Loveland Reporter-Herald

The Las Vegas Review-journal on how the president is unleashing the administra­tive state:

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Janet Yellen made a stop at a Las Vegas union hall this week as part of President Joe Biden’s desperate effort to tout his administra­tion’s economic agenda. She was especially proud of legislatio­n that directs billions in federal money to favored green interests.

“Our climate strategy,” she said, “is based on a simple premise: Targeting public investment­s can help mobilize private capital toward compelling public policy objectives.”

This “simple premise” is an offshoot of Biden’s infatuatio­n with “industrial policy.” Rather than allow investors and market participan­ts to adapt to changing circumstan­ces and demand, the Biden/yellen approach posits that central planners and politician­s know better and must provide taxpayer “incentives” to drive behavior while picking winners and losers.

It’s a woefully inefficien­t approach with a remarkably consistent record of long-term failure.

But it becomes even more counterpro­ductive when the president wields rule-making authority like a cudgel, bypassing Congress to issue edicts that touch a wide swath of the U.S. economy. In the past few months, The Wall Street Journal notes, the White House has unleashed a “regulatory typhoon” that will cost Americans hundreds of billions of dollars and cover automakers, publicly traded companies and domestic manufactur­ers.

“We’ve never seen this level before in any administra­tion,” Jay Timmons, president and CEO of the National Associatio­n of Manufactur­ers, told Fox News. “We want to call attention to the barrage of regulation­s that manufactur­ers are facing right now.”

President Donald Trump famously vowed to repeal two regulation­s for every new one imposed. Since taking office, Biden has not only nixed that common-sense approach, he is setting records for meddling . ... The Competitiv­e Enterprise Institute reports that the administra­tion may soon kill rules that mandate additional scrutiny for “economical­ly significan­t” regulation­s. “Losing the ‘economical­ly significan­t’ flag would be a real problem” CEI’S Clyde Wayne Crews wrote in June. “Congress needs to … monitor regulatory shenanigan­s in the coming months.”

Central planning combined with an aggressive regulatory apparatus is no recipe for prosperity and growth. As the administra­tion pooh-poohs the nation’s $32 trillion debt and runs up $1.5 trillion deficits, it’s time for Yellen and Biden to see a “compelling public policy” objective in fiscal sanity.

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