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Hampton Reviews

 

The Hampton Report

 

In 2004, the Chancellor of the Exchequer asked Philip Hampton, a leading businessman, to lead a review of regulatory inspection and enforcement. Philip Hampton’s 2005 report set out an ambitious programme to reduce the burdens on business created by regulatory systems, together with principles to guide effective inspection and enforcement, putting risk assessment at the heart of regulatory assessment, and intending to encourage a regulatory system which properly balances protection and prosperity.

 

The reviews

 

In 2006, the Chancellor of the Exchequer invited us to work with the Better Regulation Executive to follow up progress against the principles set out in the Hampton Report. The reviews covered five of the biggest regulators – the Environment Agency, Financial Services Authority, Food Standards Agency, Health and Safety Executive and the Office of Fair Trading (OFT).

 

The reviews were carried out, over Summer and Autumn 2007, by four-person review teams comprising independent experts and officials drawn from a number of regulators, the Better Regulation Executive and the NAO. Review teams’ reports were published in March 2008.

 

The compendium report

 

In July 2008 we published a compendium report, Regulatory quality: How regulators are implementing the Hampton vision, which drew out the common themes from the five separate reviews. It also sought to highlight good practice amongst the regulators.

 

Common challenges

 

In drawing together the information gathered through the individual assessments we have been able to identify some of the common problems and challenges that regulators have to deal with to become fully risk-based, consistent, proportionate and effective organisations. These challenges can present a range of managerial, intellectual and resource issues which are not necessarily simple to solve. The practical challenges facing the regulators were:

 

  • to understand the effectiveness of their activities better – to inform strategic thinking on striking the right balance between inspection and enforcement activity and other means of achieving compliance;
  • to develop a coherent, business-friendly, evidence based strategy for advice and guidance, and to improve the reach and effectiveness of guidance, particularly for small firms;
  • to improve their engagement with local authorities, particularly where local authorities are an integral part of the regulatory structure, to deliver a coordinated and consistent system of regulation based on a shared understanding of risk and mutual respect;
  • to use intelligence well, to improve risk assessment and the allocation of regulatory effort;
  • to identify common ground and build trust with business organisations and trade associations: to draw on their experience, use their resources to target messages and find new ways of encouraging compliance;
  • to allow for local discretion, the use of inspectors’ judgement and innovation, but still deliver consistent, outcome-focused inspection and enforcement;
  • to share knowledge better, both internally and with other regulators – to capture what works; and
  • to develop a comprehensive risk assessment system which can deal with a wider range of risks both high level and firm-specific so as to inform judgements about the application of resources to different areas of risk.

 

More information on our work on Hampton, including our methodology and all of the reports, is available on our About Regulation page.