Cable unveils plans to cut red tape
04/06/10 | 18:00
Vince Cable, the business secretary, has announced plans to curb the ‘excessive
regulation that is stifling the growth of small businesses’.
The pledge to
reduce red tape, which is frequently cited by small business owners as the
biggest barrier to hiring staff, follows prime minister David Cameron’s vow to
“re-open Britain for business”.
“The deluge of new regulations has been
choking off enterprise for too long. We must move away from the view that the
only way to solve problems is to regulate,” said Cable.
The coalition’s
‘action plan’ for cutting red tape includes: the creation of a new Cabinet ‘star
chamber’ (the Reducing Regulation Committee), chaired by Cable, which will lead
the efforts to reduce red tape and an immediate review of all pending
legislation inherited from the Labour administration, which the new government
said will cost £19.1bn a year to implement after April 2011.
A new
‘challenge group’, with a mandate to find ways of achieving social and
environmental goals without legislating, will also be established, along with a
‘one-in, one out’ approach to new laws to control the red tape burden and ensure
any new regulatory cost is compensated by cuts to the cost of old
laws.
Cable said that reducing the level of business regulation while
safeguarding protections for consumers and the environment would be “a real
challenge and it will not be easy”, adding that it will require increased social
responsibility on the part of businesses and individuals.
“We need to
reduce regulation and at the same time meet our social and environmental
ambitions. This demands a radical change in culture away from the tick box
approach to regulation only as a last resort. It’s a big task but one worth
striving for.”
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