Shapiro Stuart
Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy, Rutgers University, 33 Livingston Avenue #274, New Brunswick, NJ 08901, USA.
Eval Program Plann. 2008 Aug;31(3):223-30. doi: 10.1016/j.evalprogplan.2008.03.008. Epub 2008 Apr 10.
In 1984, Portney argued that "[w]e should scrutinize proposed reforms of the rulemaking process every bit as carefully as the regulations that process produces." In the 23 years since then, the regulatory process on the federal level has been continuously reformed by statute, by executive order, and by directives from the OMB. Despite the extensive debate on the need for these reforms, there has been very little analysis of the reforms themselves. This paper updates Portney's work on analyzing cost-benefit analysis and expands it to evaluate reforms of the regulatory process. I use as my primary example the recent peer-review guidelines issued by OMB. I argue that we may have reached a point of diminishing returns in regulatory reforms, that the peer-review guidelines likely have costs that exceed their benefits, and that further regulatory reforms merit closer evaluation.
1984年,波特尼认为,“我们应该像仔细审查规则制定过程所产生的法规一样,认真仔细地审查对规则制定过程的拟议改革。”从那时起的23年里,联邦层面的监管程序不断通过法规、行政命令以及管理和预算办公室(OMB)的指令进行改革。尽管对这些改革的必要性进行了广泛辩论,但对改革本身的分析却非常少。本文更新了波特尼关于分析成本效益分析的工作,并将其扩展以评估监管程序的改革。我以管理和预算办公室最近发布的同行评审指南作为主要例子。我认为,我们在监管改革方面可能已达到收益递减的阶段,同行评审指南可能成本超过收益,并且进一步的监管改革值得更仔细的评估。