Townhall...
Bureaucratic
Deception Vs. Economic
Reality on Regulation
By Raymond J. Keating
6/29/2011
President
Obama recently touted his
credentials as a job creator, highlighting the 49% increase in foreign
investment experienced by the U.S. in 2010. Unfortunately, the $194
billion
invested in the country by foreigners falls substantially short of the
$328
billion figure seen in 2008.
While
a slight rebound in the economy
has led to some increased investment, an uncertain business atmosphere
continues to divert needed capital from the U.S. or simply keep it on
the
sidelines.
Supporting
claims by many in the
private sector that the President “doesn’t get it” when it comes to job
growth,
the administration is pushing for increased and costly federal
regulations as
Americans struggle to crawl out of recession. Uncertainty surrounding
these
regulations means that businesses large and small have taken a
wait-and-see
approach on investing and creating new jobs.
At
the forefront of concern, the
Environmental Protection Agency is primed to pile on new costs,
including time
consuming permitting processes, requiring firms with expansion plans to
receive
agency approval to grow and hire. Amazingly, the White House is trying
to
position additional regulation as an avenue for job creation.
In
a report released by EPA in late
2010, titled The Benefits and Costs of the Clean Air Act 1990 to 2010,
the
agency tries to show vast economic benefits of existing regulations,
providing
political cover for the President as he seeks to heighten and expand
agency
authority. Astoundingly, EPA states that Clean Air Act regulations will
create
$2 trillion in economic benefits in 2020, or 10% of national GDP.
Economist
David Montgomery analyzed
EPA’s supposed benefits of regulation and noted “that the claimed $2
trillion
benefit has nothing to do with the actual amount of goods and services
produced
in the U.S. economy or the number of jobs that are available.” Instead,
Montgomery points out that the EPA analysis is based on speculation
based on
various surveys, and therefore, “the $2 trillion net benefits claimed
by EPA
will never show up as increased output or jobs in the real economy.”
On
the other hand, the $109 billion in
costs due to this EPA regulation has a direct impact on hiring and
economic
expansion.
The
Administration’s tactics on this
issue are far from surprising. With 38% of the country strongly
disapproving of
President Obama’s performance, and jobs remaining the nation’s top
priority,
the White House is trying to boost its credentials wherever possible.
However,
this absurd attempt to frame business stifling regulations as a tool to
increase employment indicates that the President might be running out
of
tricks. Consider that the EPA report showing costs of $109 billion by
2020 only
takes into account existing regulations.
EPA
intends to ramp up regulations. A
recent economic modeling analysis by the American Council for Capital
Formation
predicts that by 2014, heightened EPA regulations will cost the nation
between
476,000 to 1,400,000 jobs and $47 billion to $141 billion in GDP.
To
make matters even worse, of course,
the Administration is calling for higher taxes to address budget
deficits and a
rising national debt. But a better option exists – pro-growth tax and
regulatory reforms. By streamlining the tax code, and relieving U.S.
job
creators from the heavy burdens of increased taxes and regulatory
expenses,
hiring will improve and GDP will be unleashed.
It
will be private sector growth led
by small businesses, not increased government regulation and taxes,
that will
lead the nation out of the current economic slump. Unfortunately, the
President
and his ambitious bureaucratic regulators fail to grasp this
fundamental
economic truth.
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