Guide to Making Federal Acts and Regulations
Part 1 - Law-making Framework
Chapter 1.1 -
Choosing the Right Tools to Accomplish
Policy Objectives
Overview
This chapter supplements section 2 of the Cabinet Directive on
Law-making which says:
Law should be used only when it is the most appropriate. When a
legislative proposal is made to the Cabinet, it is up to the sponsoring
Minister to show that this principle has been met, and there are no other
ways to achieve the policy objectives effectively.
This chapter provides guidance on meeting this requirement by providing
an analytical framework that covers:
- the range of instruments (techniques) available for accomplishing
policy objectives;
- how to determine which ones are the most appropriate; and
- how to decide whether an Act or regulation is required.
Officials are encouraged to adopt a comprehensive approach to
developing proposals to accomplish policy objectives. They should
focus on achieving a desired outcome, rather than assuming that a
particular instrument, particularly an Act or regulation, will be
effective. This chapter is also a good place to begin thinking about
what should go into an Act or regulation if one is required. This
question is explored in more detail in the "Checklist for
Preparing Bill-drafting Instructions for a Memorandum to Cabinet"
in Chapter 2.2.
Audience
Departmental program officials and their legal advisers.
Key messages
- Instrument-choice should be considered early in the policy development
process.
- The Government cannot deal with every situation. Its involvement must
be assessed in light of its responsibilities, its resources and the
likely effectiveness of its involvement relative to the involvement of
other governments or the private sector.
- The range of possible instruments available to accomplish policy
objectives is very broad, allowing the Government to choose the type and
degree of its intervention, if any.
- An Act or regulation should only be chosen after assessing the full
range of possible instruments.
- Instrument-choice has wide-ranging effects and is an important element
of many governmental activities.
- Consultation on instrument-choice, both within and outside the
Government, is essential to making good choices.
Introduction
When a situation may require the Government’s attention, it should
be assessed to determine what, if anything, the Government should do to
address it. This involves determining the objectives in addressing it
and how these objectives can best be accomplished. This determination
should be done as early as possible in the policy development process.
The following questions may help you to do this:
- What is the situation?
- What are the objectives in addressing the situation and what
particular results are desired?
- Is there a role for the Government of Canada?
- What instruments are available to accomplish the desired results?
- What is involved in putting the instruments in place?
- What effect would the instruments have?
- How will their success be measured?
- Which (if any) instrument(s) should be chosen?
The assessment process does not necessarily follow the order of
these questions. Answers reached at one point in the process may have
to be re-evaluated in light of other answers.
In order to obtain sound answers, it is also important to conduct
appropriate consultations with those affected.
What is the situation?
This step involves defining the key features of a situation that may
require the Government’s attention. A situation may present itself in
the form of a problem, in which case you should try to get to its source
and not define it in terms of its symptoms.
The situation may also be an opportunity for the Government to do
something creative or positive, for example celebrating a national or
global event, as opposed to responding to a problem.
A description of the situation is often framed in terms of how people
are behaving or how they may behave in future. Their behaviour may be
active (doing something) or passive (not doing something). A behavioural
approach involves identifying the following elements:
- the behaviour that is, or may be, creating or contributing to the
situation;
- who is engaging in the behaviour;
- who is affected by the behaviour and what these effects are;
- whether some behaviour, or behaviour by some persons, is more
serious than others;
- what external factors are influencing the behaviour;
- what behavioural changes are desired to address the situation.
What are the objectives and desired results?
This question is intended to help you define the objectives as
concretely as possible in terms of particular results to be achieved.
Objectives and the desired results go hand in hand, but they are not
quite the same.
For example, an objective might be to make a particular activity
safer, while the desired result might be a 30 percent reduction in the
rate of injury.
Another example is an objective of increasing Canada’s capacity in
information technology. The desired result would be to increase the
number of people who immigrate to Canada with expertise in this field by
500 in the next two years.
Is there a role for the Government of Canada?
Consider whether the Government of Canada can or should do something.
The Constitution constrains the authority of the Government through:
- the distribution of legislative powers between Parliament and the
provincial legislatures (although this distribution is qualified by
powers such as the spending power and the power to declare works for
the general advantage of Canada);
- limits on the exercise of legislative powers, for example the Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms;
- obligations relating to such things as the provision of services in
both official languages.
Policy considerations should also be weighed, including consistency
with the political platform of the Government and its approach to
federal-provincial relations.
Practical considerations should be addressed as well. The
Government has limited resources and it can’t deal with every
situation: perhaps others are better placed to achieve a desired
outcome.
Finally, if the Government does become involved, what role should
it play? Possible roles include taking the lead, acting in partnership
with others or stimulating or facilitating action.
What instruments are available to accomplish the
desired results?
This question looks at the full range of available policy
instruments, which can be grouped into five categories:
;
capacity building;
economic instruments, including taxes, fees and public expenditure;
rules;
organizational structure.
Information
Information can be a powerful tool. People act on the basis of the
information available to them. By giving them specific information, it may
be possible to influence their behaviour. Some examples are:
- consumer information about the quality or safety of products;
- occupational health and safety information;
- anti-drinking and driving advertising and education campaigns;
- "buy-Canadian" promotional campaigns;
- environmental awareness programs;
- information about how programs are operated or about administrative
practices;
- symbolic gestures.
Capacity Building
Capacity-building increases the ability of people or organizations to do
things that advance policy objectives. It goes beyond providing information
to include transferring to them the means for developing their ability. Some
examples are:
- employment skills training programs;
- programs to support scientific research and public education about
the results of the research;
- information gathering through consultation or monitoring;
- working with industries to help them develop voluntary codes
governing their practices.
Economic Instruments
Many instruments have a mainly economic focus. They affect how people
behave in the marketplace or in other economic transactions. These
instruments include taxes, fees and public expenditure, which are considered
separately below. They also include the creation of exclusive or limited
rights, such as marketable permits, licences or marketing quotas that
acquire value because they can be bought and sold. Insurance requirements
are another example of economic instruments because they can, for example,
force businesses to assess and reduce risks and ensure that their products
are priced to cover the costs of insurance or preventive measures.
Taxes and Fees
The basic purpose of taxes and fees is to raise revenue. However, they
are also capable of influencing how people make choices about the activities
to which the taxes or fees apply. In this sense, they can be powerful tools
for accomplishing policy objectives. Examples include:
- taxes on income, property or sales;
- customs duties;
- fees or charges for licences or services;
- tax exemptions, reductions, credits or remissions.
Further information on user fees and charges is available from the
Treasury Board Secretariat:
Public Expenditure
The Government can act by transferring or spending money in a
particular area in order to accomplish policy objectives involving those
who receive the money. This makes it a potentially effective instrument
for encouraging particular activities that support the policy objectives.
Some examples of public expenditure are:
- monetary benefits, grants or subsidies;
- loans or loan guarantees;
- vouchers redeemable for goods or services;
- transfers to the provinces and territories for education or health
programs.
Rules
Rules, in the broadest sense, guide behaviour by telling people how
things are to be done. However, there are many different types of rules.
For example, they differ in terms of how they influence behaviour:
- Acts, regulations or directives tend to apply to groups of people
and have legal force in that they can be enforced by the courts;
- contracts or agreements also have legal force, but they generally
apply only to those who are parties to them;
- guidelines, voluntary codes or standards and self-imposed rules
usually apply to groups of people, but they do not have legal force,
relying instead on their persuasive or moral value.
Rules having legal force are generally cast in terms of
requirements, prohibitions or rights. A combination of these
elements can be seen in rules that create:
- rights that entitle people to do things on an equal footing, such
as obtaining goods, services or employment, and corresponding
requirements to provide these things to those entitled to them;
- prohibitions against doing something without a licence that
confers a right to do it, for example, exclusive or limited rights,
such as marketable permits, licences or marketing quotas that
acquire value because they can be bought and sold.
Rules may also be formulated in different levels of detail, for example:
- as precise requirements that tell people exactly what to do; or
- as performance standards that set objectives that people are
responsible for meeting.
Finally, it is worth noting the drafting technique of
incorporation by reference. Rules of one type (for example, Acts or
regulations) can sometimes be drafted so that they incorporate rules
of the same or another type (for example, other Acts or regulations
as well as industry codes or standards) simply by referring to them,
rather than restating them. This avoids duplication of the
incorporated rules and can be a way of harmonizing the laws of
several jurisdictions if they each incorporate the same set of
rules. However, this technique, particularly in the context of
regulations, is subject to a number of legal considerations, such as
requirements governing the publication of laws in both official
languages and the general accessibility of the law.
Additional information on choosing the right type of rules can be
found in the publications listed at the end of this chapter as well
as in the "Checklist for Preparing Bill-drafting Instructions
for a Memorandum to Cabinet" in Chapter 2.2.
Organizational Structure
Organizational structure is often critical in accomplishing policy
objectives. It generally supports the use of other instruments by
providing for their administration. Examples of organizational instruments
include:
- departmental or agency structures to deliver programs;
- framework agreements and partnerships with other governments or
organizations;
- privatization or commercialization of government services;
- public investment in private enterprises.
Additional information on organizational structure can be found
in the Alternative Program Delivery Policies and Publications,
available from the Treasury Board Secretariat at http://www.tbs-sct.gc.ca/Pubs_pol/opepubs/TB_B4/siglist_e.html
or through the Alternative Service Delivery Division Home Page at http://www.tbs-sct.gc.ca/asd-dmps/.
Combination and Timing of Instruments
These instruments are not necessarily stand-alone alternatives to one
another. In fact, many of them are mutually supportive or otherwise
interrelated. For example, information enables organizations to work
effectively and organizations are often needed to administer legal rules,
such as Acts or regulations, which may, in turn, be needed to support the
creation of organizations.
Another important dimension of the range of available instruments is
timing. Some instruments are better used in the initial stages of policy
implementation while others may only be needed later if circumstances
warrant. For example, information campaigns often precede the imposition
of legal rules and, if they are effective enough, they may avoid the need
for such rules.
What is involved in putting the instruments in place?
This question involves the legal, procedural and organizational
implications of using each instrument as well as the process
requirements for making them operational. It also involves considering
in greater detail the role that the Government of Canada may play,
whether acting alone or as a partner with other levels of government or
the private sector.
You should assess:
- whether the use of the instrument is within the general mandate or
authority of the Government;
- whether some specific legal authority is needed, for example,
authority to impose taxes or penal sanctions, and, if so,
- whether it requires new laws (Acts or regulations) to be made,
- whether there is legal authority to make the new laws federally, and
- whether the new laws would be consistent with Canada’s
international obligations.
It is particularly important to consult departmental legal
advisers when considering this legal aspect of the question.
- What the short- and long-term operational requirements, both
organizational and financial, of the instruments are, including:
- organizations and personnel needed to administer the instruments,
for example, officials needed to assess benefit claims or conduct
inspections,
- additional costs for the courts because their workload has increased
as well as the effect such an increase may have on their general
efficiency;
- who should be consulted before the instruments are put in place
(other departments, other governments, stakeholders);
- what processes are required to put the instruments in place,
including processes required for any new laws (as described in this
Guide);
- what, if any, monitoring or enforcement measures will be needed,
such as penalties, inspections and court action (this is closely
connected to the next question of what effect the instruments would
have).
What effect would the instruments have?
This question involves assessing how the instruments would work,
including:
- whether the instruments will bring about the desired results,
including whether people will voluntarily do what the instruments
encourage or require, or whether some are likely to try to avoid
compliance or find loopholes;
- whether the instruments will cause any unintended results or impose
costs or additional constraints on those affected by them;
- what the scope and nature of any likely environmental effects will
be, particularly any adverse environmental effects and how they can be
reduced or eliminated;
- what effect the instruments may have on federal-provincial relations
or international relations, particularly in light of the Government’s
obligations under interprovincial or international agreements;
- how the general public will react to the instruments and, in
particular, whether the instruments will be perceived as being enough
to deal with the situation.
When deciding whether to choose legal rules, you should also keep
in mind their strengths and weaknesses. They can often be used to
overcome resistance in achieving the desired results because they are
binding and enforceable in the courts. However, they may also give
rise to confrontational, rights-based attitudes or stifle innovative
approaches to accomplishing the policy objectives. You should also not
assume that a legal prohibition or requirement will, by itself, stop
people from doing something or make them do it.
How will the success of the instruments be measured?
It is not enough to choose various instruments and use them. Clear
and measurable objectives must also be established as well as a means
for monitoring and assessing whether they are being achieved. This
assessment should be ongoing and include looking at how other
governments are addressing the same situation. This is necessary both
for determining whether the chosen instruments should continue to be
used as well as for providing a better basis on which to make
instrument-choice decisions in future.
Which instruments should be chosen?
The final step is to choose the instruments that would be most
effective in achieving the policy objective. It is important to realize
that a single instrument is seldom enough. Usually a combination of
instruments is required, often in stages with different combinations at
each stage. They should be chosen through a comparative analysis of
their costs and benefits, taking into account the answers to the
preceding questions.
This is also a good time to consider again whether there is a role
for the Government of Canada. It may be that none of the instruments
should be chosen if:
- the situation does not justify the Government’s attention, for
example, because there is no problem or the situation is beyond the
Government’s jurisdiction or is not a priority for it;
- the situation will take care of itself or will be addressed by
others;
- the Government does not have the resources to address the situation;
- the Government becoming involved in the situation would lead to
unmanageable demands to become involved in similar situations.
Additional information
Additional information on how to implement policy objectives can be
found in the following publications and through Web sites:
- Alternative Program Delivery Policies and Publications, Treasury
Board Secretariat:
http://www.tbs-sct.gc.ca/Pubs_pol/opepubs/TB_B4/siglist_e.html
- Alternative Service Delivery Division Home Page, Treasury Board
Secretariat:
http://www.tbs-sct.gc.ca/asd-dmps/
- Assessing Regulatory Alternatives,
Regulatory Affairs and Orders in Council Secretariat of the Privy Council
Office: http://www.pco-bcp.gc.ca/raoics-srdc/docs/publications/assessing_reg_alternatives_e.pdf
- Cost Recovery and Charging Policy, Treasury Board Secretariat:
http://www.tbs-sct.gc.ca/Pubs_pol/opepubs/TB_H/CRP_e.html
- Designing Regulatory Laws that Work
, Constitutional and
Administrative Law Section of the Department of Justice
- 1999 Cabinet Directive on Environmental Assessment of Policy
, Plan
and Program Proposals, Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency:
http://www.ceaa-acee.gc.ca/0012/0006/sea_e.htm
- Information on External User Charges, Treasury Board Secretariat:
http://www.tbs-sct.gc.ca/Pubs_pol/opepubs/TB_H/FeeInfoe.html
- Standards Systems: A Guide for Canadian Regulators
,
Regulatory Affairs and Standards Policy Directorate of Industry Canada: http://strategis.ic.gc.ca/stdsguide
- Voluntary Codes: A Guide for Their Development and Use
,
Regulatory Affairs and Standards Policy Directorate of Industry Canada: http://strategis.ic.gc.ca/volcodes
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