Press release: Chancellor calls on watchdog bosses to tear down regulatory barriers that hold back growth
Chancellor pledges to work with regulators to develop ambitious
reforms.
Today’s (16 January) summit marks the first in a
series of meetings with the regulators ahead of publishing action
plan.
Reeves welcomes initial ideas from regulators to boost
innovation and investment, but pushes for more ambition.
In a
meeting hosted by the Chancellor of the Exchequer and Secretary of
State for Business and Trade, chief executives at watchdogs covering
sectors including railways, water, energy and aviation were told that
economic growth is the absolute top priority for the government, as
part of the Plan for Change, putting more money in people’s pockets.
The meeting was the first in a series following a joint letter
from the Prime Minister, Chancellor and Secretary of State for
Business and Trade in December, in which the government asked the
regulators to each propose five reforms to support growth in the
coming year. Over the coming weeks, 17 regulators will be called in to
have their proposals scrutinised as the government leaves no stone
unturned to deliver growth.
At the meeting today, the
Chancellor told the regulators that they would have a key role to play
in delivering growth by helping to create a regulatory environment
that unlocks innovation and investment, supports businesses to thrive
and allows much needed infrastructure to be built.
The
regulators agreed with the Chancellor that they have a role to play in
driving growth but highlighted that there are some barriers, including
the need to balance growth with their other legal responsibilities.
The Chancellor noted that the regulators’ responsibilities had
accumulated over time and said she was open to hearing about where
this was preventing them from taking clear, consistent and balanced
actions to drive growth.
She emphasised the importance of
leadership to deliver a mindset shift on regulation, calling on each
of the CEOs in the room to institute cultural change based on helping
to deliver growth instead of excessively focusing on risk.
The Chancellor also promised that the government would work
with them to develop and deliver important reforms by playing its
part, including by making time for legislation where it is needed or
using the upcoming Spending Review, and noted the Prime Minister’s
promise to rip up regulation that blocks investment to make the
regulatory regime fit for the modern age.
The Chancellor was
clear that while some of the proposals already put forward were
promising, she wanted to see greater ambition and urgency to drive
economic growth. She emphasised that fresh ideas were needed and noted
that the Government will also ask industry to come forward with their
own ideas to deliver a more growth supportive regulatory environment.
She highlighted some specific and promising ideas she had
heard from the regulators today. These included: driving greater
responsiveness to business demands, particularly on planning and
license applications; grant funding administered by Ofwat to drive
innovation in the water sector supply chain; energy tariff reform;
increasing access to rail operator efficiency data and innovative
drone solutions which would unlock growth in the public sector.
The regulators agreed to continue working with the government
on their proposals reform ahead of publishing an action plan in
Spring, and welcomed today’s strategic discussion.
The
Chancellor finished the meeting by reiterating that leadership
matters, noting that every regulator would have to play their part to
improve living standards across the country.
Following the
meeting, Chancellor of the Exchequer, Rachel Reeves
said:
There’s no substitute for growth. It’s the only way to
create more jobs and put more money in people’s pockets, which is why
it’s at the heart of our Plan for Change.
Every regulator, no
matter what sector, has a part to play by tearing down the regulatory
barriers that hold back growth. I want to see this mission woven into
the very fabric of our regulators through a cultural shift from
excessively focusing on risk to helping drive growth.