Saskatchewan, Manitoba and Nova Scotia lead the pack, but lots of work left to do
Regina, January 22, 2019 – After ten years of helping federal and provincial governments understand the importance of red tape reduction through Red Tape Awareness Week™, the Canadian Federation of Independent Business (CFIB) Red Tape Report Card is awarding more ‘A’ grades than ever before.
“Ten years ago most governments didn’t even know how many rules they were imposing on their constituents—a shocking lack of accountability when you consider that regulations cost citizens a lot of time and money,” said Laura Jones, CFIB’s executive vice-president. “The good news is that our report card shows more governments than ever are being transparent with respect to the hidden tax of regulation and many have put limits on its growth. That’s an important start so the real work of reducing red tape can begin.”
This is how CFIB’s Red Tape Report Card shapes up for 2019:
Grade | Province |
A | Manitoba |
A | Saskatchewan |
A | Nova Scotia |
A- | British Columbia |
A- | Ontario |
B+ | Federal government |
D | Prince Edward Island |
F | Newfoundland and Labrador |
F | Alberta |
F | Yukon |
F | Northwest Territories |
N/A | Quebec* |
N/A | New Brunswick |
*Quebec and New Brunswick are both noted as not applicable
as there have been recent changes in government and direction on red tape reduction remains unclear.
“When the report card was launched the highest grade was a ‘B+’, earned by British Columbia. Today there is a record breaking number of ‘A’s. We haven’t changed the standard, which means governments are rising to the challenge of measuring, reporting and generally being a lot more accountable with respect to this important way they affect our lives,” added Jones. “We plan to keep grading accountability as we know getting an ‘A’ is one thing, but keeping it is another. We also want to turn our attention to municipal governments.”
Saskatchewan’s grade improved to an ‘A’ in 2019, up from an ‘A-’ grade in 2018. “Clearly, the Government of Saskatchewan has made red tape reduction an ongoing priority,” noted Jones. “We commend the province for having both a calculator (Direct Cost Estimator) to cost out individual regulations and a broad measure of regulatory requirements. It is impressive that to date the use of the DCE has resulted in over $202 million in cumulative, forecasted red tape savings over the next 10 years.”
“A healthy regulatory framework is widely linked to economic growth and the level of prosperity of a region,” said Jeremy Harrison, Saskatchewan Minister of Trade and Export Development. “Knowing this, the Government of Saskatchewan is committed to reducing red tape by focusing on smarter regulations, establishing a government-wide standard to ensure all regulations remain relevant, needed and cost effective for impacted stakeholders.”
CFIB’s report card grades governments along three criteria: strong leadership, comprehensive measurement of the regulatory burden, and whether or not the government has put a cap on regulations in place. It does not compare provinces on how much regulation is in place, but on their regulatory accountability and transparency, which are essential for successful red tape reduction.
Here are the report card grades for previous years: