By Wayne Crews on 3.19.08 @ 12:07AM
How our spend happy Congress could actually do some good for the economy.
As Democrats and Republicans in Congress group hug over their
$150 billion smoke-and-mirrors redistributionist stimulus package,
the deficit is projected to top $400 billion.
Federal spending now straddles the $3 trillion mark, the bulk of it from
America's entitlements, health, and defense budget bonanzas. The
same government that claims to stimulate spends over 20 percent of
this nation's $13 trillion annual economic output.
A drop in this big bucket, the stimulus represents a nervous
exercise to avoid blame in November and obscure the fact that a
recession, if it comes, must be ridden out -- if not now,
then months or years later when the re-adjustments could be even
more painful. But by then, of course, it will be a problem for
other politicians.
Politicians of both parties opportunistically blame markets for
an impending recession while paying no heed to the real culprit:
the leviathan that government has become. Like the presidential working group now contemplating new
oversight of mortgage markets, the "solution" is always to expand
that leviathan, to impose new controls on businesses and
entrepreneurs.
Blaming the private sector makes bipartisanship easy. The
stimulus will have little real effect and betrays no principles
when Congress recognizes few boundaries on power anyway. Indeed,
politicians promise even more stimulus if the current go
round doesn't "work."
The financial markets blamed in the ongoing credit meltdown are
already regulated top to bottom. Politicians rarely mention this or
the fact that the Federal Reserve has manipulated money, credit,
and interest rates for close to a century. (Indeed, any true free
market in money and credit is generations away, but that's another
story.)
But the partially free financial market we do enjoy should be
allowed to function rather than be subjected to even more political
intervention.
THERE IS ONE potential silver lining here. The call for new
regulations highlights the need to reconsider regulation
comprehensively in the context of stimulating economic growth and
wealth creation.
A new Small Business Administration (SBA) initiative called
Regulatory
Review and Reform is an example of just the kind of re-thinking
that's needed now.
Reducing the accumulated impact of 70,000 annual pages of new
regulations -- in a Washington incapable of cutting spending --
would offer real stimulus opportunities. Pruning the regulatory
superstate can increase returns to investors, and offer struggling
entrepreneurs greater prospects that risky new ventures will
succeed.
That assurance would be welcome. Economist Mark Crain's research
for SBA estimates compliance costs for health, safety,
environmental, and economic regulations at over $1.1
trillion -- over one-third the level of federal spending
itself.
For perspective, consider: Regulatory costs exceed all U.S.
corporate pretax profits ($1.06 trillion in 2004), estimated
individual income taxes ($998 billion in 2006), and corporate
income taxes ($277 billion). Combining regulation and spending, the
federal government's share of the economy tops 29 percent.
The 60-plus federal departments, agencies, and commissions are
now at work on nearly 4,000 more rules. Of these, agencies report
that well over 100 of those are "economically significant" -- that
is, they will cost at least $100 million (often far beyond), while
nearly 800 are expected to affect small businesses.
So much for a national stimulus policy; we have a ball-and-chain
policy.
SBA'S LIST OF THE top 10 rules to reform is a good starting point.
But it's only a start: Recent regulatory proposals cover everything
from trans-fat labeling to the controversial airline passenger
screening system program; from myriad auto and Labor Department
safety standards to energy efficiency mandates for anything with an
exhaust pipe.
A regulatory stimulus package would create a more favorable
environment for business and wealth creation by (1) freezing
enactment of new non-essential rules, (2) reviewing the regulatory
state as a whole and implementing a bipartisan package of cuts, and
(3) instituting a permanent "sunsetting" process of ongoing rule
reviews and purges.
Congress could start by repudiating the slate of crippling
energy regulations already enacted (and those being proposed
this election year).
A Deregulatory Stimulus package is a good start. But we also
need to hold Congress accountable for the good and bad that agency
rules do. Voters elect their members of Congress, not the
bureaucrats in the implementing bureaucracies. The latter lack
incentives to police themselves, so they rarely acknowledge that
the costs of the regulations they implement could outweigh their
benefits.
By delegating lawmaking power to agencies, Congress
is the prime mover behind regulatory growth. Sound public policy
would hand the responsibility back to Congress and require elected
representatives to affirm new major rules and their costs before
they are made effective
Long-term economic health owes much to minimal regulation, not
short-term stimulus. We badly need better control of the fiscal
state -- but just as badly we need to rein in the regulatory state.
The federal budget itself didn't even hit $1 trillion -- the
regulatory state's current perch -- until 1987. Look at us now.
Stimulus, indeed.
topics:
Taxes, Business, Federal Budget, Entitlements, Environment, Constitution, Law, Energy