In a new report detailing its approach, the Committee outlines that new forms of scrutiny will be required, given the number of regulatory initiatives is likely to grow as regulators assume additional responsibilities following the UK’s exit from the EU. 
      
    
    
      The Sub-Committee on Financial Services Regulations will take the 
lead on scrutiny of financial regulatory proposals and will have powers 
to “send for persons, papers and records” and agree reports.
The Sub-Committee will be chaired by the Rt. Hon. Mel Stride MP and 
will, initially, consist of all the members of the Treasury Committee.
Chair's comment
Commenting on the announcement, Rt. Hon. Mel Stride MP, Chair of the Treasury Committee, said:
“Following the UK’s exit from the EU, our regulators have assumed 
significant new responsibilities. Those will require scrutiny, and 
Parliament has an opportunity to put in place a process which is less 
bureaucratic and significantly more nimble than was previously the case 
in the European Union.
“The Treasury Committee is well placed to conduct this scrutiny. We 
often consider new regulatory proposals and, given our responsibility to
 scrutinise the Treasury and its associated regulators, we can take a 
holistic view of regulatory change.
“Our approach will be targeted and flexible, with the new 
Sub-Committee devoted to the scrutiny of financial regulations and 
underpinned by a new and well-resourced unit of experts and 
specialists.”
The Treasury Committee’s approach to scrutiny of proposed financial services regulations:
The UK’s exit from the EU presents an opportunity to establish a less
 bureaucratic and significantly more nimble scrutiny process.
The Committee believes it would be most effective to intervene at the
 consultation paper stage of the regulatory proposal process, where 
proposals have crystallised into draft texts but when there is clear 
scope for influence.
A new Financial Services Scrutiny Unit is being formed, which will 
include financial specialists, staff members of the Treasury Committee, 
and a legal adviser from the Office of Speaker’s Counsel. Specialist 
advisers will also be appointed to provide the Sub-Committee with 
detailed and expert knowledge.
The Unit will offer advice to the Sub-Committee on the likely impact,
 fitness for implementation and level of appropriate scrutiny for each 
proposal.
The Sub-Committee will focus on assessing regulatory proposals which 
contain texts that would have legal effect. It will normally intervene 
at the consultation paper stage, when proposals have crystallised into 
draft texts but when there is clear scope for influence. The 
Sub-Committee will consider the following points:
- Is the policy justified and desirable? Is the balance between 
service providers, consumers and others the right one? Do the benefits 
outweigh any drawbacks?
- Is the regulator acting within their delegated power?
- Is the drafting of the necessary standard?
The Sub-Committee would then take a decision on whether the proposal 
merited closer examination. This might be through a call for written 
submissions and oral evidence, or written questions to regulators, or it
 might be raised in one of the Treasury Committee’s accountability 
sessions with the relevant regulator. The Sub-Committee could choose to 
produce a report on the proposal with recommendations for change.
The Sub-Committee will commence its work by scrutinising the 
Prudential Regulation Authority’s proposals for a ‘Strong and Simple 
Framework’, which would amount to a significant change in prudential 
policy applying to banks and building societies. It plans to invite 
written submissions and take oral evidence on the proposals.
Download the report [PDF 232KB]
House of Commons
      
      
      
      
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