1 / 22

Simplification of law in France: the time for assessment

This article discusses the ongoing efforts to simplify law in France through various procedures and initiatives. It examines the origins of the issue, the procedures involved, and provides examples of recent simplification laws. The article also highlights two recent assessments of the results of these efforts.

gerriw
Download Presentation

Simplification of law in France: the time for assessment

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Simplification of law in France:the time for assessment Charles-Henri Montin Head of (interministerial) B.R. Unit Ministry of Finance, France charles-henri.montin@dgme.finances.gouv.fr OECD 24 April 2006

  2. The right time to examine what has been done • The tools • 3 simplification laws (annual?) since 2003 • 15 codes • Loi anti-loi • Guide de légistique • New assessments of results, introduction of new insights • Conseil d’Etat report (20 March 2006) • Comité d’enquête report (26 January 2006) • Much doubt and soul-searching. A new initiative ?

  3. Outline of the presentation « Il n’y a pas de liberté sans lois. » (J.J. Rousseau) • Origins of the issue in France • The simplification procedures • Enabling Acts • Codification • Loi anti-loi • Two recent assessment of the results • Comité sur le coût et rendement des service publics • Conseil d’Etat

  4. Simplification: origins of the issue Concern about the «normative inflation » The OECD peer review of France (2003) The concern of the highest authorities . Civil rights spirit embodied by the Conseil Constitutionnel: • accessibility and understandability of the law justify simplification (decision 473 dated 26/6/2003) • Excessive complexity is illegal (decision 530 of 29/12/2005) "en raison de son excessive complexité, qu'aucun motif d'intérêt général ne suffisait à justifier." « Les longues lois sont des calamités publiques » (St Just)

  5. The procedures The main instrument : ordinances under Art.38 of the Constitution to empower the Government Two methods to select the contents of the simplification programme: - asks ministries for their projects (LH1 et LH2) • ask the citizens/users (PLS3 « Il y a tant de lois qu’il n’y a personne exempt d’être pendu.» (Napoléon I)

  6. The third simplification law (examples of articles) 1/ For the public • Simplify election procedures (electronic vote, single commission, leaflets, etc) • Suppress handwritten mentions in contracts • Change of matrimonial contract without court proceeding • Facilitate redress for victims of crime 2/ For businesses • Unify multiple declarations (into single) for apprentices • Harmonise rules about gaz transport by pipeline (7 laws at present) • Simplify litigation procedures 3/ For local authorities • Align procurement concepts • Practical measures to facilitate operations of local authorities

  7. Clarification and simplification of texts Dynamic codification Codification Codification : a French tradition To promote access and understanding of the law Static codification No changes to the content • « Il faut être sobre de nouveautés en matière de législation » Portalis, discours prélimaire du code civil, 1804

  8. The new codification 3 types, between which you need to choose carefully • 1/ re-writing: redraft unclear laws, abrogate useless or obsolete articles, or regulations within legislative area, harmonize and simplify the legal concepts. LH2 authorizes such codification for Public Health, Expropriations • 2/ inclusion of jurisprudence: not truly new law, when it is simplu interpretation, but must be authorized if it includes extension. Example the Administrative code which will regulate relations with the public • 3/ full scale renovation of existing texts, with reform of underlying principles. Example Code des propriétés publiques

  9. La loi anti-loi: issues • Official name: law abrogating dispositions outdated or rendered meaningless • A symbolic dossier favored by ministers • Legal issues, leading to C.E. reserves about the idea • Most texts have been codified (70%), i.e. 212000 articles. Not many « orphans » • Need for an décret anti décret • Simplification is the main tool, it includes abrogation • Near impossible to find whole laws to fit the criteria • Review the whole corpus to track down the suspects « Les lois inutiles affaiblissent les lois nécessaires » (Montesquieu – 1754)

  10. The time for assessment • Two major assessments published in recent weeks • Conseil d’Etat: “sécurité juridique et complexité du droit” (March 2006) • Comité sur le coût et rendement des service publics: “effets de la loi du 2 juillet 2003” (February 2006)

  11. Conseil d’Etat: a new diagnostic of complexity 1/ Complexity from new sources of law • development and extension of EU law (result of institutional reform). Primacy of EU law over internal law • new regulators : independent administrative authorities- the new principle of "free administration of territorial authorities« - special legal regimes of overseas territories 2/ L'intempérance normative - misuse of legislative power to further political agendas, or pander to public opinion transient moods - answer to the "social demand" asking for new norms, specially in the fields of security and social affairs

  12. Consequences as listed by Conseil d’Etat • the simplification process itself contributes to cluttering the legislative agenda • the new laws are not consistent with existing legislation hence complexity/ obscurity / instability for the judges • there is a loss of control by Parliament • lacunae in the implementation; excessive use of internal instructions to provide guidance to services (not legally binding, and often not published) • penalisation of economic actors and citizens (legal insecurity, administrative burden reaching 3 to 4% of GDP), with the resulting loss of competitivity

  13. C.E.’s recommendations for change • Time –limits: OECD diagnosed that the system of written Roman law does not ascribe time-limits to legislation, hence the piling up of texts, which codification has failed to contain. ►Avoid sedimentation; assess corpus and abrogate outdated/useless norms • The simplification process has generated too many new texts: 150 ordonnances, which in many cases have been changed several times, or haven't been implemented because the ministries cannot agree on the décrets d'application. ►Stem the flow of new legislation.

  14. CE recommendations • Stricter respect of existing constitutional rules • Emphasis on the political responsibility for the current situation • Quoting the OECD, the C.E. recommends that an organic law (and a constitutional update) reform the legislative process, especially to introduce compulsory RIA’s and other adjustments (limit amendments, facilitate transposition of EU directives, enhance parliamentary control on implementation of laws).

  15. The report of the Comité d’enquête New approach: you must measure success of S. program in "transformation of administrative action", in terme of savings, instead of "evolution of law « , hence a severe diagnostic; Inappropriate scope of programs Ineffective tools (ordinances) Fautly implementation

  16. The inappropriate scope of the program Legal simplification is a necessary step but not always enough to bring about a simplification of practices • inconsistencies in norms • Volatility of practices ( rapidly changing texts) • Still fair amount of purely formal (clearing) of texts going on • there are two many exogeneous elements inserted into S laws Simplification of law can be useful when applied to elementary procedures

  17. The lack of effectivity of the tool The ordinance is not an efficient vector for reform • no proper discussion in Parliament, hence risk • piecemeal approach, no overall scheme to uniformise regimes dealing with similar situations • only surface treatment of complexity • the ordinance can even be harmful, dressing up as simplification what is just a lightening of procedure. • many simplifications have been introduced without reference to the shift to LOLF • the simplification agenda gets diluted or lost in the buzz of multiple reforms on the same subject

  18. The implementation of S. policy is faulty Implementation is generally chaotic and piecemeal: • the simplification measures are drowned in the mass of instructions the services receive, many of which get higher priority • delays in issuing implementation rules. : O 1/7/04 on commissions still not in force • stratification between the policy makers and the end-users. • simplification is a resource-driven process « Le législateur, en élaborant la loi, ne doit jamais perdre de vue l'abus qu'on peut en faire » (Victor Hugo)

  19. CECRSP : what simplification can do Simplification works best for technical improvements • Open new exchanges of information between administrations • Centralise operations hitherto distributed between different departments (example social affairs) • Deal with operations and processes, example professsional elections, rather than principles • Suppress least cost-effective tools, such as fiscal stamps • Reduce ex ante control: replace authorization regime by a declaration

  20. CECRSP : you must manage simplifications ►(strategic) • a better definition, and a strategy ≠ "réforme de l'Etat • avoid introducing new norms • simplify the process itself: focus on simple measures. ►(practical) • look at the process rather than the text • measure the impact and cost each measure • include the regulatory measures in the project • monitor implementation (the complexity does not disappear when the text is published in the JO) • weakness of the "big-bang" approach

  21. CONCLUSION Major issues for discussion stemming from the reports: • How to contain the growth of legal norms while meeting the expectations of citizens for security ? • Should all legislation be codified ? • The recognition of Consultation and AB to assist simplification • Can more rules introduce quality into the political normative process • Success of S. can depend on good project management

  22. Find the documents quoted in this presentation Central BR site for France: :http://extraqual.pm.ader.gouv.fr/ 1/ The two recent reports: • Conseil d’Etat : « sécurité juridique et complexité du droit » (20 March 2006) : http://www.conseil-etat.fr/ce/rappor/index_ra_li0600.shtml • Comité sur le coût et le rendement des services publics : « effets de la loi du 2 juillet 2003 » (26 janvier 2006) http://www.ccomptes.fr/organismes/comite-enquete/bilan-activites/ordonnances/simplification-droit-ordonnances-02-2006.pdf 2/ Décisions du Conseil constitutionnel • http://www.conseil-constitutionnel.fr/decision/2003/2003473/index.htm • http://www.conseil-constitutionnel.fr/decision/2005/2005530/communiq.htm

More Related