Regulation in the social, political, psychological, and economic domains can take many forms:
legal restrictions promulgated by a
government authority, contractual obligations (for example, contracts between insurers and their insureds),
self-regulation in psychology,
social regulation (e.g.
norms), co-regulation, third-party regulation, certification, accreditation or market regulation.
State-mandated regulation is government intervention in the private market in an attempt to implement
policy and produce outcomes which might not otherwise occur, ranging from consumer protection to faster growth or technological advancement. The regulations may prescribe or proscribe conduct ("command-and-control" regulation), calibrate incentives ("incentive" regulation), or change preferences ("preferences shaping" regulation). Common examples of regulation include limits on environmental
pollution, laws against child labor or other
employment regulations,
minimum wages laws, regulations requiring truthful labelling of the ingredients in food and drugs, and food and drug safety regulations establishing minimum standards of testing and quality for what can be sold, and zoning and
development approvals regulation. Much less common are controls on market entry, or
price regulation. One critical question in regulation is whether the regulator or government has sufficient information to make ex-ante regulation more efficient than ex-post liability for harm and whether industry self-regulation might be preferable. The
economics of imposing or removing regulations relating to
markets is analysed in empirical legal studies, law and economics, political science, environmental science,
health economics, and
regulatory economics. Power to regulate should include the power to enforce regulatory decisions. Monitoring is an important tool used by national regulatory authorities in carrying out the regulated activities. In some countries (in particular the Scandinavian countries) industrial relations are to a very high degree regulated by the labour market parties themselves (self-regulation) in contrast to state regulation of minimum wages etc.
Measurement Regulation can be assessed for different countries through various quantitative measures. The Global Indicators of Regulatory Governance by
World Bank's Global Indicators Group scores 186 countries on transparency around proposed regulations, consultation on their content, the use of regulatory impact assessments and the access to enacted laws on a scale from 0 to 5. The
V-Dem Democracy indices include the regulatory quality indicator. The QuantGov project at the
Mercatus Center tracks the count of regulations by topic for United States, Canada, and Australia. The length of
Code of Federal Regulations of the United States increased over time. == History ==