A guide to writing good regulatory orders
by Natasha Aggarwal, Bhavin Patel and Karan Singh.
India has several regulators that are vested with quasi-judicial powers and that play a pivotal role in economic governance. In exercising their quasi-judicial functions, regulatory orders must: (i) demonstrate compliance with the principles of natural justice, (ii) establish legitimacy by showing how they are taken strictly in accordance with, and to the extent authorised by the governing law, and (iii) be accountable, by ensuring that all the information an appellate authority may require for its evaluation of the regulatory action is clearly documented.
Regulatory orders significantly impact market participants and public trust. In particular, four sets of stakeholders are impacted by regulatory orders: (i) parties involved in the enforcement proceedings, (ii) the regulator itself, (iii) appellate and review fora, and (iv) the market and the general public. However, deficiencies in reasoning, structure, and clarity in quasi-judicial orders often undermine regulatory legitimacy and efficiency, leading to diminished stakeholder confidence. Moreover, arbitrary orders that do not demonstrate application of mind can be challenged or overturned or remanded in appeal. Such challenges, overturns, and remands lengthen the enforcement process and increase costs for all those involved. They also take away from the certainty of regulatory orders and affect the predictability of the law. Regulatory certainty and predictability are important requirements of the rule of law and are critical for the smooth functioning of markets.
The need for regulatory orders to be well-reasoned is recognised in Indian law. In a recent paper, titled “A guide to writing good regulatory orders”, we propose a method of structuring regulatory orders that would aid readability, strengthen the logical flow of arguments, and enhance the accessibility and transparency of regulatory orders. In particular, we identify four sets of requirements for better order writing: informational, structural, substantive, and stylistic. Broadly, the information requirements relate to identificatory and citatory information that should appear in orders, and to information that helps establish that procedural requirements have been complied with, such as dates of Show Cause Notices. Structural requirements relate to the logical arrangement of the contents of orders in a manner that aids reading and comprehension, and which strengthens regulatory arguments. The substantive requirements help establish that all the requirements of the substantive law applicable to the matter discussed in the order have been addressed. Finally, our suggestions on stylistic requirements include the use of plain language and writing styles that are accessible and comprehensible to all affected persons.
We propose to conduct further studies on how the suggestions in this paper may be implemented through tools and technologies that could augment regulatory capacity for order writing.
The authors are researchers at the TrustBridge Rule of Law Foundation.
Source: https://blog.theleapjournal.org/2025/03/a-guide-to-writing-good-regulatory.html