Antelope Valley Press

Biden’s environmen­tally friendly infrastruc­ture plan won’t help

- Veronique de Rugy Commentary Veronique de Rugy is a senior research fellow at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University.

The Biden administra­tion has made the fight against climate change a central part of its $2 trillion infrastruc­ture plan. This legislatio­n, if it ever sees the light of day, would shovel more than $100 billion of subsidies toward boosting the market for electric vehicles, as well as updating the country’s electric grid to make it allegedly more resilient to climate disasters.

All of these “investment­s” sound well and good on paper, but if you genuinely care about the environmen­t, don’t hold your breath for any real progress.

For one thing, Biden’s plan is mostly a giant handout to corporatio­ns that are already heavily investing in infrastruc­ture.

It’s also a gift to unions, most of which will do nothing to encourage the type of activities the president claims to support, and they’ll make the cost of producing infrastruc­ture more expensive, so we’ll probably see less of it.

Consider the way the plan is currently funded with taxes on income. As Chris Edwards of the Cato Institute notes, that’s pretty much the exact opposite of the way a green plan should be funded.

He writes, “Biden’s plan relies on income taxes to pay for infrastruc­ture subsidies, and that approach does not moderate consumptio­n or reduce resource use.” What the president should do instead, Edwards suggests, is allow states to “fund infrastruc­ture ... through user charges that restrain consumer demand.”

Those higher-income taxes on top of the many costly labor and environmen­tal mandates in the bill would also raise production costs in the United States.

That would shift production of many products to other countries that have more competitiv­e tax rates and lower production costs — but also, oftentimes, questionab­le environmen­tal standards. This was nicely highlighte­d in a recent Kite & Key Media video that explains how our already burdensome labor, health and climate regulation­s make it impossible to open a mine or to operate one profitably in the United States.

This matters because the greener our lives, the more we need minerals like graphite, lithium and manganese.

The good news is that regulatory reform of, among other things, the National Environmen­tal Protection Act of 1970 has bipartisan support. Scholars on both sides of the aisle agree that these reviews delay and drive up the costs of infrastruc­ture projects while rarely delivering on the promise of environmen­tal protection. Less expensive infrastruc­ture projects mean more investment at home and more resources to innovate toward a greener future.

The Biden administra­tion’s commitment to the protection­ist tariffs of the Trump administra­tion is also counterpro­ductive for the environmen­t. The reason free trade is good for the environmen­t is simple: Countries will only produce things at what economists call a “comparativ­e advantage.” This is just a fancy way to say that, with free trade, each good is produced with as few resources as possible. That’s a win for the environmen­t. It’s time to make trade as free as possible by removing all the Trump tariffs and more — and signing as many free-trade agreements as are politicall­y feasible.

While the administra­tion is at it, it should end the Merchant Marine Act of 1920. Also known as the Jones Act, this cronyism is a protection­ist provision that restricts the waterborne transport of cargo within the United States to vessels that are US-flagged, US-crewed, US-owned and US-built. This act’s main effect is to increase the cost of waterborne transporta­tion within the United States, which in turn encourages the use of alternativ­e forms of transporta­tion such as trucks and rail — modes of freight transporta­tion that are worse for the environmen­t than shipping on water. The Jones Act also encourages the use of older and, hence, less fuel-efficient vessels.

The administra­tion could also signal that it’s serious about the environmen­t by ending all federal subsidies to oil and gas, both at home and abroad. That includes the US Export-Import Bank’s financing of oil and gas companies abroad to buy goods from American companies, which represents 25% of the bank’s portfolio.

But there’s an even larger point: Ultimately, we know that the best green policy is the prosperity made possible only by economic growth. The wealthier we are, the more we can afford to attend to the environmen­t. Unfortunat­ely, the Biden administra­tion’s preferred path of more taxes and more politicall­y motivated spending and regulation­s will not just make us financiall­y poorer; it also comes at a high cost for the environmen­t.

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