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Committee Material Published 6 Jul 2021 ↗ View on Parliament

We agree with the Treasury that the body of EU financial services rules that was on- shored during the process of leaving the EU should be moved into the regulators’ rule books. Keeping rules in statute could require Parliament to amend or pass new legislation every time that the regulators wish to make changes to them. This would be resource-intensive and impractical. The regulators have a key role to play in designing and developing the rules with appropriate Parliamentary oversight. We ack...

We agree with the Treasury that the body of EU financial services rules that was on- shored during the process of leaving the EU should be moved into the regulators’ rule books. Keeping rules in statute could require Parliament to amend or pass new legislation every time that the regulators wish to make changes to them. This would be resource-intensive and impractical. The regulators have a key role to play in designing and developing the rules with appropriate Parliamentary oversight. We acknowledge that the process of moving rules out of statute will be time-consuming for the regulators and will be a heavy demand on their resources. It is i Type: conclusion | Number: 1 | Paragraph: 27 | Response status: under_consideration Government response: Second, I note the Committee’s view that ‘the body of EU financial services law that was on-shored during the process of leaving the EU should be moved into the regulators’ rulebooks.’ As set out in the previous consultation, the government’s