House of Lords Report Warns on Over-Regulation Driving Investors Away

If you create a hostile environment for businesses and risk-takers, with high taxation and regulation at every turn, plus increased taxes on CGT and Dividends, then don’t be surprised if entrepreneurs choose to locate their insurtech start-up well away from London. Fact.
Here’s the word from the Lords Committee;
A House of Lords Committee has warned that a combination of unclear guidance from Government, legislative restrictions and the need to balance growth with their other duties might result in regulators failing to meet the Government’s call for them to facilitate innovation and growth. Any such failure could drive new investment away from the UK.
In ‘Time is money: How regulators can support growth’, a report published today (Tuesday 12 May), the cross-party House of Lords Industry and Regulators Committee calls on the Government to give clear guidance to regulators on trade-offs between supporting economic growth and their other responsibilities, such as consumer and environmental protections. The Committee says regulators need to provide speed and certainty in their decision making to help businesses make investments.

The Committee also urges on the Government to:

  • provide political cover where it wants a regulator to be more open to risk;
  • legislate to ensure the regulatory framework can adapt to new technologies, products and services, if necessary through a Regulatory Reform Bill;

  • estimate the extent to which the Government’s Action Plan will reduce the actual cost of compliance with regulation, rather than just the administrative costs of regulation;
  • work with regulators to identify where lead regulator models could be implemented more broadly and speedily, including across departmental boundaries;
  • ensure sponsoring departments have suitable metrics to hold regulators to account for their pace and the outcomes of their work.
The Committee calls on regulators to:
  • Speed up their internal processes to reduce delays that make the UK a less attractive prospect for investment;
  • Proactively engage with industry to ensure companies know what is required of them;
  • Make use of tools such as regulatory sandboxes to test innovative products, services and technologies.
Chair of the Committee, Baroness Hayter said:
“The Government says economic growth is its number one aim and wants regulators to help facilitate this. Our inquiry found that, for this to happen, Government itself must take difficult decisions on how regulators should balance economic growth with the protections that citizens and the environment rely on, and the levels of risk to which the public should be exposed.
“Regulators must play their part by performing their functions more effectively, providing the speed and certainty businesses need to make investments, and the flexibility to respond to innovation.

“If growth is the government’s priority, it must provide clarity to regulators about its expectation and the political coverage for them to be less risk averse. The time to act is now.”

About alastair walker 19895 Articles
20 years experience as a journalist and magazine editor. I'm your contact for press releases, events, news and commercial opportunities at Insurance-Edge.Net

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