Red Tape Rising

Notable from this WSJ opinion:

Last year Bush rule-making agencies imposed $11 billion of net new economy-wide regulatory costs (mostly in the environmental area). The cost of new regulations has increased every year on Mr. Bush’s watch, but last year was by far the highest. What’s more, a new Heritage Foundation report concludes that the Administration’s agency czars are in a “clear the decks” mode of promulgating rules during the Presidency’s final 10 months.

With the economy stalling and capital markets looking like sludge, this red-tape roll out makes no sense. The Small Business Administration calculates that the total cost in 2005 of complying with 145,000 pages of federal rules and procedures was $1.1 trillion. This is the rough economic equivalent of imposing a second federal income tax on the economy.

George Mason University’s Mercatus Center reveals in a soon-to-be released study that every measure of regulatory activity is up in recent years — agency staffing, budgets, pages of rule making and compliance costs. Those numbers contradict the stream of attacks against this Administration for “weakening” federal consumer and environmental protections.

Excluding homeland security regulations, the budgets of Uncle Sam’s 50 largest agencies, such as the Federal Communications Commission and the Consumer Products Safety Commission, are up almost one-third since 2001. There are now some 200,000 full-time government employees writing and enforcing federal commandments.

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