Portugal

Overview and recent developments

In March 2017 through Resolution n. 44, the Council of Ministers took key steps in installing RIA in Portugal. Under its current implementation, the so-called Legislative Impact Analysis requires policy makers to qualitatively describe benefits and to quantify the impact of new regulations on businesses. It also includes an SME Test and a competition impact assessment. The Technical Unit for Legislative Impact Assessment (UTAIL), was established to provide oversight and support for the new RIA. Since June 2018, ministries are required to assess legislative impacts on citizens and as of 2019 impacts on public administration.

Although the role of RIA has expanded, it is not yet used in consultation with stakeholders. Stakeholders often only have a chance to comment when there is a draft regulation. Portugal could approach stakeholders earlier and before a preferred option is selected. A RIA could also be made available to stakeholders to support discussions.

In 2016, Portugal updated its administrative simplification programme from the Simplex to the Simplex+. The programme centres on the measures that the public service commits to implement within a year to simplify the life of citizens and companies. A team criss-crossed the country over four months to gather feedback, interviewing 2,000 citizens and business and holding special forums within the public sector. A key factor supporting the success of Simplex+ is the thorough follow-up and monitoring. Members of the public can submit suggestions at any time about administrative processes. Portugal could consider introducing “in-depth” reviews in particular sectors or policy areas.

Institutional setup for regulatory oversight

To support the implementation of RIA, the Council of Ministers created the Technical Unit for Legislative Impact Assessment (UTAIL) within the Legal Centre of the Presidency of the Council of Ministers (CEJUR). UTAIL acts as a supervising body that supports the implementation of RIA. It develops the impact assessment methodology, gives technical support, provides training to the Ministries and other public administrative bodies and produces and reviews reports for each impact assessment analyses. The Agency for Administrative Modernization (AMA) is a public institute under indirect government administration. The AMA promotes public administration modernisation, through administrative simplification, namely through the evaluation of administrative burdens of Simplex+ projects; the research and the dissemination of good practices in administrative and regulatory simplification; and contributing to the simplification environment.

Indicators of Regulatory Policy and Governance (iREG): Portugal, 2018
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Note: The more regulatory practices as advocated in the OECD Recommendation on Regulatory Policy and Governance a country has implemented, the higher its iREG score. The indicators on stakeholder engagement and RIA for primary laws only cover those initiated by the executive (80% of all primary laws in Portugal).

Source: Indicators of Regulatory Policy and Governance Surveys 2014 and 2017, http://oe.cd/ireg.

Requirements to use regulatory management tools for EU-made laws: Portugal

Stakeholder engagement

Regulatory impact assessment

Development stage

The government facilitates the engagement of domestic stakeholders in the European Commission’s consultation process

No

 

Negotiation stage

Stakeholder engagement is required to define the negotiating position for EU directives/regulations

No

RIA is required to define the negotiating position for EU directives/regulations

No

Consultation is required to be open to the general public

No

 

Transposition stage

Stakeholder engagement is required when transposing EU directives

No

RIA is required when transposing EU directives

Yes

The same requirements and processes apply as for domestically made laws

No

The same requirements and processes for RIA apply as for domestically made laws

Yes

Consultation is required to be open to the general public

No

RIA includes a specific assessment of provisions added at the national level beyond those in the EU directives

Yes

 

 

RIA distinguishes between impacts stemming from EU requirements and additional national implementation measures

No

Source: Indicators of Regulatory Policy and Governance Survey 2017, http://oe.cd/ireg.

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