监管出口

J. Ruhl, James E. Salzman
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引用次数: 0

摘要

退出是生活中无处不在的特征,无论是婚姻破裂、大学辍学,还是退出一项风险投资。事实上,我们的退出选择往往决定了我们是否以及如何进入。虽然法律学术界对企业和个人退出策略的研究比比皆是,但在行政法学术界,退出的话题却很少被触及。然而,退出在监管型国家和在其他地方一样发挥着核心作用——福利支持终止;政府退出利率设定。在本文中,我们认为退出是监管设计的一个基本特征,应该在程序创建时明确考虑。第一部分从基本原则出发,阐述了监管退出的基本特征。它解决了退出策略的设计挑战以及如何衡量退出的成功。有了这些描述性和规范性的基础,第二部分开发了一个框架,解释了四种基本类型的监管退出策略,探索了决定每种策略的政治经济学,并解释了政策制定者何时最有可能采用它们。为了证明其在实践中的实用性,第三部分将该框架作为案例研究应用于水力压裂的新挑战。最后,我们描述了一种新的监管设计退出策略模型,一种“回溯退出”的混合方法。退出是行政治理中一个巨大的、核心的、但在很大程度上尚未被探索的方面。通过提供更全面的描述,我们展示了为什么退出需要重点研究和理论发展,为退出问题的分析创建了一个框架,并确定了未来研究的关键问题。这样做提供了重要的见解,不仅可以理解我们今天看到的实践,还可以为管理新出现的问题的程序设计提供见解。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Regulatory Exit
Exit is a ubiquitous feature of life, whether breaking up in a marriage, dropping a college course, or pulling out of a venture capital investment. In fact, our exit options often determine whether and how we enter in the first place. While legal scholarship is replete with studies of exit strategies for businesses and individuals, the topic of exit has barely been touched in administrative law scholarship. Yet exit plays just as central a role in the regulatory state as elsewhere – welfare support ends; government steps out of rate-setting. In this article, we argue that exit is a fundamental feature of regulatory design and should be explicitly considered at the time of program creation. Part I starts from first principles and sets out the basic features of regulatory exit. It addresses the design challenges of exit strategies and how to measure success of exit. With these descriptive and normative foundations in place, Part II develops a framework that explains the four basic types of regulatory exit strategies, exploring the political economy that determines each strategy and explaining when policy makers are most likely to adopt them. To demonstrate its usefulness in practice, the framework is applied as a case study in Part III to the emerging challenge of fracking. We conclude by describing a new exit strategy model for regulatory design, a hybrid approach of “Lookback Exit.” Exit is a vast, central, yet largely unexplored aspect of administrative governance. By providing a fuller account, we demonstrate why exit warrants focused research and theoretical development in its own right, create a framework for the analysis of exit issues, and identify the key questions for future research. Doing so provides important insights not only to understand the practice we see around us today but also for the design of programs to manage emerging issues.
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