Our country began today with the regulatory reform as part of its process of accession to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). In the first stage, 14 entities of the Executive they must compulsorily apply the Ex – Ante Regulatory Impact Analysis, which provides a solution to the public problems that will be addressed.
These institutions are the Presidency of the Council of Ministers, the National Institute of Statistics and Informatics (INEI), the Supervision Agency for Forest Resources and Wild Fauna (Osinfor), the Ministry of Foreign Trade and Tourism, Indecopi, the National Council of Science, Technology and Technological Innovation (Concytec), Ministry of Production, Serve, National Institute of Quality (Inacal), National Fisheries Health Agency (Sanipes), Ministry of Housing, Construction and Sanitation; Cofopri, OTASS and the National Superintendency of State Assets.
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From now on, before issuing a new standard, the entities must send the project to the Multisectoral Commission for Regulatory Quality (made up of the PCM, the Ministry of Economy and the Ministry of Justice), to avoid the duplication of standards, or that they are unnecessary, inapplicable or contradictory. In this way, it will ensure that those that are approved have a citizen-centered approach.
The regulatory reform is part of the set of recommendations that the OECD gave our country as part of the process of joining this body.