Trend in action
Encouraging investment by clarifying or mitigating risks
Stakeholders rely on regulations to set expectations for risks. Regulatory uncertainty, on the other hand, could foster distrust among consumers, limit investments, and can even endanger markets.4 The recent implosion of a cryptocurrency exchange left many wondering if tighter regulations could have prevented disaster.5
Regulatory tools, such as sandboxes, can provide increased certainty to regulators and regulated entities. Sandboxes are safe testing environments in which innovators can see their inventions play out with certain regulatory leeway and appropriate consumer protections. The use of such tools signals to investors that regulators are inclined to support innovation but will closely watch how the market develops.
A Bank for International Settlements study analyzed how entering the United Kingdom's fintech regulatory sandbox affects fintech firms’ ability to raise funding. Firms selected for the sandbox witnessed up to a 15% increase in capital raised.6 The sandbox reduced regulatory uncertainty, helped firms bake in appropriate safeguards, and reduced expenditures on regulatory consulting.7
Singapore’s regulatory sandbox that aims to mitigate risks around autonomous vehicles (AV) has been attracting investment to the city-nation. The launch of Singapore’s AV sandbox in 2015 attracted many foreign AV players. In 2017, Singapore introduced traffic rules to regulate AV trials. Key requirements included mandatory liability insurance, installation of a data recorder, a safety driver, and obligation to report malfunctions. Singapore set up a testing center to assess AV capabilities before allowing new tech on the road.8 Engineers train public transit AV at the same facility.9 Singapore is counted among the world’s top countries ready for accepting and implementing AVs.10 The country has gradually opened public roads spanning more than 1,000 km to AVs.11
Promoting innovation for regulators and funding innovators
Regulatory agencies must evolve to adapt to innovative new business models. Regulatory innovation requires experimenting with new approachesc, such as sandboxes, and a shifting mindset that calls for protecting the public while ensuring sustainable market growth. Adopting regtech technologies that improve oversight and enforcement can promote regulatory innovation. For example, Denmark aims to develop digital-ready legislations that are interoperable and less burdensome for public administrators and businesses.12 The country requires every new legislation to go through a digital-ready assessment.13
Encouraging such innovations is the purpose of the UK Regulators’ Pioneer Fund. The fund invests in regulatory projects which encourage business innovation, investing up to £10 million between 2018 and 2022.14 Care Quality Commission, the UK’s regulator of social and health care services, received funding to test its sandbox ideas, engage stakeholders through open discussions, and set innovation principles as a guidebook for future regulatory experiments.15
While the United Kingdom funds regulatory innovations through the Pioneer Fund, Australia funds businesses through challenges and grants to encourage regulatory innovation. One startup, with a grant from the Business Research and Innovation Initiative, developed an AI-powered, sensor monitoring system to monitor the health of exportable livestock.16 Another startup developed language processing solutions to analyze disclosures of listed companies in real-time. Another grant-funded innovation will allow regulators to perform more accurate asbestos testing.17
Similarly, governments can also fund innovators, especially early-stage R&D in promising areas that might be too high risk for private investors. Government’s many funding tools include grants, challenges, prizes, loan guarantees, advanced purchase agreements, and in some cases, direct equity. Government financing propelled the research and development (R&D) of COVID-19 vaccines and helped assure businesses that they could invest in vaccine production.18
Similar grant mechanisms have also been used for green energy and climate funding. The Swedish Energy Agency has supported 250 startups with approximately US$100 million in grants. The agency grants up to US$770,000, depending on stages of development, from concept development to viable pilot.19
Government agencies and regulators can also use loans, loan guarantees, and direct equity to boost innovation. The US Department of Energy manages US$35 billion of debt and loan guarantees (see section, How US Department of Energy catalyzes innovation for clean energy).20 Morocco and Israel allow startups to choose financing either as a refundable grant or equity investment.21
Incentivizing businesses to invest in and consumers to adopt innovations
Incentives shape markets. Regulators can incentivize investment in innovations through a slew of direct and indirect tools.
The growth in Norway's electric vehicles (EV) market has been buttressed by policy incentives. In 2021, nearly 65% of cars sold in Norway were EVs.22 By 2025, the country aims to reach 100%.23 The government’s car tax system incentivizes this transformation. Low emission cars are exempt from purchasing and vehicle registration tax, import tax, and annual road traffic insurance tax. EVs also enjoy reduced tolls, subsided parking, and access to bus lanes. Norway also has in place the “polluter pays” principle, where high-emission vehicles pay more taxes than EV owners.24
Charging infrastructure has kept pace with EV sales. In 2015, the Norwegian government subsidized a push to construct a charging station every 50 kilometers along main roads, resulting in 21,000 charging stations across Norway in 2022.25 The country also passed legislation empowering people with the “right to charge,” including those living in apartments and buildings—giving them the right to access charging stations.26
Some regulators are going far beyond financial incentives. The German government is funding the KelRide, an on-demand autonomous electric vehicle (AEV) ridesharing project for public transportation.27 Though the funding is sizeable, the key attraction noted of the project is an ecosystem of stakeholders and an AEV testing environment. The project allows electric AVs to run on a 14 km public road with dynamic re-routing of AVs (as opposed to fixed routes) and a chance to test AVs under real-life adverse weather conditions such as rainfall, snowfall, and fog.28 If successful, the project is expected to act as a blueprint across Germany.29
Likewise, Germany's Energy Agency (Deutsche Energie-Agentur) launched the Start-Up Energy Transition (SET) awards in 2017. The top 15 finalists receive promotional videos and introductions to potential customers, investors, and corporate partners.30 Since 2020, SET has also added an element called SET Mentoring that allows startups to get their business models reviewed by the energy agency.31 When engaging with businesses and offering advice, regulatory agencies should guard against “regulatory capture.” Keeping separate teams for regulatory and advisory functions, providing equitable participation platforms, and reforming internal decision-making processes, can help agencies prevent regulatory capture.32
Endorsing and setting standards to drive growth and convergence
Standards contribute to flexible, agile policymaking.33 Standards also encourage collaboration, allow technologies to interface with each other, and give consumers accepted baselines of quality. They can be a powerful tool.
The introduction of the Global System for Mobile Communications (GSM) standards represents a major success story in standard setting. The European Telecommunications Standards Institute (ETSI) defined protocols for telecom operators and telecom equipment manufacturers. GSM made technologies interoperable, saved development and production costs, and allowed users to roam freely across the globe.34 The GSM, first launched as European standards and then adopted globally, currently has more than 5 billion unique mobile users.35
Similarly, the Boiler and Pressure Vessel Code (BVPC), first created in the United States and issued every two years, has been adopted in over 140 countries.36 The standards improve safety, prevent accidents, and mitigate adverse environmental impacts by avoiding leaks.37
As emerging business models mature, we may see agencies setting standards to prevent online harms, protect privacy, and encourage convergence of technologies under metaverse.38
Streamlining regulatory processes
Long delays involved in permitting infrastructure projects can be frustrating. This is particularly problematic for green infrastructure given many countries are committed to move towards green energy. In the US, an Office of Management and Budget-led effort to shrink those delays reduced the average time needed for obtaining a permit from 4.5 years to 2.5 years, a 45% reduction that saved billions of dollars.39
Australia has also recognized the issue. The 2022-23 Australian budget provides AUD$139.6 million to advance environment law reform.40 This includes AUD$10 million for a single touch system to remove the patchwork approval process at the federal, state, and local level.41 The on-time decisions have markedly improved, from 21% in December 2019 to 83% in June 2022.42