Anyone wondering why the U.S. economy can't seem to grow at its usual pace should examine one product category where production is booming: federal regulation.
Washington set a new record in 2013 by issuing final rules consuming 26,417 pages in the Federal Register. While plenty of government employees deserve credit for this milestone, leadership matters. And by this measure President Obama has never been surpassed in the Oval Office.
The latest rule-making tally comes from the Competitive Enterprise Institute's Wayne Crews, who on April 29 will publish his annual review of federal regulation in "Ten Thousand Commandments." This is important work because politicians and the media treat regulation as a largely cost-free public good. Mr. Crews knows better.
Congress may be mired in gridlock, but the federal bureaucracy is busier than ever. In 2013 the Federal Register contained 3,659 "final" rules, which means they now must be obeyed, and 2,594 proposed rules on their way to becoming orders from political headquarters.
The Federal Register finished 2013 at 79,311 pages, the fourth highest total in history. That didn't match President Obama's 2010 all-time record of 81,405 pages. But Mr. Obama can console himself by noting that of the five highest Federal Register page counts, four have occurred on his watch. The other was 79,435 pages under President George W. Bush in 2008.
And the feds aren't letting up. Mr. Crews reports that there are another 3,305 regulations moving through the pipeline on their way to being imposed. One hundred and ninety-one of those are "economically significant" rules, which are defined as having costs of at least $100 million a year. Keep in mind that the feds routinely low-ball their cost estimates so the public will continue to think regulation is free.
ZitatAnyone wondering why the U.S. economy can't seem to grow at its usual pace should examine one product category where production is booming: federal regulatio ..................................... This is important work because politicians and the media treat regulation as a largely cost-free public good. Mr. Crews knows better. ...................................... The Federal Register finished 2013 at 79,311 pages, the fourth highest total in history. That didn't match President Obama's 2010 all-time record of 81,405 pages. But Mr. Obama can console himself by noting that of the five highest Federal Register page counts, four have occurred on his watch. The other was 79,435 pages under President George W. Bush in 2008.
These regulations are a great way for global corporate and finance to suppress competition from small business and start ups, the two main sources of economic growth.
Quote: algernonpj wrote in post #2[quote] These regulations are a great way for global corporate and finance to suppress competition from small business and start ups, the two main sources of economic growth.
The increase in Government regulations is creeping into every person's life and we are now finding the government restrictions and intrusions of the law in our everyday news.
Who had ever heard of the BLM before last week and the Bundy Ranch controversy? Now we learn the BLM is in charge of over 80% of Nevada's land and Dirty Harry is in charge of the BLM as of a week or so ago.
The pieces are beginning to add up and it's more of the same. Did anyone hear Rush's sub today? He was very good!
******************* "The best way to get a bad law repealed is to enforce it strictly." Abraham Lincoln
"Either the Republican party will reform itself or its going the way of the wind." Pat Caddell at CPAC