Chattanooga Times Free Press

economic growth?

Will Trump’s house-cleaning agenda at major rules-making agencies spur

- BY WILLIAM F. SHUGHART II

As President Donald Trump has noted, a surefire way to restore the competitiv­e edge America once enjoyed would involve cleaning out the executive branch’s Augean stables from which heavy-handed regulation­s have been issued at an increasing pace for decades.

Complying with regulation­s now costs individual­s and businesses both large and small about $4 trillion every year, according to economists at George Mason University’s Mercatus Center. That’s about $13,000 per person.

Money spent keeping records, hiring regulatory compliance officers and dealing with the bureaucrat­s who promulgate and enforce these regulation­s — which affect nearly every aspect of daily life — is money not available for families to spend on their own needs. Indeed, its money businesses don’t have to invest in buildings, equipment and jobs.

Regulation­s are like a tax on economic activity. And they’re a regressive one, at that, meaning they fall most heavily on low-income households and small businesses.

Suppose a new safety regulation for cars and trucks — requiring all new vehicles to be equipped with backup cameras, for example — adds $500 to the cost of every vehicle sold. Most of the added cost will be passed onto consumers in the form of higher prices.

Who is more hurt by the price increase: the government bureaucrat making $131,000 a year, or an apprentice electricia­n earning

» Yes «

Regulatory red tape is strangling economic growth

$30,000 annually?

Most regulation­s are one-size-fits all. The anti-money laundering provisions of the Patriot Act, passed shortly after 9/11, required all financial institutio­ns to adopt procedures and internal controls to prevent money from ending up in the hands of terrorist groups.

Because the costs of complying with that law essentiall­y were the same for a hometown bank as for a big Wall Street bank, some 3,000 small financial institutio­ns were forced to shut their doors or merge with larger competitor­s over the following few years.

So-called midnight regulation­s are another growing problem. That term refers to rules issued by an outgoing administra­tion between Election Day and Inaugurati­on Day.

Every president since Ronald Reagan has signed executive orders requiring government agencies issuing major regulation­s to conduct cost-benefit analyses prior to finalizing them. Midnight regulation­s, however, are rushed through the review process and published without full considerat­ion of their economic impacts.

One shouldn’t put much faith in regulation­s issued less hastily, as federal agencies routinely overstate the benefits and understate the costs of the rules they issue.

A district court judge recently reprimande­d the Environmen­tal Protection Agency for failing to comply with a requiremen­t that it estimate the number of jobs that would be lost as the result of new regulation­s.

EPA Administra­tor Gina McCarthy responded by saying producing such estimates is of “limited utility.”

To whom, one wonders?

The EPA’s proposed Mercury and Air Toxics Standards, or MATS, was sold as a public health measure that would cut mercury and acid gas emissions from coal mines and power plants.

The rule, while promising annual benefits of $4-6 million, will cost electric utilities almost $10 billion per year — a cost that will be passed on to customers.

Unless canceled,

Federal agencies routinely overstate the benefits and understate the costs of the rules they issue.

MATS will help fulfill President Barack Obama’s goal of shutting down America’s coal industry and will inflict deep economic pain on states like Wyoming, West Virginia, Kentucky, Illinois and Pennsylvan­ia.

Trump has called for a two-for-one policy requiring the eliminatio­n of two existing regulation­s for every new rule issued. Because not all rules impact the economy equally, the policy will require careful and thoughtful implementa­tion. It’s a good starting point.

But there’s much more to be done. Pruning back the regulatory state will go a long way toward energizing the economy.

William F. Shughart II is the research director of the Independen­t Institute and the J. Fish Smith Professor in Public Choice at the Huntsman School of Business at Utah State University.

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