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Entries in CEI (933)

Tuesday
May212013

CEI Today: 10,000 Commandments, credit union regulation, and immigration vs wages

TEN THOUSAND COMMANDMENTS - WAYNE CREWS

REPORT ON REGULATION


In the twenty years since the creation of Ten Thousand Commandments: An Annual Snapshot of the Federal Regulatory State, one trend has become clear: The regulatory state is growing in large part because the executive branch increasingly uses its control over rulemaking to enact policies it could not get approved by Congress.


Americans spend an estimated $1.8 trillion a year to comply with federal regulations, according to the report. For the first time, that’s more than half the level of total federal expenditures. Agencies spend $61 billion per year just to administer and enforce federalregulations—a 50 percent increase in the last decade.

cei.org/10kc


See also: Wall Street Journal editorial, Red Tape Record Breakers


> Interview Wayne Crews

CREDIT UNION REGULATION - JOHN BERLAU

Openmarket.org: Udall-Paul Legislation Spreads Freedom for Credit Unions and Entrepreneurs

 

By definition, if a bill is sponsored by Sens. Mark Udall, D-Colo., and Rand Paul, R-Ky., or any similarly odd ideological couples in the House, it more than meets the definition of bipartisan. For that, it should get a big kumbaya from the Beltway cognoscenti.


Yet the Udall-Paul bill, S. 968, should be cheered not just because of its bipartisanship, but because it actually spreads freedom. Those concerned with government eroding options for entrepreneurs should cheer this legislation, which lifts regulatory barriers to an untapped source of capital for startups: America’s credit unions. > Read more


> Interview John Berlau

IMMIGRATION - DAVID BIER

Openmarket.org: What Happened to U.S. Wages During Mass Immigration?

 

From 1890 to 1914, more than 15 million people poured into the United States, mostly from Europe. More than 1.3 million came in  1907 alone. That would be like 4 million coming in one year today–which would be four times the number allowed in legally last year. Despite this enormous increase in the workforce, worker compensation rose 40 percent over that era. Overall, America’s fastest period of economic growth was during the time of mass immigration (4.17 percent annually). > Read more


> Interview David Bier

CEI ANNUAL DINNER & GALA

FEATURING

THE HONORABLE RAND PAUL


JUNE 20, 2013

 


cei.org/ceidinner

 

CEI is a non-profit, non-partisan public policy group dedicated to the principles of free enterprise and limited government.  For more information about CEI, please visit our website, cei.org, and blogs, Globalwarming.org and OpenMarket.org.  Follow CEI on Twitter! Twitter.com/ceidotorg.

 

TODAY!

I, Pencil Movie Screening

The Union League Club
Chicago, Illinois

May 21, 2013, 6 - 7:30 PM

APPLY TODAY!

Warren T. Brookes Journalism Fellowship

CEI offers a one-year fellowship for journalists seeking to improve their knowledge of the principles of free markets and limited government. 

cei.org/warrenbrookes


Contact: chall@cei.org

 




 

   

Tuesday
May212013

CEI - Ten Thousand Commandments: Regulations Increasingly Used to Enact Measures Voters Wouldn't Approve

Obama Administration Piles On Regs In Areas Where Congress Wouldn't Cooperate

 

WASHINGTON, D.C., May 21, 2013 – In the twenty years since the creation of Ten Thousand Commandments: An Annual Snapshot of the Federal Regulatory State, one trend has become clear: The regulatory state is growing in large part because the executive branch increasingly uses its control over rulemaking to enact policies it could not get approved by Congress.

According to the new edition of the report, released today by the Competitive Enterprise Institute, Americans spend an estimated $1.8 trillion a year to comply with federal regulations. For the first time, that’s more than half the level of total federal expenditures. Agencies spend $61 billion per year just to administer and enforce federal regulations—a 50 percent increase in the last decade.

The 2012 Federal Register ranks fourth all-time with 78,961 pages, but three of the top four years, including the top two, occurred during the Obama administration. The 2010s are on pace to average 80,000 pages per year—up from 170,000 in the 1960s and 450,000 in the ‘70s.

Completed rules reviewed in the federal Unified Agenda compilation of priority regulations went up 16 percent in the last year and 40 percent the year before.

There are more federal regulations than ever—the Code of Federal Regulations, which compiles all federal regulations, grew by more than 4,000 pages last year and now stands at 174,545 pages, spread over 238 volumes. Its index alone runs to more than 1,100 pages.

Government has added more than 80,000 regulations in the last 20 years—3,708 in the last year alone. That’s one new rule Americans must live under every 2½ hours. Today, 4,062 sit in the pipeline. Those will add at least $22 billion in compliance costs and probably much more.

The dramatic growth in federal regulation did not begin with President Obama. The Federal Register stood at 75,606 in 2002—the sixth-highest level—and has been above 70,000 every year since except for 2009. But since then, it has recorded three of the four busiest years for regulatory activity in history.

And when it comes to economically significant rules—those expected to cost $100 million or more in compliance costs—the Obama administration is the unchallenged champion. Of the 4,062 rules in the pipeline, 224 are in this category. That level is 24 percent higher than President Bush’s most active year and far higher than any other year since 2000—except for 2010, which was tied.

The “Big Five” rulemakers—the Departments of Treasury, Commerce, the Interior, Agriculture and Transportation—account for 43 percent of that. EPA ranks sixth in rule making, but EPA regs, which are especially subject to being used to enact policies that would likely not pass muster with voters, are up 44 percent in the first Obama term and cost American taxpayers $353 billion per year—the most of any agency.

“It’s not just the politicization of the regulatory process,” said Wayne Crews, author of the report and vice president for policy at CEI. “It’s about transparency. It’s about cost and burden analysis. It’s about real outside audits of federal agencies. Asking agencies to audit themselves and identify their own weaknesses is like asking students to grade their own tests.”

The stakes are not insignificant. Americans implicitly spend nearly $15,000 per family to comply with federal regulations. That’s more than they spend on anything else except housing.

Crews cites two paths for reform. One is to enact true transparency and cost analyses. The other is to go to the source of the matter—the systematic over-delegation of rulemaking power to agencies. “Requiring expedited votes on economically significant or controversial agency rules before they become binding on the people would reestablish congressional accountability and help affirm the principle of ‘no regulation without representation,’” Crews said.

What do all these new rules do? The Department of Agriculture enacted a Rural Broadband Access Loan and Loan Guarantee program and new regulations concerning importation of unmanufactured wood articles. Health and Human Services added a spate of rules related to the Affordable Care Act and a review of what constitutes a single serving for labeling purposes.

The Department of Labor instituted a hearing conservation program for construction workers. The Department of Energy established conservation standards for wine chillers, battery chargers, TVs, residential humidifiers and mobile home furnaces. The Department of Transportation updated its regs on head restraints and rear center lap and shoulder belts. The Department of the Treasury prohibited funding of unlawful Internet gambling.

“What we’ve done for 20 years is round up the data that expose the hidden tax of regulation,” said Crews. “Government’s reach extends well beyond Washington’s taxes, deficits and borrowing. And these are costs we all pay—through higher taxes or lower wages.”

โ–บ Read the 2013 edition of Ten Thousand Commandments

โ–บ Read the 2013 Ten Thousand Commandments Fact Sheet

โ–บ Browse the archive of past editions of the report


CEI is a non-profit, non-partisan public policy group dedicated to the principles of free enterprise and limited government.  For more information about CEI, please visit our website, cei.org, and blogs, Globalwarming.org and OpenMarket.org.  Follow CEI on Twitter! Twitter.com/ceidotorg.

Monday
May202013

CEI - WSJ on CEI report: regulations up 21% over past decade 

Did you know: federal regulations have increased more than 21% in the past decade as measured by pages in the Code of Federal Regulations? That's one of the take-aways from today's Wall Street Journal editorial, which opines on a forthcoming report by CEI's Wayne Crews.  In fact, this is the 20th anniversary of the report, Ten Thousand Commandments: An Annual Snapshot of the Federal Regulatory State.

The report is scheduled for release tomorrow.

#####

The Wall Street Journal

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887323582904578485241326184204.html


REVIEW & OUTLOOK


May 19, 2013, 6:31 p.m. ET

Red Tape Record Breakers

A new study puts the cost of regulation at $14,768 per household.

President Obama is opposing a bill passed by the House last week that would require the Securities and Exchange Commission to better measure the costs and benefits of new regulations. That's no surprise considering that the latest annual index of federal rules shows that Team Obama is now the red tape record holder.

For two decades, Wayne Crews of the Competitive Enterprise Institute has tracked the growth of new federal regulations. In his 20th anniversary edition this week, he'll report that pages in the Code of Federal Regulations hit an all-time high of 174,545 in 2012, an increase of more than 21% during the last decade.

Relying largely on government data, Mr. Crews estimates that in 2012 the cost of federal rules exceeded $1.8 trillion, roughly equal to the GDP of Canada. These costs are embedded in nearly everything Americans buy. Mr. Crews calculates these costs at $14,768 per household, meaning that red tape is now the second largest item in the typical family budget after housing.

Last year 4,062 regulations were at various stages of implementation inside the Beltway. The government completed work on 1,172, an increase of 16% over the 1,010 that the feds imposed in 2011, which was a 40% increase over 722 in 2010.

Another way to measure the regulatory burden is by pages in the Federal Register, which includes new rules as well as proposed rules and supporting documents. By that measure the Obama Administration did not break the all-time record of 81,405 pages it set in 2010. But the 78,961 pages it churned out in 2012 mean that the President has posted three of the four greatest paperwork years on record.

And to be fair, if Mr. Obama were ever to acknowledge that this is a problem, he could reasonably blame George W. Bush for setting a lousy example. Despite the Obama myth that the Bush years were an era of deregulation, the Bush Administration routinely generated more than 70,000 pages a year in the Federal Register.

When it comes to "economically significant" rules, which are those estimated by the feds to cost at least $100 million each, Mr. Crews notes that the current Administration is "in a class by itself." The bureaucracy finished up 57 such rules in 2012 and another 167 are in the pipeline.

These are largely the progeny of the Affordable Care Act, Dodd-Frank and the EPA's effort to use regulation to impose an anti-carbon-fuels agenda that even a Democratic Senate won't pass. Since Mr. Obama doesn't want to accurately assess the costs of these rules, we'll rely on Mr. Crews.

Monday
May202013

CEI Today: Crushing regulation, investigating the EPA, and wind farms v condors

TEN THOUSAND COMMANDMENTS
REPORT ON REGULATION


Wall Street Journal: Red Tape Record Breakers


For two decades, Wayne Crews of the Competitive Enterprise Institute has tracked the growth of new federal regulations. In his 20th anniversary edition this week, he'll report that pages in the Code of Federal Regulations hit an all-time high of 174,545 in 2012, an increase of more than 21% during the last decade. > Read more (subscription req.)


> Interview Wayne Crews

TARGETING CONSERVATIVE/LIBERTARIAN GROUPS

The Hill: EPA to review claims of bias against conservatives amid fight over IRS


The Environmental Protection Agency’s inspector general will review claims the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) refuses to waive public records fees for conservative groups while granting the waivers for environmental organizations.

The action follows a May 14 report by the conservative Competitive Enterprise Institute (CEI) that claims the EPA waives the fees for major environmental groups more than 90 percent of the time, while often denying fee waivers for CEI, Judicial Watch and other groups. 
> Read more


> Interview Christopher Horner

EPA LETS WIND FARMS KILL CONDORS - MARLO LEWIS

Globalwarming.org:  No Fine If Wind Farm Kills Endangered Condors — Fish and Wildlife Service

 

Should industrial wind facilities have to pay a $100,000 fine – as oil and gas companies do – if they kill an endangered species? Many environmental activists think so. The Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) does not.


In a reversal of its official opinion, the FWS recently announced “it will not penalize the operator of a Southern California wind operator if its turbines kill or injure one California condor,” reports environmental journalist Chris Clarke in ReWire. > Read more

> Interview Marlo Lewis

CEI ANNUAL DINNER & GALA

FEATURING

THE HONORABLE RAND PAUL


JUNE 20, 2013

 


cei.org/ceidinner

 

CEI is a non-profit, non-partisan public policy group dedicated to the principles of free enterprise and limited government.  For more information about CEI, please visit our website, cei.org, and blogs, Globalwarming.org and OpenMarket.org.  Follow CEI on Twitter! Twitter.com/ceidotorg.

 

TODAY!
"Richard Windsor,” Gina McCarthy, and the Abuse of Power



Featuring Christopher Horner, author of The Liberal War on Transparency and CEI Senior Fellow

Monday, May 20, 2013
3:00 pm – 4:00 pm
406 Senate Dirksen Office Bldg

Washington, DC

RSVP:
mebell@cei.org

 



I, Pencil Movie Screening

The Union League Club
Chicago, Illinois

May 21, 2013, 6 - 7:30 PM

APPLY TODAY!

Warren T. Brookes Journalism Fellowship

CEI offers a one-year fellowship for journalists seeking to improve their knowledge of the principles of free markets and limited government. 

cei.org/warrenbrookes


Contact: chall@cei.org

 




 

   

Friday
May172013

CEI Today: Court ruling on Obama recess appointments, junk science on Fox, and Obama's EPA nominee 

OBAMA RECESS APPOINTMENTS - HANS BADER

Openmarket.org: Obama Recess Appointments Violate Constitution; Another Appeals Court Rules Against the NLRB


Another federal appeals court has ruled that President Obama’s so-called “recess appointments” to the National Labor Relations Board were unconstitutional because the Senate was not in recess at the time.

Obama’s appointments of the NLRB members would be valid only under a still broader, radically expansive interpretation of the Recess Appointments Clause that would gut the Senate’s power to review Presidential appointments.
> Read more


> Interview Hans Bader

JUNK SCIENCE - ANGELA LOGOMASINI

Openmarket.org: Surprising Junk Science on FOX News


FOX published a silly story from Prevention magazine on how chemicals found in popcorn cooked in nonstick pans might give you heart disease based on a single study that found a statistical association, which can occur by mere chance.  How many other studies failed to find an association?  The article doesn’t bother to go there, rather it says:  ” Scary? You bet.”  The article does offer a weak qualifier, stating that “more research needs to be done to determine the specific relationship between PFOA [the chemical used in non-stick the pans] and cardiovascular disease.”


Another recent FOX-published article highlights EWG’s latest Shoppers’ Guide to Pesticides in Produce.  Fox offers no  critical analysis of the activist groups’ crazy claims.  > Read more

> Interview Angela Logomasini

 

EPA (NON)TRANSPARENCY - MARLO LEWIS

Globalwarming.org:  Gina McCarthy’s Responses to Sen. Vitter’s Questions Part II: Fuel Economy


Even the Society of Environmental Journalists – hardly a hotbed of libertarians, conservative Republicans, or fossil-fuel industry lobbyists — recently complained that the Obama administration “has been anything but transparent in its dealings with reporters seeking information, interviews and clarification” on environmental, health, and public lands issues, and that, ”The EPA is one of the most closed, opaque agencies to the press.”  > Read more

> Interview Marlo Lewis

CEI Podcast for May 16, 2013: A Controversial EPA Nominee

The bitter fight over Gina McCarthy, President Obama’s nominee for EPA Administrator, is headed to the Senate floor under a potential filibuster threat. Myron Ebell, Director of CEI’s Center for Energy and Environment, explains that the deeper cause of this political fight is a startling lack of transparency at the EPA that McCarthy is unlikely to fix.

 


COMING SOON!


Ten Thousand Commandments:
An Annual Snapshot of the Federal Regulatory State

DID YOU KNOW?

U.S. households “pay” $14,768 annually in regulatory hidden tax, “absorbing” 23 percent of the average income of $63,685, and 30 percent of the expenditure budget of $49,705.

CEI ANNUAL DINNER & GALA

FEATURING

THE HONORABLE RAND PAUL


JUNE 20, 2013

 


cei.org/ceidinner

 

CEI is a non-profit, non-partisan public policy group dedicated to the principles of free enterprise and limited government.  For more information about CEI, please visit our website, cei.org, and blogs, Globalwarming.org and OpenMarket.org.  Follow CEI on Twitter! Twitter.com/ceidotorg.

 


"Richard Windsor,” Gina McCarthy, and the Abuse of Power



Featuring Christopher Horner, author of The Liberal War on Transparency and CEI Senior Fellow

Monday, May 20, 2013
3:00 pm – 4:00 pm
406 Senate Dirksen Office Bldg

Washington, DC

RSVP:
mebell@cei.org

 



I, Pencil Movie Screening

The Union League Club
Chicago, Illinois

May 21, 2013, 6 - 7:30 PM

APPLY TODAY!

Warren T. Brookes Journalism Fellowship

CEI offers a one-year fellowship for journalists seeking to improve their knowledge of the principles of free markets and limited government. 

cei.org/warrenbrookes


Contact: chall@cei.org