Canada’s 2017 federal budget
failed to offer any plans for deregulation. This is ironic because regulations
are among the most important obstacles to innovation, the holy grail of the
government’s plan for future growth. Planned subsidies will not prevent the
death of nascent innovations in garages or on desktop computers too small or
distant from Ottawa to get the attention of the new, large federal bureaucracy.
The irony is worsened by the policies of President Donald Trump
and the Republican Congress, which have begun to deliver on their promise to
reform the regulatory system. As they do so, they will encourage Canadian
innovators to move south to escape the costly time and red-tape paperwork they
face here.
The American reform plans are the response to the staggering
costs of existing regulations. Large banks claim that one worker is required to
make sure that four others comply with regulations. Government regulations
account for 24.3 per cent of the final price of a new single-family home. The
burden of compliance is symbolized by the fact that in 2014 the Federal
Register for Regulations mentions 1.1 million times the words “shall,” “must,”
“may not,” “required” and “prohibited.”
The total cost of U.S. regulations has been estimated to have
been US$1.88 trillion in 2015, not including the effect regulations have on
future rates of innovation. This figure is equal to more than half of the
federal government’s spending that year and while it is on the high end of
available estimates, there is no doubt that the costs of regulation are
enormous.
To deal with the cost of regulation and the public complaints it
has created, Trump has issued an executive order that requires all regulatory
agencies to eliminate two existing regulations for every new one they adopt. To
prevent the repeal of only regulations that impose little cost, the savings
they bring must be at least as great as the costs resulting from the new regulation.
Trump also ordered a temporary stop to the hiring of all new government
employees including those in regulatory agencies. In his first budget he
proposed severe spending cuts for regulatory agencies, such as the 31 per cent
facing the Environmental Protection Agency, and appointed known critics as
heads of regulatory agencies, such as Scott Pruitt for the EPA.
Congress has also has gotten into the act. On January 6, 2017, it passed the
awkwardly named Regulations
from the Executive in Need of Scrutiny Act (REINS Act), which will return to
politicians the right to approve or reject any new regulations that have an
economic impact on the economy greater than $100 million a year. Even before
the election, in 2016 the Republican majority in the House of Representatives
introduced the Agency
Accountability Act, which
will require all regulatory agencies to transmit to the treasury fines and fees
they have collected from the public, and which reduces their financial
resources and incentives to impose fees and fines.
At the core of these reforms is the desire to return the
regulatory process to elected politicians and away from unelected bureaucrats
in regulatory agencies who, according to Senator Mike Lee from Utah, have
created the conditions where: “Today, the vast majority of federal “laws”
—upwards of 95 per cent — are not passed by the House and Senate and signed by
the president as the Constitution directs; they are imposed unilaterally by
unelected Executive Branch bureaucrats.”
Many Canadians will be appalled
by the proposed regulatory reforms in the United States, fearing that polluters
will again bring skies darkened by smoke and fish killed in rivers. These
concerns are not warranted. The proposed U.S. reforms will not repeal such
clearly beneficial regulations favoured by the public.
They will instead focus on regulations that bring ephemeral
benefits, like those coming from regulations that are highly uncertain, like
those aimed at the prevention of global warming and financial instability. The
assessment of the net benefits from such regulations will again be made by
politicians who reflect the values of the public and not by unelected
bureaucrats who have chosen to work in regulatory agencies to advance leftist
ideological goals.
Even if Canadians do not like American voters’ instructions to
their politicians on regulatory reform, the failure to consider its
implications will affect seriously all of the economic and social programs
advocated in the 2017 budget. Regulatory reform should be on Canada’s agenda
for public discussion and serious political consideration.
Published
in the Financial Post on March 27, 2017
http://business.financialpost.com/fp-comment/justin-trudeau-needs-to-deregulate-to-innovate-but-we-didnt-see-that-in-the-federal-budget
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