A little scientific rigor can go a long way when it comes to designing government regulation. That is the message of a recent recommendation issued by the Administrative Conference of the United States (ACUS), a government agency dedicated to finding ways to improve administrative processes in the federal government. ACUS adopted its new recommendation, entitled Learning from Regulatory Experience, to help regulatory agencies think more carefully and systematically about making their regulations work better. For many of the same reasons that pharmaceutical companies test new drugs to make sure they work as intended, it makes sense for government agencies to test and measure the impact of the rules they impose on the economy. The stakes to ...