France
Overview and recent developments
Since 2013, France has engaged in important simplification efforts. Following waves of simplification measures, the 2017 programme “Action publique 2022” identifies administrative simplification as one of the five priority actions and ministers are tasked to develop simplification plans. France also introduced a “one-in, two-out” regulatory offsetting approach in 2017. When transposing EU legislation, the adoption of requirements going beyond those set by the EU measure is prohibited.
RIAs have to be prepared for all primary laws and major subordinate regulations and are available online. The range of impacts and costs assessed in RIA has been broadened in the past three years. The Sécrétariat Général du Gouvernement (SGG) at the Prime Minister’s Office is responsible for reviewing the quality of RIAs and provides advice and expertise on drafting regulation to authorities. For primary laws, it can return RIAs if their quality is considered insufficient. Since mid-2017 the SGG no longer provides a formal opinion on RIAs for subordinate regulations. France’s approach to ex post evaluation frequently integrates the evaluation of regulations and other policy tools. France Stratégie recently published new guidelines for policy evaluation that establishes standard evaluation techniques.
France does not require stakeholder engagement with the general public for the development of new laws, with the exception of environmental regulation. Informal consultations and consultation through consultative committees are however frequent. France could make public consultations a more cross-sectoral and systematic practice to fully reap the benefits of stakeholder engagement.
The SGG ensures compliance with procedures (including with regulatory management tools such as RIA and stakeholder engagement), inter-ministerial co-ordination, liaison with the Conseil d’Etat and the Parliament. It provides guidance on how to conduct RIA, and ensures the appropriate publication of the legal text. The Conseil d’Etat also plays a critical role in regulatory policy, both upstream (through its consultative function for the government, including in the area of RIA, and its control of legal quality) and downstream (as the administrative judge of last resort). Contrary to the relative centralisation of the oversight of ex ante procedures, the ex post evaluation of regulations is fragmented across a range of institutions, including the Cour des Comptes, the Parliament, the Conseil national d'évaluation des normes, the Direction interministérielle de la transformation publique (formerly known as the Secrétariat général pour la modernisation de l’action publique) and France Stratégie.