The subject of regulatory capture was back on Capital Hill last week as the result of a briefing sponsored by Administrative Conference of the United States (ACUS). In 2010, I testified concerning regulatory capture in a Senate hearing chaired by Senator Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI), but in the midst of the broad-scale conservative assault on regulation, the issue hasn’t gotten nearly the attention it deserves. That’s unfortunate for a simple reason. As Rena Steinzor and I establish in our book, many aspects of the regulatory system are downright dysfunctional, and we identified regulatory capture as a significant source of this dysfunction.
Regulatory capture is a complex issue and determining how best to reduce the amount of capture is challenging, as a helpful book on the subject edited by Dan Carpenter and David Moss establishes. Nevertheless, there are some steps that Congress or the President can take that would have a beneficial impact.
First, Congress should study the impact of budget cuts on the capacity of agencies to carry out their statutory mandates. Because agency budgets are a miniscule part of the total federal budget, such cuts are the very definition of “penny wise and pound foolish.” They therefore constitute a type of capture in which regulatory opponents have stopped, or greatly slowed, the regulatory process by persuading their champions in the Administration and on the Hill to starve agencies of the money they need to engage in effective rulemaking and enforcement. To make matters worse, once starved, agencies are more susceptible to the kind of undue industry influence that characterizes regulatory capture.
For example, in the years leading up to the BP oil spill, the Department of Interior’s Minerals Management Service (MMS)—the former agency charged with overseeing offshore oil drilling—was so starved of resources that it lacked adequately trained and expert personnel for tackling the complex issues that were at the heart of the agency’s mission. Consequently, the MMS became overly dependent on industry, essentially creating a system of self-regulation, which made a disaster on the scale of the BP oil spill all but inevitable.
Second, the President should require agencies to submit “true-up” budgets in which they estimate the amount of money that they would need to actually do their jobs, as opposed to some incremental increase or decrease in their current budgets based on which way the political winds are blowing. These submissions should be made available to the public and elected officials on the agency’s web site.
Third, the President should issue an Executive Order requiring regulatory agencies and the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) to produce yearly reports revealing how many times they met with different categories of interests, such as regulated entities, trade associations and public interest groups, concerning rulemaking, enforcement, and other significant regulatory actions. This would help reveal “information capture,” which can occur when agencies are overwhelmed by arguments and information provided by regulated entities and their trade associations, particularly when there are many fewer attempts by public interest groups to challenge these presentations, because the public interest community lacks the resources to do more.
Fourth, the President should issue another Executive Order requiring agencies to create and use what Rena Steinzor and I have called “regulatory metrics.” These measurements would address the extent to which an agency has accomplished its regulatory mission. To give an oversimplified example, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) would measure the extent to which it has accomplished its mandate under the Clean Water Act to achieve “clean water.” If EPA is stuck at 68 percent, to make up a number, or worse the metric shows the water is becoming less clean over time, the public and elected officials would be alerted that something is wrong. It might be that the agency is captured or they might be some other cause. In any case, performance metrics such as this one would give an overall picture of the regulatory system and its progress to protecting people and the environment.
Regulatory capture is difficult to cure because regulated entities and their allies have every incentive to prevent agencies from doing their job and the resources to capture the agency and prevent this from happening. It’s also difficult, because as stakeholders, regulated entities have a legitimate role to play in contributing to the development of new regulations; the trick is to ensure that this role doesn’t cross a line into undue influence that produces regulatory outcomes that are inconsistent with an agency’s statutory mandate to protect the public interest. We can expose various forms of regulatory capture to scrutiny by practicing greater transparency, which will help to mitigate the power of these interests. The suggestions offered here are a start.
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Sidney A. Shapiro | March 11, 2016
The subject of regulatory capture was back on Capital Hill last week as the result of a briefing sponsored by Administrative Conference of the United States (ACUS). In 2010, I testified concerning regulatory capture in a Senate hearing chaired by Senator Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI), but in the midst of the broad-scale conservative assault on regulation, […]
Daniel Farber | March 10, 2016
Many thought that the BP Oil Spill would lead to new environmental legislation, as happened after past environmental disasters. That didn’t happen. But something else did happen: BP paid $24 billion in civil and criminal penalties. In an era where any effort at government regulation is immediately denounced as a dire threat to liberty, there was nary […]
Mary Jane Angelo | March 9, 2016
Recently I had the opportunity to spend an entire day at the University of Florida Department of Entomology — the same department where I obtained my M.S. more than 30 years ago. I gave a talk on the law and ecology of pesticides and pest management and met with graduate students and faculty. It was […]
Dave Owen | March 7, 2016
Since Justice Scalia’s passing, the blogosphere has been abuzz with speculation about how the changed composition of the Court will affect environmental law. This post adds a little more to that speculation. My focus is not the Clean Power Plan litigation, which has (justifiably) gathered much of the attention, but instead the litigation over the […]
Daniel Farber | March 3, 2016
Chief Justice Roberts turned down a request this morning to stay EPA’s mercury rule. Until the past month, this would have been completely un-noteworthy, because such a stay would have been unprecedented. But the Court’s startling recent stay of the EPA Clean Power Plan suggested that the door might have been wide open. Fortunately, that doesn’t seem […]
James Goodwin | March 3, 2016
CPR Vice President Sid Shapiro is among the many distinguished panelists participating this monring in a forum called “Regulatory Capture in the 21st Century.” The forum is hosted by the Administrative Conference of the United States (ACUS), an independent federal agency that works to provide Congress with advice on improving the administrative system. The event will feature remarks […]
Evan Isaacson | March 2, 2016
The mysterious deaths of 13 bald eagles on Maryland's Eastern Shore last month captured headlines around the country. While a tragic story, it was also a reminder of just how far bald eagle populations and those of other birds of prey have recovered over the last several decades. From a population of fewer than 1,000 […]
James Goodwin | March 2, 2016
Yesterday, the Republican members of the Senate Homeland Security and Government Affairs Committee (HSGAC)—the Senate committee with primary oversight jurisdiction over the regulatory system—published a report detailing their shock and dismay over a Wall Street Journal story alleging that the White House “may have inappropriately influenced” the Federal Communications Commission’s (FCC) so-called “net neutrality” rule. […]
Rena Steinzor | February 29, 2016
The Supreme Court today denied certiorari in a case challenging the watershed-wide effort led by the EPA to reduce pollution flowing into the Chesapeake Bay. The Court’s action leaves standing a lower court ruling upholding the effort. CPR Member Scholar Rena Steinzor, Professor of Law at the University of Maryland Francis King Carey School of Law, issued […]