I’ve shared some nightmare stories of excessive and mindless government regulation.
- The Food and Drug Administration raiding a dairy for the terrible crime of selling unpasteurized milk to people who prefer unpasteurized milk.
- New York City imposing a $30,000 fine on a small shop because it sold a toy gun.
- The pinheads at the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission going after Hooters for not having any male waiters in hot pants and tight t-shirts.
- Indiana’s Department of Natural Resources is legally attacking a family for rescuing a baby deer.
- An unlucky guy who is in legal hot water for releasing some heart-shaped balloons to impress his sweetheart.
But the regulatory burden goes way beyond these odd anecdotes. We’re talking about a huge cost to the economy, and it’s been getting worse for the past 12 years.
Here are some comments on the President’s inauspicious record from the Wall Street Journal.
Team Obama is now the red tape record holder. …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.
…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…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. …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.
If those numbers don’t make you sit up and take notice, how about these ones?
- Americans spend 8.8 billion hours every year filling out government forms.
- The economy-wide cost of regulation is now $1.75 trillion.
- For every bureaucrat at a regulatory agency, 100 jobs are destroyed in the economy’s productive sector.
- The Obama Administration added $236 billion of red tape just in 2012.
My personal “favorite,” as you can imagine, is the regulatory burden of the income tax.
- The number of pages in the tax code.
- The number of special tax breaks.
- The number of pages in the 1040 instruction booklet.
Today’s Byzantine system is good for tax lawyers, accountants, and bureaucrats, but it’s bad news for America. We need to wipe the slate clean and get rid of this corrupt mess. And you know how to make that happen.
[…] You can click here to learn something about Obama’s record on the issue, and click here to learn a bit about Trump’s track record as […]
[…] You can click here to learn something about Obama’s record on the issue, and click here to learn a bit about Trump’s track record as […]
[…] Strangled By Red Tape […]
[…] Strangled By Red Tape […]
[…] Strangled By Red Tape […]
[…] Strangled By Red Tape […]
[…] Time for another great moment in red tape. […]
[…] And as this video explains, all of this unearned wealth is made possible by a bloated budget, a Byzantine tax code, and a maze of complicated regulations. […]
The Fairtax is the answer. I have been taking it apart for 13 years. The flat tax- will be changed before the ink is dry!
[…] And as this video explains, all of this unearned wealth is made possible by a bloated budget, a Byzantine tax code, and a maze of complicated regulations. […]
Ned is dead on. Imagine the massive boost to the economy when we free all of the brain power that is now being wasted on tax compliance to productive pursuits. And eliminating the distribution bureaucracy would free many more (though of possibly less brain power) to higher pursuits.
[…] Strangled By Red Tape […]
A true flat tax is not politically acceptable, because the bottom 95% would be forced to pay a higher percentage of the total tax revenue.
A flat tax can be made progressive using a standard deduction, but it messes with the ease of collection of a true flat tax. The answer is: cash payment in lieu of a standard deduction. For example, $10,000 in cash is the same as a $40,000 std deduction for a 25% flat tax. While it is true that those [citizens] with no income would have a negative income tax, current means-tested support could be reduced by an equal amount.
Severing cash distribution and collection improves both. Collection is accomplished by employers withholding an accurate 25% of gross income, avoiding the need for employees to file any tax forms at all. [We currently waste 6.5 billion man/hours, or 4 million man/years, filing taxes.] On the cash distribution side, no fraud, no waste.
Monthly electronic payments could also be divided into: cash, medical savings deposits, and retirement savings deposits. This avoids the need to force people to buy insurance with their own funds, if the portion that goes into medical savings accounts is adequate to buy minimal insurance. And, it provides a Sunstein “nudge” to build a minimal retirement account.
Cass Sunstein, also the author of “Nudge”, has recently written “Simple[r]”, which makes the claim that Obama’s administration did everything it could to reduce the burden of regulation. — Total BS, but when you read it, it makes you wish that he had really done [some of] what he’s written about.