Title: The Commissions Impact Assessment System Making a difference
1The Commissions Impact Assessment System
Making a difference
- Annika Kroon
- European Commission
- Secretariat General
- Better Regulation and Impact Assessment Unit
2Overview
- What is an Impact Assessment (IA)
- Within the context of Better Regulation
- The Commission IA system
- What makes it effective
- The role of the Impact Assessment Board (IAB)
- Final remarks
3Better Regulation applies to the whole circle
of policy life
Simplification
EffectiveImplementation
Reduction of administrative burdens
Effective transposition
Impact assessment
Quality of legal texts
4What is IA?
- Tool to prepare new proposals
- Ex-ante, forward looking
- Evidence for decision makers
- Process ensuring transparency of policy
development and stakeholders input - What it is not?
- Not a bureaucratic exercise
- Not a substitute for political judgment and
decision making
5What makes the IA process effective?
- Targets right initiatives
- Provides timely input for policy development
- Incorporates input from stakeholders
- Analyses all relevant impacts
- Quality is controlled
- Process is transparent
- Political decision makers consider IAs
6 Effectiveness of IA System Targeting right
initiatives
- More than 500 IA reports since 2003
- Selection of initiatives for IAs no strict
ex-ante criteria, case by case screening - Covers all Commission proposals with significant
impacts - Until 2008 focus on CLWP
- Since 2009 - focus on legislative proposals
(CLWP, catalogue and comitology items)
7Number of IAs
8Number of IAs by policy areas
9Effectiveness of IA System Providing timely
input
- IA work takes 18-24 months to complete, service
level planning has become more effective - External stakeholders involved at early stage
- Coherence ensured within the Commission
- Planning coordination at corporate level
- Inter-service steering groups
- IA and policy proposal are drafted by same people
- an interactive process - IA accompanies proposal in inter-service
consultation and College level discussions
10Effectiveness of IA System Incorporating
stakeholders input
- Consulting stakeholders has always been a
cornerstone of IA approach - Reinforced by 2009 IA Guidelines
- Consult on problem definition, subsidiarity
analysis, options, impacts - At least 8 weeks more when sensitive
- Involvement of all relevant stakeholders
- Present the different positions in IA
11Effectiveness of IA System Analysing all
relevant impacts
- Integrated approach - all benefits and costs
economic, social and environmental impacts - Principle of proportionate analysis - the depth
of analysis depends on significance of expected
impact - 2009 guidelines added further highlights -
fundamental rights, SMEs, consumers,
national/regional aspects - Quantification desirable, but not at any cost
12Effectiveness of IA System Quality control
- Quality is assured by
- The IA Guidelines
- Training and awareness rising activities
- Quality is supervised by
- IA support units in services
- Stakeholders scrutiny at different stages
- IA inter-service steering groups
- Director Generals (requirement to sign-off)
- Quality is assessed by
- The Impact Assessment Board
13Effectiveness of IA System Ensuring
transparency
- Publication of Commissions work programme with
IA references (as from 2010) - Publication of roadmaps (as from 2010 for all
initiatives with IA) - Established standards and culture of stakeholder
consultation - Publication of IA reports
- Publication of IAB opinions
14Effectiveness of IA System Use of IAs in
political decision making
- IAs have strong political backing, quoted
- during the inter-service consultations
- in discussion at Cabinet and College level
- More and more often used in political discussions
by legislators Council and European Parliament
15Commissions IA System Impact Assessment Board
(1)
- An independent body within the Commission,
launched by President Barroso - Operational since 2007
- Responsible for quality control and quality
support to services - Has assessed the quality of more than 300 IAs
16Commissions IA System Impact Assessment
Board (2)
- Composition of Board mirrors the three pillars of
sustainable development - Alexander Italianer (SG), Chair
- Gert-Jan Koopman (ECFIN)
- Xavier Prats Monne (EMPL)
- John Farnell (ENTR)
- Timo Mäkelä (ENV)
17Commissions IA System Impact Assessment
Board (3)
- IAB can
- Indicate which proposals require IA (prompt
letters) - Give opinion on quality of IA and recommendations
for improvement - Require resubmission of draft IA
- Use internal/external expertise on a case by case
basis - IAB has no formal right of veto.
18Final remarks Key Characteristics
- The Commissions IA system
- ensures the integrated approach
- is ambitious compared to many national systems
- has an independent quality control
- is very transparent
- However, there is always room for improvement
19Final remarks Continuous need for improvement
- for example
- better planning of IA work
- sounder data and evidence base
- more robust qualitative and quantitative methods
- more focus on social impacts
- better inter-institutional cooperation
- linking ex ante and ex post evaluation
- In addition, the Commission is called ...
20Final remarks External calls
- ... to
- make some impacts more equal than others (SMEs,
gender equality, administrative burdens) - fit in additional elements (e.g. implementation
plans) - be even more transparent (consult on draft IAs)
21The very final remark
- We should seek for a reasonablebalance to avoid
an overload of the system which couldhinder its
functionality
22Further information
- IA Website
- http//ec.europa.eu/governance/impact/index_en.htm
23Evolution of the IA system
- 2002 Better Regulation Action Plan
- 2003 First IA Guidelines, first IA reports
- 2005 Revised IA Guidelines
- 2006 Launch of the IA Board
- 2007 External evaluation of IA system
- 2008 Audit by European Court of Auditors
(results in 2010) - 2009 Revised IA guidelines