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The Changing Regulatory Landscape

The Changing Regulatory Landscape. Isabel Nisbet, Acting CEO (isabel.nisbet@ofqual.gov.uk) 26 November 2008. Outline. Regulation – the changing scene Institutionalising the light touch Self-regulation – a false dawn? Professionalism Goodbye to the light touch? A way forward

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The Changing Regulatory Landscape

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  1. The Changing Regulatory Landscape Isabel Nisbet, Acting CEO (isabel.nisbet@ofqual.gov.uk) 26 November 2008

  2. Outline • Regulation – the changing scene • Institutionalising the light touch • Self-regulation – a false dawn? • Professionalism • Goodbye to the light touch? • A way forward • Ofqual – the independent regulator of qualifications, exams and tests

  3. Institutionalising the light touch • Nationalised utilities are privatised • Privatised utilities moderated by regulation • Challenge to the traditional professions • Law • Medicine • Reaction to the “regulatory burden” on industry • Better regulation task force (1997) • Hampton principles (2006) • Legislative and Regulatory Reform Act 2006 • Compliance Code 2007

  4. Institutionalising the light touch Proportionality Interventions related to risk Accountability • Targeting • Measures taken related to purpose • Consistency • In judgments made • In data requests • In criteria used • Transparency • Open and visible

  5. Setting the City free • “The better model of regulation is ... not just a light touch but a limited touch. We should not only apply the concept of risk to the enforcement of regulation, but to ... the decision as to whether to regulate at all.” • Gordon Brown, 2005

  6. Self-regulation • The universities • 2001: revolt against QAA subject-level inspections “[John Randall] said that plans for light-touch quality assurance ….. would short-change students and employers and hurt public confidence in university standards…. The Association of University Teachers said “John Randall’s resignation marks the end of overly bureaucratic and prescriptive regulation in higher education” • The professions • Medicine • Nursing • The law • Teaching

  7. Self-regulation (ctd) • Further Education • Sir George Sweeney • Single Voice • Learning and Skills Improvement Service – “Principles of self-improvement”

  8. The professions • Attempts to champion “professionally-led regulation” • Separation of functions • Overtaken by externally enforced, lay-run, regulation: • Legal Services Act 2007 (Legal Services Board – powers include setting performance standards and targets; Office for Legal Complaints) • Health and Social Care Act 2008 (new Office of the Health Professions Adjudicator; appointed GMC Council; “responsible officers” for local doctors) • Highly critical review of NMC

  9. The new professionalism (public service) • “Excellence and fairness” (Cabinet Office, June 2008) • Includes “professionals defining excellence” • “New professionalism … means maintaining high standards of service and performance, and strengthening user choice and voice, but at the same time providing space for the best pofessionals to design and run their own services.”

  10. The case for joint working • Public interest in the self-respect and ownership of standards by the profession itself • “The best guarantee of the public safety is the self-respect of the [medical] profession itself” (Merrison) • The reality of professionally-delivered public services • Most professionals are employed by the State and work in the eye of Government • The “politics of the double bed” (Rudolph Klein) • Earned trust – the social contract

  11. Then it goes badly wrong

  12. More goes wrong • PM vows to prevent Baby P repeat • The first pictures of Baby P were revealed on Friday • Gordon Brown has vowed to do everything in his power to prevent a repeat of the Baby P abuse case. • The prime minister rejected Tory claims of "buck-passing" after it emerged that a whistle-blower had raised concerns about Haringey Borough Council. • Baby P's natural father said the process had been "very traumatic", adding: "I loved him deeply." • Baby P died aged 17 months following abuse. His mother and two men were convicted of causing his death. • The alleged failings were investigated by the Commission for Social Care Inspection (CSCI).

  13. The banking crisis • “Few dispute that the whole concept of “laissez-faire” financial regulation has failed. Stephen Green, chairman of HSBC, has described the model as ‘bankrupt’. Even Alan Greenspan, the former US Federal reserve chairman and arch-exponent of the ‘light touch’ has admitted his ‘world view’ was wrong.” (Daily Telegraph)

  14. What Adair Turner said • “[The crisis] frees one from the danger that one is going to be criticised in that over-sloganised way [“red tape”, “over-regulation”]…. We are now in a different environment. We shouldn’t regulate for regulation’s sake but over-regulation and red tape has been used as a polemical bludgeon. We have probably been over-deferential to that rhetoric.” • So whither risk-based/principles-based regulation?

  15. A way forward • Principles can be tough “There’s nothing light or soft about the use of principles. Indeed, I’d remind anyone so misguided as to believe that principles are less demanding than rules, that principles confer flexibility on the regulator” (Callum McCarthy, former Chair of FSA) • Set and police firm boundaries • Drilling down is okay – but must be justified • Risk regimes can be high as well as low • Learn how to learn from crises • Primary, secondary and tertiary prevention • Mix and match from the repertoire of regulatory instruments

  16. Christopher Hood’s four types of control

  17. A way forward • Principles can be tough “There’s nothing light or soft about the use of principles. Indeed, I’d remind anyone so misguided as to believe that principles are less demanding than rules, that principles confer flexibility on the regulator” (Callum McCarthy, former Chair of FSA) • Set and police firm boundaries • Drilling down is okay – but must be justified • Risk regimes can be high as well as low • Learn how to learn from crises • Primary, secondary and tertiary prevention • Mix and match from the repertoire of regulatory instruments • Loose-tight controls (Peters & Waterman)

  18. About Ofqual • Independent of Government and QCA • Will report to Parliament • To ensure standards and confidence in qualifications, exams and tests • Conceived by Ed Balls in September 07 • Launched (in shadow form) in April 08 • Legislation in 08-09 session • Meantime distinct part of QCA

  19. Our mission as a regulator • Regulate awarding bodies, qualifications, examinations and National Curriculum Assessments effectively to ensure that the qualifications market is fit for purpose, that qualifications are fair, that standards are secure, that public confidence is sustained, and that Ofqual acts as the public champion of the learner.

  20. Ofqual’s strategic priorities for 2008-09 • Maintain standards in existing, new and revised qualifications and assessments • Recognise Professional Bodies that are fit to be in the national system and make sure that they are effective • Secure an effective and efficient qualifications market • Act in the public interest when things go wrong • Promote and sustain confidence in the regulated system • Establish and run an effective and visibly independent interim regulator, within QCA

  21. The Reliability Project • How much variability in results is acceptable? • Same learner on different occasions • Different markers • Are our expectations realistic? • Technical strand • Public debate

  22. Conclusions • Challenge to regulatory orthodoxy • Need for VERSATILE REGULATION • Regulators and professionals should work together • OFQUAL – independent regulator of qualifications, exams and tests • Shining a light on the public debate • Intelligent crisis management

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