“…Indeed, reviews of RISs, in Australia and elsewhere, consistently conclude that the process is not achieving its stated objectives, due to insufficient coverage, lack of resources, low levels of compliance and a reluctance by departments to prepare RISs (Carroll, 2008a). For example, the New South Wales Auditor‐General stated that the ‘[RIS] processes were ineffective, the claimed financial benefits were inaccurate and hard to quantify, and, despite some early achievements, the measures taken had failed to spark sustained regulatory reform over the medium term’ (cited in Allen et al., 2021, p. 120). Likewise, the Greiner report observed that in New South Wales their quality was inconsistent, the assessments were ‘far from the reality’ and the process was little more than a tick the box exercise, if they were prepared at all; also, that RISs were used to justify rather than inform and overall the impression was that they were ‘little more than a perfunctory exercise and an administrative burden on those undertaking them’ (Greiner et al., 2017, p. 42).…”