Monthly Archives: July 2020

In the News: Tariff Relief

Reason‘s Eric Boehm was kind enough to draw on my recent paper on tariff reform in a piece urging the inclusion of tariff relief in the next coronavirus stimulus bill. The article is here; the paper is here.

Interview: #NeverNeeded Regulations

I recently appeared on the John Locke Foundation’s HeadLocke podcast via Zoom to talk about regulatory reform and CEI’s #NeverNeeded campaign.. The video is now on YouTube. Astute viewers will notice my cat Bella putting in a cameo around the 4:00-4:30 mark.

How to Make #NeverNeeded-Style Reforms Stick

There are lots of good regulatory reform ideas out there. The ideas with the most staying power share a common theme. They don’t just treat this or that rule. They treat the larger rulemaking system that keeps churning out those harmful rules. With a tough economic recovery ahead once masks, prudence, and treatments defeat COVID-19, now is a good time to implement them.

In a recent paper, I outlined two institution-level reform ideas: an independent Regulatory Reduction Commission, and automatic sunsets for all new rules. For those who don’t have time for the paper-length version, there is now an op-ed version, courtesy of Inside Sources. It concludes:

Dealing with COVID-19’s health and economic effects are the two top political priorities right now. Nothing else even comes close. As policymakers find and eliminate never-needed regulations that are blocking recovery, they must also reform the system that made those rules possible in the first place.

If left untreated, that regulatory sludge will build back up, and stifle the next emergency response in ways no one can predict today. Repeal is not enough.

We also need resilience.

The whole piece is here. The original paper is here. For more regulatory reform resources, see neverneeded.cei.org.

New #NeverNeeded Paper: Regulatory Reform

Regulatory reform is one of the most important policy responses to the COVID-19 crisis. In the short run, removing obstacles to health care can save lives. Removing barriers against remote education, telecommuting, and gig jobs can help people make ends meet during a lockdown with double-digit unemployment. But getting rid of this or that #NeverNeeded regulation is not enough. Policy makers need to reform the rulemaking process that continues to generate all these bad rules.

In a new paper, I outline two such reforms. One addresses the large stock of existing regulations. The other addresses the ongoing flow of new rules.

To address the stock of regulations, Congress and the president should create an independent Regulatory Reduction Commission to go through the 185,000-page Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) and annually send to Congress an omnibus package of rules to repeal. The paper contains suggestions for how to tackle the CFR in manageable chunks over a 10-year cycle, how to structure the commission’s membership so neither party can stack it, how to prevent Congress from stalling or watering down the package, and more.

That will reduce the stock of existing regulations to a more reasonable level. To keep regulatory sludge from building back up, the annual flow of 3,000 new regulations should have automatic 10-year sunsets for each rule. Just as every carton of milk has an expiration date, so should regulations. Congress can renew them easily enough. And as times and technology change, so should regulations. Automatic sunsets give agencies a powerful incentive to regularly review their rules to make sure they are working as they should, and update them if needed.

The whole paper is here.

More regulatory reform ideas are in the new 2020 edition of Wayne Crews’s Ten Thousand Commandments.

CEI’s #NeverNeeded website is here.

New #NeverNeeded Paper: Remove or Reduce Tariffs

Trade barriers are an obvious #NeverNeeded candidate for removal during a pandemic and a recession. They make medical supplies scarcer and more expensive. They raise consumer prices at a time when millions of people are losing their jobs and wondering how to make ends meet. And because other countries retaliate every time President Trump raises a tariff, U.S. businesses find shrunken markets for their goods through no fault of their own. Tariffs are a self-harming policy. They must go.

In a new paper for CEI’s #NeverNeeded series, I lay out a plan for making that happen. But simply getting rid of the Trump-era tariffs is not enough. Reformers need to make sure they do not come back. That means, as with so many areas, that institution-level reform is necessary. In this case, that reform involves the separation of powers.

The backstory is that Congress originally delegated away some of its tariff-making power in the 1960s and 1970s to the president because it found itself incapable of reducing tariffs the way it wanted to in the early postwar era. Vote-trading and favor exchanges that are a common part of congressional operating procedure weakened trade liberalization attempts. The thinking was that the president, with a national constituency, would be less prone to giving narrow favors to a single congressional district at the expense of the whole country.

This worked until an ideologically protectionist White House more than doubled U.S. tariff rates in just three years. Those tariffs and the retaliations they inspired are costing roughly a half percentage point of growth. The country might be able afford this kind of ideological luxury good during a boom, but not during COVID.

The tariffs must go, and Congress must reclaim its authority. Fortunately, the reform is pretty simple. Congress can repeal three sections from two different trade bills to reclaim its proper taxing authority from an executive branch that will not use it responsibly.

Those sections are Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962 and Sections 201 and 301 of the Trade Act of 1974.

The whole paper is here.

A brader agenda for reducing trade barriers is in Iain Murray’s and my paper Traders of the Lost Ark.

CEI’s #NeverNeeded website is here.

This Week in Ridiculous Regulations

The United States-Mexico-Canada (USMCA) trade agreement came into effect on July 1, and three states increased their minimum wages. The unemployment rate went down to 11.1 percent. The federal government also took Friday off to celebrate Independence Day, though that didn’t stop the 2020 Federal Register from topping 40,000 pages on Thursday. Meanwhile, regulatory agencies issued new regulations ranging from cellulose products to Texas onion tax cuts.

On to the data:

  • Last week, in a four-day week, 57 new final regulations were published in the Federal Register, after 82 the previous week.
  • That’s the equivalent of a new regulation every two hours and 57 minutes.
  • Federal agencies have issued 1,568 final regulations in 2020. At that pace, there will be 3,063 new final regulations. Last year’s total was 2,964 regulations.
  • There were also 39 proposed regulations in the Federal Register last week, for a total of 1,113 on the year. At that pace, there will be 2,174 new proposed regulations in 2020. Last year’s total was 2,191 proposed regulations.
  • Last week, agencies published 383 notices, for a total of 11,386 in 2020. At that pace, there will be 22,652 new notices this year. Last year’s total was 21,804.
  • Last week, 1,344 new pages were added to the Federal Register, after 1,409 pages the previous week.
  • The 2020 Federal Register totals 40,084 pages. It is on pace for 78,290 pages. The 2019 total was 79,267 pages. The all-time record adjusted page count (which subtracts skips, jumps, and blank pages) is 96,994, set in 2016.
  • Rules are called “economically significant” if they have costs of $100 million or more in a given year. Three such rules have been published this year. Four such rules were published in 2019.
  • The running cost tally for 2020’s economically significant regulations ranges from net savings of between $1.38 billion and $4.19 billion. 2019’s total ranges from net savings of $350 million to $650 million, mostly from estimated savings on federal spending. The exact number depends on discount rates and other assumptions.
  • Agencies have published 31 final rules meeting the broader definition of “significant” so far this year. 2019’s total was 66 significant final rules.
  • So far in 2020, 303 new rules affect small businesses; 12 of them are classified as significant. 2019’s totals were 501 rules affecting small businesses, with 22 of them significant.

Highlights from last week’s new regulations:

For more data, see Ten Thousand Commandments and follow @10KC and @RegoftheDay on Twitter.

Managed Trade: USMCA Comes into Effect Today

The United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) comes into effect today. It replaces the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) of 1994. USMCA’s policy changes are modest, and its economic impact will be small. But it sets a negative precedent for future trade agreements that could have far larger long-term impacts than USMCA itself. Most of its changes also attempt to manage trade, rather than free it. These factors led CEI to oppose USMCA in December 2019.

Some USMCA policy changes are positive, such as a partial liberalization of Canada’s dairy markets. More than half of USMCA’s text is drawn verbatim from the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) that the Trump administration unwisely withdrew from early in its term. My colleague Patrick Hedger wrote about Section 230-style language that will benefit free speech while making all three member countries’ tech industries more competitive.

Other changes are negative. The U.S. essentially dictated to Mexico what some of its labor policies shall be. Not only is this disrespectful to Mexico’s sovereignty, but it is essentially a gift to U.S. labor union interests, and will make autos more expensive for consumers. Auto parts makers’ supply networks, which have built up over decades, will have to be reconfigured to meet USMCA’s requirements for what percentage of parts must come from which countries. But those are smaller potatoes. There are larger ones.

USMCA’s name does not contain the words “free” or “trade.” This is symbolism, but also important. President Trump is a longstanding critic of free trade, and hired his policy advisers accordingly. Their removal of the F from NAFTA accurately reflects their policy goals. They would rather manage trade than free it.

Nor is their planners’ ethos confined to USMCA. The China Phase One deal goes so far as to outline minimum dollar amounts for how much agricultural exports U.S. farmers are to send to China, for example. Of course, the administration’s economic planners could not foresee the COVID crisis. Their quotas are now unlikely to be met even in a best-case scenario, which is causing avoidable diplomatic tensions; the best-laid plans and all that. Some USMCA plans have similarly been thrown off by the pandemic. Supply networks were already rushing to meet USMCA’s country-of-origin requirements. The last few months of lockdown have made the adjustments even more difficult.

USMCA’s missing T, which in NAFTA stood for Trade, is also significant. It belies mission creep. Trade agreements should stick to trade. USMCA emphatically does not.  USMCA’s trade-unrelated provisions include environmental policies, labor policies, intellectual property rules, currency policy, pharmaceutical regulations, and more. Trade-unrelated provisions inflate page counts, create unnecessary areas of contention, prolong negotiations, distract from the matter at hand, and create new rent-seeking opportunities.

The original NAFTA was the first major trade agreement to contain significant trade-unrelated provisions, and deserves criticism on that front. But at least they were shunted off into a side agreement. USMCA bakes its trade-unrelated provisions into the main agreement. The U.S., Canada, and Mexico already enjoy a near-zero tariff relationship, and relatively low non-tariff barriers. Without much left for USMCA to accomplish on trade, non-trade issues are no longer a sideshow. They are the show.

While USMCA is comparatively low stakes and will have minimum economic impact, it sets a negative precedent for upcoming agreements with the, European Union, and China. Relations with the EU have been tense for some time, especially over Boeing and Airbus subsidies. Any further China agreements will be delicate, both because of the COVID lockdown affecting Phase One compliance and President Trump’s reelection concerns apparently influencing his negotiations.

Haggling over non-core trade issues could potentially torpedo those agreements, or dilute liberalization victories for tariffs and other trade barriers. USMCA itself is not particularly harmful. But the precedent it sets might be.

For a more constructive approach to trade policy, see Iain Murray’s and my paper “Traders of the Lost Ark.” For a better approach to trade agreements, see “The Ideal U.S.-U.K Free Trade Agreement,” put together by consortium of groups in the U.S. and U.K., headed by the Cato Institute’s Dan Ikenson and Simon Lester, and the Initiative for Free Trade’s Daniel Hannan.