OECD Home › Regulatory reform › Publications & Documents › Reports
Reports
29-October-2001
English, , 734kb
This report analyses the institutional set-up and use of policy instruments in Italy. It also includes policy recommendations developed by the OECD during the review process.
29-October-2001
English, , 685kb
Can the national administration ensure that social and economic regulations are based on core principles of good regulation?
29-October-2001
English, , 319kb
Regulatory reform has emerged as an important policy area in OECD and non-OECD countries. Experience shows that institutional capacities and instruments are of crucial importance for a successful regulatory reform policy. This report on Governmen...
This publication explores the nature and impact of rules which affect the structure of public utilities industries. It covers not only the theory behind different forms of separation but also practical experience in a wide variety of countries and sectors.
14-August-2001
English, , 89kb
This Report responds to the 1995 request by OECD Ministers that the OECD examine the significance, direction, and means of reform in regulatory regimes in Member countries.
Related Documents
5-July-2001
Dutch, , 1,132kb
Het voorbije werkjaar kende een moeilijke start.
4-July-2001
English, , 36kb
The US Regulatory Impact Analysis Program as it operates today was established essentially in its present form by President Reagan 20 years ago, less than a month after he took office.
8-June-2001
English, , 465kb
It is vital for South East European countries to manage and track their progress in reform against a coherent set of benchmarks and the Monitoring Instruments serve that purpose.
This review on Ireland presents an integrated assessment of regulatory reform in framework areas such as the quality of the public sector, competition policy and enforcement, and market openness with recommendations for regulatory reform.
22-April-2001
English, , 673kb
Competition policy is central to regulatory reform. Its principles and analysis provide a benchmark for assessing the quality of economic and social regulations. It motivates the application of laws that protect competition, which must be applied vigorously as regulatory reform stimulates structural change so that private market abuses do not reverse the benefits of reform.
Related Documents
Follow us
E-mail Alerts Blogs