Regulatory Governance for Development and Growth : Malaysia's Experience with Good Regulatory Practices

Good Regulatory Practices (GRP) are a systematic application of tools, institutions, and procedures that governments can mobilize to ensure that regulatory outcomes are effective, transparent, inclusive, and sustained. Other terms used for GRP incl...

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Main Author: World Bank Group
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Malaysia 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/993771569259958518/Regulatory-Governance-for-Development-and-Growth-Malaysias-Experience-with-Good-Regulatory-Practices
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/32440
id okr-10986-32440
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-324402021-05-25T09:27:57Z Regulatory Governance for Development and Growth : Malaysia's Experience with Good Regulatory Practices World Bank Group REGULATION PRIVATE SECTOR DEVELOPMENT GOVERNANCE STAKEHOLDER CONSULTATION OVERSIGHT BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT LICENSING Good Regulatory Practices (GRP) are a systematic application of tools, institutions, and procedures that governments can mobilize to ensure that regulatory outcomes are effective, transparent, inclusive, and sustained. Other terms used for GRP include ‘regulatory governance’ and ‘better regulation.’ Among the most common GRP tools used by governments are: public consultation, ex ante regulatory impact analysis (RIA), ex post review of existing regulations, administrative simplification, access to laws and regulations, forward regulatory planning, and regulatory oversight functions. This report focuses on GRP because by improving the regulatory environment, they can boost conditions for sustainable growth and investment. This is evidenced, among others, in the World Bank Group’s Global Investment Competitiveness Report 2017-2018, which surveyed 750 investors in developing and transition economies. The report found that next to ‘political stability and security’, the ‘legal and regulatory environment’ was the most important consideration of senior executives when making investment decisions (WBG, 2018). Similarly, evidence shows a positive relationship between the improvement of the regulatory environment and aggregate investment (and economic growth), suggesting that countries stand to gain from a broad push for streamlining regulations and procedures affecting business (Eifert, 2009). The report reflects on Malaysia’s formal experience with GRP because, although launched only relatively recently, results have been remarkable. Malaysia has demonstrated that more business-friendly regulations and a more favorable regulatory environment can contribute to economic growth and investment. Moreover, Malaysia’s regulatory reform success has been reflected in many international indicators, such as the Global Indicators of Regulatory Governance, Worldwide Governance Indicators, Doing Business, (all produced by the WBG) and those from the World Economic Forum that measure the burden of government regulations and transparency of the policymaking process. International indicators measuring GRP performance show that Malaysia is converging with high-income OECD countries. 2019-09-24T18:49:55Z 2019-09-24T18:49:55Z 2019-06 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/993771569259958518/Regulatory-Governance-for-Development-and-Growth-Malaysias-Experience-with-Good-Regulatory-Practices http://hdl.handle.net/10986/32440 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Malaysia Economic & Sector Work :: Other Public Sector Study Economic & Sector Work East Asia and Pacific Malaysia
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic REGULATION
PRIVATE SECTOR DEVELOPMENT
GOVERNANCE
STAKEHOLDER CONSULTATION
OVERSIGHT
BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT
LICENSING
spellingShingle REGULATION
PRIVATE SECTOR DEVELOPMENT
GOVERNANCE
STAKEHOLDER CONSULTATION
OVERSIGHT
BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT
LICENSING
World Bank Group
Regulatory Governance for Development and Growth : Malaysia's Experience with Good Regulatory Practices
geographic_facet East Asia and Pacific
Malaysia
description Good Regulatory Practices (GRP) are a systematic application of tools, institutions, and procedures that governments can mobilize to ensure that regulatory outcomes are effective, transparent, inclusive, and sustained. Other terms used for GRP include ‘regulatory governance’ and ‘better regulation.’ Among the most common GRP tools used by governments are: public consultation, ex ante regulatory impact analysis (RIA), ex post review of existing regulations, administrative simplification, access to laws and regulations, forward regulatory planning, and regulatory oversight functions. This report focuses on GRP because by improving the regulatory environment, they can boost conditions for sustainable growth and investment. This is evidenced, among others, in the World Bank Group’s Global Investment Competitiveness Report 2017-2018, which surveyed 750 investors in developing and transition economies. The report found that next to ‘political stability and security’, the ‘legal and regulatory environment’ was the most important consideration of senior executives when making investment decisions (WBG, 2018). Similarly, evidence shows a positive relationship between the improvement of the regulatory environment and aggregate investment (and economic growth), suggesting that countries stand to gain from a broad push for streamlining regulations and procedures affecting business (Eifert, 2009). The report reflects on Malaysia’s formal experience with GRP because, although launched only relatively recently, results have been remarkable. Malaysia has demonstrated that more business-friendly regulations and a more favorable regulatory environment can contribute to economic growth and investment. Moreover, Malaysia’s regulatory reform success has been reflected in many international indicators, such as the Global Indicators of Regulatory Governance, Worldwide Governance Indicators, Doing Business, (all produced by the WBG) and those from the World Economic Forum that measure the burden of government regulations and transparency of the policymaking process. International indicators measuring GRP performance show that Malaysia is converging with high-income OECD countries.
format Report
author World Bank Group
author_facet World Bank Group
author_sort World Bank Group
title Regulatory Governance for Development and Growth : Malaysia's Experience with Good Regulatory Practices
title_short Regulatory Governance for Development and Growth : Malaysia's Experience with Good Regulatory Practices
title_full Regulatory Governance for Development and Growth : Malaysia's Experience with Good Regulatory Practices
title_fullStr Regulatory Governance for Development and Growth : Malaysia's Experience with Good Regulatory Practices
title_full_unstemmed Regulatory Governance for Development and Growth : Malaysia's Experience with Good Regulatory Practices
title_sort regulatory governance for development and growth : malaysia's experience with good regulatory practices
publisher World Bank, Malaysia
publishDate 2019
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/993771569259958518/Regulatory-Governance-for-Development-and-Growth-Malaysias-Experience-with-Good-Regulatory-Practices
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/32440
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