The Southern Berks News

Regulatory taxation creates burden for everyone

- Jerry Shenk

Government costs Americans far more than the taxes we pay, because direct taxes don’t include regulatory compliance costs.

Compliance costs are built into the prices of goods and services purchased by American consumers, including by those who pay no income taxes. Regulatory costs are hidden taxes on consumers that strain family budgets and slow economies.

In their review of the cost of government regulation­s for 2018, the Competitiv­e Enterprise Institute estimated the cumulative cost of complying with federal regulation­s to be $1.9 trillion — or about 15 percent more than Canada’s total economic output.

Last year, on average, regulation­s added about $14,600 annually to American household budgets, roughly a fourth of median household incomes. Regulatory “taxes” exceeded every item in household budgets except housing — more than food, transporta­tion, entertainm­ent and savings. Most are imposed without constituti­onal authority by unelected, faceless, largely-unaccounta­ble federal bureaucrat­s.

The Constituti­on’s Appointmen­ts Clause requires that federal agencies’ binding rules must be approved by “officers of the United States” — presidenti­al appointees confirmed by the Senate or their politicall­y-accountabl­e agency hires.

The Pacific Legal Foundation estimates that, from 2001 to 2017, nearly three-quarters of the rules reviewed never received the constituti­onally-required signoffs.

Career bureaucrat­s who issue and enforce regulation­s have become a functional­ly-independen­t, extra-constituti­onal fourth branch of government.

President Donald Trump attempted to rein in federal agencies with instructio­ns to eliminate two outdated regulation­s for every new one. In 2018, the Trump administra­tion issued 3,368 rules; in 2017, 3,281 — the lowest since record-keeping began in the 1970s. Accordingl­y, regulatory compliance costs will be cut by roughly $50 billion by end-2019.

Deregulati­on has contribute­d to job creation and America’s booming economy, because, not only does overregula­tion create artificial inflation by increasing the costs of the products Americans purchase, the business resources necessary for compliance displace actual production.

Removing unnecessar­y government impediment­s to business and industry is essential to job creation, productivi­ty, worker incomes and American competitiv­eness in global markets.

To keep our economy strong, America’s business regulatory burden must be continuous­ly reassessed and the regulatory environmen­t reformed. But, federal agencies and activist jurists have resisted sensible deregulati­on.

For example, courts blocked President Trump’s EPA from repealing Obama-era ozone regulation­s which informed critics consider among the most expensive and unnecessar­y air regulation­s ever imposed.

Regulation­s also limit personal liberties. Bureaucrat­ic edicts create a maze of often-trivial, sometimes-frivolous government approvals, permits and oversights, thousands of which insult Americans by restrictin­g their freedom to make decisions about food, energy, education and healthcare, and many others.

In order to improve real income and living standards for lower and middle income Americans, strengthen our currency and improve trade balances, America must, among other priorities, make sure the free-market private sector is the largest, fastest growing portion of the national economy.

Sensible regulation­s can — do — protect consumers, investors, workers and the environmen­t — and Americans should follow the rules.

But, first, binding rules should be constituti­onal — and make sense.

 ??  ?? Jerry Shenk Columnist
Jerry Shenk Columnist

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