This fall marks the twenty-fifth anniversary of Executive Order 12,866. The order, issued by President William Clinton and retained by every subsequent president, establishes how agencies should analyze their new regulations and have them reviewed in advance by the White House Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA). A recent event hosted by The George Washington University Regulatory Studies Center commemorated the executive order. Speakers attributed the order’s longevity to the process used to draft the order and to the regulatory analysis principles it espoused. It is important today to understand these principles and why they offer a valuable guide to sound regulatory decision-making. The section of the order entitled “Pr...
Executive Order (E.O.) 13,422 leaves in place most of the existing 2 review process established earl...
This study provides the most comprehensive evaluation of the quality of recent economic analyses tha...
Thirty federal agencies – from the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation to the Social Security ...
Since the Nixon Administration, some half a century ago, the U.S. government has made concerted effo...
Ever since the Reagan Administration, federal regulatory agencies have routinely conducted benefit-c...
When conducting the analysis needed to inform sound regulatory decision-making, independent agencies...
The Reagan administration\u27s desire to stimulate the national economy has resulted in a fundamenta...
Independent regulatory agencies face increasing pressure to improve the quality of the economic anal...
Both supporters and critics seem to agree that President Donald Trump broke new ground when he issue...
On January 20, just hours after being sworn into office, President Joe Biden signed a presidential m...
In 1981, President Ronald Reagan signed an executive order giving the Office of Information and Regu...
Why should government intervene in the economy? The fundamental economic justification is that marke...
Executive Order (E.O.) 13,422 is remarkably short, covering barely more than two pages and consistin...
Recently, Congress has shown a greater interest in assessing the economic impact of regulation. The ...
Over the past few decades, Presidents and Congress have imposed various procedural requirements on r...
Executive Order (E.O.) 13,422 leaves in place most of the existing 2 review process established earl...
This study provides the most comprehensive evaluation of the quality of recent economic analyses tha...
Thirty federal agencies – from the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation to the Social Security ...
Since the Nixon Administration, some half a century ago, the U.S. government has made concerted effo...
Ever since the Reagan Administration, federal regulatory agencies have routinely conducted benefit-c...
When conducting the analysis needed to inform sound regulatory decision-making, independent agencies...
The Reagan administration\u27s desire to stimulate the national economy has resulted in a fundamenta...
Independent regulatory agencies face increasing pressure to improve the quality of the economic anal...
Both supporters and critics seem to agree that President Donald Trump broke new ground when he issue...
On January 20, just hours after being sworn into office, President Joe Biden signed a presidential m...
In 1981, President Ronald Reagan signed an executive order giving the Office of Information and Regu...
Why should government intervene in the economy? The fundamental economic justification is that marke...
Executive Order (E.O.) 13,422 is remarkably short, covering barely more than two pages and consistin...
Recently, Congress has shown a greater interest in assessing the economic impact of regulation. The ...
Over the past few decades, Presidents and Congress have imposed various procedural requirements on r...
Executive Order (E.O.) 13,422 leaves in place most of the existing 2 review process established earl...
This study provides the most comprehensive evaluation of the quality of recent economic analyses tha...
Thirty federal agencies – from the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation to the Social Security ...