Townhall...
Stop
the
Regulation!
by Michael
Whalen
Mar 02,
2012
In his
State of the Union address last month, President Obama raised some
eyebrows in
saying “I’ve approved fewer regulations in the first three years of my
presidency
than my Republican predecessor did in his.” While some of the
President’s
critics immediately figured him to be playing around with the numbers,
others
took it as evidence that the Administration might be more pro-business
than it
is usually portrayed.
In reality,
the statistic was solely a measure of the quantity of regulations, and
not
their impacts. As the Annenberg Public Policy Center’s website
FactCheck.org
wrote: “It’s true (barely) that Bush issued more new regulations than
Obama at
the same point in their presidencies — but Obama didn’t mention that
his cost
more.”
Unfortunately,
when it comes to our current government and regulation, the reality is
that
where there’s smoke there’s fire. When one counts “economically
significant”
regulations, as the Competitive Enterprise Institute has, he or she
sees that
President Obama has issued 953 in his first three years in office,
compared to
just 30 that were passed in the first three years of the Bush
Administration.
This is the more meaningful number, as it shows which regulations have
impacted
small businesses and made it more difficult for them to expand and hire.
The same
numbers also show that economically significant rules affecting small
business
have also increased substantially. During the first three years of the
Bush
Administration, 16 new rules of economic significance were issued,
compared to
257 in the first three years of the Obama Administration. It is highly
concerning that the millions of small businesses in the country, which
have
historically fueled our economy, are being so uniquely affected by
current
policy.
I am not
anti-regulation. I absolutely recognize its importance in preventing
exploitive
or dangerous activities, and I am truly proud of America’s history of
protecting
workers and resources. Yet the pendulum has swung so far these days
that I
regularly hear small business owners asking why the government seems to
have it
out for them, going so far as to kill previously-approved projects at
the
owner’s expense. Everywhere I go, I hear from business owners who are
genuinely
confused by new governmental regulations, and frustrated with the
obstacles
that prevent them from hiring new workers. What’s going on now is
unacceptable,
and it makes no sense during this current time of economic uncertainty.
What’s
perhaps most significant about the current pace of regulation is the
circumstances. The past three years have been bleak, and small
businesses have
greatly struggled to get by. Perhaps it is sensible to consider
tinkering with
regulatory policy during an economic boom, but it is extremely harmful
to
recovery to be doing so during a time of economic distress.
America’s
businesses need all the freedom they can have to get back on their feet
and
start growing, and that is exactly what will lead to our economic
recovery. We
want businesses to feel confident enough to undertake new projects and
hire new
workers, not terrified of the bureaucratic traps that might lie around
the
corner.
Slowing the
pace of regulation would be a big step on the road to economic
stability. It
would renew confidence that our government is working on our side,
instead of
against us. The longer we wait, the more small businesses will feel
uncertain
about the future, and unable to get America back to work.
Read this
and other articles at Townhall
|