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Christine Hall,
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Cost of Federal Regulation
Exceeds $1 Trillion
Americans Burdened by
Governments 10,000 Commandments
Washington, D.C., July 9, 2007A new Competitive Enterprise
Institute report on federal regulation finds that the cost of federal
regulations on consumers topped $1 trillion last year, nearly 10 percent of
U.S. gross domestic product.
In
Ten Thousand Commandments: An
Annual Snapshot of the Federal Regulatory State, author Clyde Wayne
Crews, Jr. examines the whopping costs and burdens imposed by federal
regulations. Among the reports findings:
- Given that 2006 government spending reached $2.654
trillion, the hidden tax of regulation now approaches half the level of federal
spending itself.
- Regulatory costs are more than quadruple the $248
billion budget deficit.
- The number of new regulations declined but is still
well into quadruple digits. In 2006, agencies issued 3,718 final rules, a
6 percent decline from 2005.
- New regulations by federal agencies outpace actual
laws passed by Congress, indicating that considerable lawmaking power is
delegated to unelected agencies. While regulatory agencies issued 3,718
final rules, Congress passed and the president signed into law 321 bills in
2006.
- Regulatory costs exceed the amount of wealth already
extracted from Americans in the form of income taxes. Regulatory costs
exceed the estimated 2006 individual income taxes of $998 billion and dwarf
corporate income taxes of $277 billion.
- Regulatory costs exceed 2004 corporate pretax profits
of $1.059 trillion.
The solution to the crushing level
of federal regulations on the lives and livelihoods of American
workers? The report urges a
series of reforms to make the cost of regulation more transparent and
accountable to the people. For example, Congress should commission a
third-party review of the costs and benefits of regulations. And Congress
should be required to vote on agency rules before they become
binding.
Read the report
Wayne Crews
BIO