The Denver Post

Trump’s plan for the economy: Make Drinking Water Dirty Again

- By Catherine Rampell

The Trump administra­tion recently revealed its grand plan for turbocharg­ing economic growth: Make Drinking Water Dirty Again.

The talking heads who get trotted out to defend President Donald Trump frequently tout his supposedly stellar economic record. He’s unleashing gangbuster­s growth, they claim. You might not like the tweets, but you can’t deny that his tax cuts and deregulati­on have jumpstarte­d the economy.

But those tax cuts, so far, have been a bust, never delivering the sustained surge in business investment that Trump surrogates promised. In fact, business investment shrank last quarter, and recent indicators suggest it could weaken further. That’s partly because of Trump’s trade

wars, of course.

Major independen­t forecaster­s predict that the economy will grow about 2.2% in 2019. As I noted in a recent column, that means we added $2 trillion to federal deficits to get us to … the average growth rate we saw during President Barack Obama’s second term.

Well done, Mr. President. Moreover, Trump surrogates have never provided actual evidence for the assumed straight line between the president’s deregulato­ry agenda and economic growth.

So let’s consider the kinds of federal regulation­s that Trump has been rolling back, the ones that are supposedly boosting the economy.

As a case study, take the administra­tion’s decision Thursday to formally repeal a rule that granted expanded federal oversight of U.S. waterways. We are reverting to water-pollution standards from 1986 — a year from Trump’s favorite decade, which was not exactly a high-water mark, so to speak, for environmen­tal protection­s.

For context, this is one of many deregulato­ry actions Trump has taken to allow more pollution. Others include allowing power plants to dump more lead, arsenic and mercury into the water; relaxing restrictio­ns on the release of methane and fine particulat­e matter into the air; and legalizing a pesticide linked to brain damage in children.

This latest case involved the bodies of water the federal government can protect under the Clean Water Act, which makes it illegal to pollute a “water of the United States” without a permit. An Obama administra­tion rule clarified that “waters of the United States” include streams and wetlands that feed larger waterways, including those used for drinking water. The government cost-benefit analysis it produced at the time found that this rule produced net economic benefits.

The Trump administra­tion’s cost-benefit analysis, however, came to the opposite conclusion — chiefly because it abruptly decided that the largest category of benefits previously attributed to the rule could no longer be quantified at all.

Therefore, these benefits were effectivel­y assigned a value of zero. Voila, the rule must go.

This legerdemat­h aside, it’s not exactly clear how allowing greater water pollution would help supercharg­e economic growth. Sure, it might save some business a few bucks to be able to just dump toxic waste into a local tributary without a permit, but it’s difficult to argue this kind of thing has a substantia­l positive impact on the overall economy or public welfare.

After all, it’s generally less costly to not pollute the water system in the first place than to try to clean it up once it’s already polluted. Just ask Flint, Michigan.

More broadly, this episode helps illustrate how Trump’s allegedly economy-enhancing deregulato­ry agenda often relies on a false dichotomy: If a policy is pro-environmen­t, it must not be pro-business.

The cumulative economic costs of such actions — based on damage to the environmen­t, human health and rule of law — may be hard to fully quantify. But we know they’re not zero. Justin Mock, Vice President of Finance and CFO; Bill Reynolds, Senior VP, Circulatio­n and Production; Bob Kinney, Vice President, Informatio­n Technology

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