Government approaches to simplification and regulatory burden reduction serve a spectrum of objectives and needs and utilise various tools. Often, concepts overlap, definitions across countries vary and there can be a lack of clarity as to their ultimate objective in public discourse.
This typology aims to clarify key approaches and tools across this spectrum (Figure A.1). It draws on a draft prepared for the 32nd session of the Regulatory Policy Committee in April 2025 [GOV/RPC/RD(2025)1] and subsequent written feedback received by RPC delegates.
Moving from left to right, the focus shifts from reducing procedural burdens to the removal of regulations and underlying policy intent altogether. It is important to recognise that many of the tools cannot be strictly tied to just one dimension. For example, whether one-in, x-out approaches, sunset clauses and regulatory guillotines are used to address regulatory burdens while maintaining or removing original policy objectives ultimately depends on the political motives driving reform. For this reason, the revised version no longer links individual simplification and burden reduction tools to a single approach, but lists them in alphabetical order.
While the typology heavily draws on existing OECD work, it should be considered a living document to inform discussions and help promote a common understanding of approaches and tools used, as well as their respective objectives and limitations.