government has been exercising non-statutorily through, for example, the May 2025 CMA Strategic Steer [candpk=250205].
Second, the sandbox layer. The Bill creates cross-economy 'sandboxing powers' enabling existing rules to be temporarily relaxed under strict controls for live-market trials. This is a wide delegated-powers grant: it allows primary and secondary legislation to be modified or suspended for testing purposes, with a fast-track mechanism to embed successful trials permanently. The doctrinal predecessor is the FCA Innovate sandbox model; the Bill's novelty is applying it cross-economy with named priority sectors (medicines and medical devices, autonomous maritime and defence, AI).
Third, the accountability/safeguards layer. Successful sandbox trials are intended to be 'quickly embedded' in law — meaning the Bill will engage delegated-powers scrutiny by the Delegated Powers and Regulatory Reform Committee and the Secondary Legislation Scrutiny Committee. The October 2025 PAC inquiry into 'Regulating for growth' 1 and the Chancellor's accompanying correspondence to PAC 2 indicate that PAC will be the principal value-for-money scrutiny channel; the Public Accounts Committee's earlier finding that regulators were under-adapted to sectoral change 3 is part of the evidence base.
The Bill is explicitly framed as 'not deregulation' 4: the strengthened Growth Duty preserves core protective functions and the sandbox powers operate under safeguards including consumer, worker and human-rights protections. Practitioners should read it as a procedural and behavioural reform of regulator decision-making, not a substantive lowering of substantive standards in any one sector.
A statutory mandate on a named list of leading regulators (Natural England, Environment Agency, HSE and others) to prioritise growth in regulatory decision-making, alongside reporting requirements and core protective duties.
A formal direction from a Minister to a regulator setting out the Government's expectations for how the regulator should interpret and apply its growth duty in different sectoral contexts.
A statutory power to temporarily relax or suspend existing rules under strict controls so that businesses can trial new products and technologies in real-world settings.
The cross-government framework for appraising the costs and benefits of regulatory proposals, including Regulatory Impact Assessments, Green Book appraisal and the SBEEA 2015 Business Impact Target reporting regime.
First Reading of the Regulating for Growth Bill and publication of the Bill text, Explanatory Notes and Delegated Powers Memorandum.
Publication of the operative list of regulators in scope of the strengthened Growth Duty (beyond Natural England, EA, HSE named in the briefing).
Public Accounts Committee report on 'Regulating for growth' following the March 2026 oral evidence session.
Operational design of priority sandbox cohorts (medicines/medical devices including AI; MASS; cross-cutting AI sandboxes).
MHRA response to the pre-market medical devices stakeholder impact survey (closed May 2026) feeding into the medicines sandbox design.
Further ministerial Strategic Steers to regulators (post-CMA model) as non-statutory dry runs for the Bill's strategic-steer power.
On the Bill overall: presents the package as 'not deregulation' but as agility reform — strengthened Growth Duty plus cross-economy sandbox powers, with named priority sectors (medicines, autonomous maritime/defence, AI), explicitly preserving consumer, worker and human-rights protections.May 2026Oct 2025Oct 2025
On the sandbox limb and on regulator strategic steers: framed by the Chancellor as a 'nearly £6 billion business blitz' on red tape, with sandbox powers announced as a Mais Lecture commitment — Treasury owns the growth-cost narrative that underpins the Bill.Oct 2025Oct 2025Oct 2025
On Regulation Action Plan delivery and the Bill's lineage: HCWS973 (21 Oct 2025) sets out delivery progress and signals further legislative action — the WMS that anchors the Bill in Parliament.Oct 2025
On regulator readiness and value for money: opened a 'Regulating for growth' inquiry in December 2025 and took oral evidence on 16 March 2026; sits on the back of earlier PAC findings that regulators were under-adapted to sectoral change. Approaches the Bill from a scrutiny posture, pressing on whether the Action Plan is delivering measurable outcomes.Dec 2025Mar 2026Sep 2021Oct 2025
On RIA quality and independence: sponsor of the Regulatory Impact Assessments Bill (Bill 101 2024-25), arguing that regulatory impact assessments should be subject to independent assessment of cost and quality — implicit pressure that the Government Bill should not weaken RIA discipline even as it accelerates rule-making.Oct 2023
On the strengthened Growth Duty: concurrently running LOLER and PSSR calls for evidence (closed Oct 2025) reviewing scope and applicability of safety SIs — a worked example of growth-duty-aligned regulator behaviour ahead of the Bill.Oct 2025Oct 2025May 2026
On environmental permitting reform: the EA is the lead regulator behind the April 2025 environmental permitting consultation and the August 2025 modernisation announcement following the Corry Review — the most developed worked example of the Bill's growth-duty model.Apr 2025Aug 2025
On cross-regulator streamlining: established July 2025 to streamline regulation in partnership with the Digital Regulation Cooperation Forum — operational platform that the Bill's strategic-steer and sandbox machinery is likely to plug into.Jul 2025