Claims Management Regulation
Impact of Regulation Assessment – Update
A report by Mark Boleat for the Ministry of Justice
July 2009
Impact of Regulation Assessment – Update
A report by Mark Boleat for the Ministry of Justice
July 2009
Introduction
The Compensation Act 2006, providing for the regulation of claims management services, achieved Royal Assent on 25 July 2006. The regulatory regime, including the regulations and rules, was quickly put in place, applications for authorisation were invited from 30 November 2006, and the offence of operating without authorisation was commenced on 23 April 2007.
In August 2007 an initial assessment of the impact of regulation was published. In April 2008 a second study reviewed the impact of regulation over its first full year of operation. The approach was to take the objectives of regulation, quantified to some extent in a Baseline Study, as the starting point. The various regulatory processes were then examined. The main part of the paper made an assessment of the impact of regulation in each of the sectors subject to regulation.
This third study reviews the impact of regulation after two years. It is essentially a brief update of the one year study, but with a specific chapter on a new area – enforceability of consumer credit agreements. The author is grateful to the staff of the Claims Management Regulator, in both London and Burton-on-Trent, and to the various trade associations and individual businesses that fed in their views.
Mark Boleat, 13 July 2008
The Compensation Act 2006, providing for the regulation of claims management services, achieved Royal Assent on 25 July 2006. The regulatory regime, including the regulations and rules, was quickly put in place, applications for authorisation were invited from 30 November 2006, and the offence of operating without authorisation was commenced on 23 April 2007.
In August 2007 an initial assessment of the impact of regulation was published. In April 2008 a second study reviewed the impact of regulation over its first full year of operation. The approach was to take the objectives of regulation, quantified to some extent in a Baseline Study, as the starting point. The various regulatory processes were then examined. The main part of the paper made an assessment of the impact of regulation in each of the sectors subject to regulation.
This third study reviews the impact of regulation after two years. It is essentially a brief update of the one year study, but with a specific chapter on a new area – enforceability of consumer credit agreements. The author is grateful to the staff of the Claims Management Regulator, in both London and Burton-on-Trent, and to the various trade associations and individual businesses that fed in their views.
Mark Boleat, 13 July 2008
Comment