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Rebuttal: The Benefits of Cost-Benefit Analysis

This post is the third in a three-post point-counterpoint-rebuttal series. The other posts, written by Member Scholar Richard J. Pierce and Senior Policy Analyst James Goodwin, are available here and here.

At the request of Senior Policy Analyst James Goodwin, I posted a brief summary of an essay in which I described the advantages that I see in expanding the scope of the White House Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) and combining its use of cost-benefit analysis with some doctrines that the U.S. Supreme Court has already adopted. I did so, and Goodwin suggested pairing it with a "counterpoint" post he subsequently prepared and also gave me the opportunity to rebut that counterpoint. I do so here.

Goodwin’s counterpoint post is a crude and ill-informed slash-and-burn attack on both OIRA and cost-benefit analysis. His approach contrasts starkly with the thoughtful efforts of scholars like former Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer, current OIRA Administrator Ricky Revesz, and Michael Livermore, an environmental law professor at the University of Virginia, to engage in the kind of detailed constructive criticism that has the potential to produce improvements in both cost-benefit analysis and OIRA.

Goodwin characterizes cost-benefit analysis as a “libertarian” tool that is used by OIRA to “go rogue” and to take actions that are “in direct conflict with the goals of the president.” Every word of that characterization is false.

A Useful Aid

First, cost-benefit analysis is a utilitarian tool that each of the last eight presidents has found useful as an aid in making regulatory decisions that are informed by data and analysis. None of those presidents was a libertarian, and none of the people who have headed OIRA over the last 50 years were libertarians. I would be surprised if any of the 57 career civil servants who work at OIRA are libertarians. If any share that philosophy, I am confident that they do not let their personal beliefs interfere with their life’s work of analyzing data relevant to regulatory decision-making.

Second, Goodwin’s characterization of OIRA must be based on a belief that each of the last eight presidents was a fool. The president appoints the head of OIRA and can remove the head at any time. If OIRA went “rogue” and acted in ways that “directly conflict with the president’s goals,” the president would remove the head of the agency in a heartbeat and appoint a replacement who shares the president’s goals.

Goodwin obviously believes that OIRA and cost-benefit analysis are nothing but obstacles to socially beneficial regulation. I have neither the time nor the expertise required to provide a detailed critique of that belief. I would urge anyone who shares Goodwin’s belief to read the thousands of pages of books and articles that have been written by scholars like Breyer, Revesz, and Livermore. The title of one of their many books accurately summarizes the relationship that they see between cost-benefit analysis and regulation: Retaking Rationality: How Cost Benefit Analysis Can Better Protect the Environment.

Benefits for the Nation         

I will mention two of the many ways in which cost-benefit analysis performed by OIRA has benefited the nation in recent years. First, many opponents of government regulation have urged adoption of a regulatory budget that would have the effect of prohibiting any agency from issuing any new rule unless it can show that it is repealing rules that impose costs that are at least equal to the costs that would be imposed by the new rule.

I have written several essays, made numerous speeches, and testified before Congress in opposition to adoption of a regulatory budget. I have relied heavily on OIRA’s annual reports of the results of its cost-benefit analyses. OIRA reports that the average major rule that it reviews and approves generates benefits that are six times greater than the costs imposed by the rules. That means that the nation earns an average 500 percent return on every regulatory investment that it makes. If we had adopted a regulatory budget approach instead of a cost-benefit analysis approach to regulation 50 years ago, we would have foregone many trillions of dollars of net social benefits. 

Second, President Donald Trump attempted to persuade agencies to repeal hundreds of rules. His failure to accomplish that goal was largely attributable to the cost-benefit analyses that agencies and OIRA produced at the time that each rule was adopted. When an agency considered whether to attempt to repeal a rule, it had to think seriously about how it could persuade a reviewing court to uphold a decision to repeal a rule when the agency and OIRA had previously estimated that the rule would yield massive net benefits to the nation. In most cases, the agency abandoned any attempt to repeal the rule based on its well-supported belief that it could not accomplish that daunting task.

Turning from the past to the future, I believe that an expanded version of OIRA would be particularly valuable in today’s conditions of extreme political polarity. Every newly elected president will be subject to extreme political pressure from the base of their party. The base of the Republican Party is on the far right, while the base of the Democratic Party is on the far left. I cannot imagine a worse system of government than one that lurches from far right to far left and back on every policy issue every four to eight years.

The need to subject every major rule to a cost-benefit analysis produced by an agency and reviewed by OIRA will reduce the risk that we will enter that abyss. Many of the most extreme proposals of the far Right and the far Left cannot be supported through use of cost-benefit analysis. Many administrative law doctrines have similar effects, such as the judicially enforced duty of an agency to engage in reasoned decision-making before making a change in policy and the requirement that an agency must conduct a data-rich notice-and-comment proceeding before it can issue a substantive rule.Let's not abandon a tool and an office that have proven useful in the past and hold the promise of protecting the ability of agencies to do their jobs during our current polarized era.

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Richard Pierce, Jr. | February 28, 2023

Rebuttal: The Benefits of Cost-Benefit Analysis

At the request of Senior Policy Analyst James Goodwin, I posted a brief summary of an essay in which I described the advantages that I see in expanding the scope of the White House Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) and combining its use of cost-benefit analysis with some doctrines that the U.S. Supreme Court has already adopted. I did so, and Goodwin suggested pairing it with a "counterpoint" post he subsequently prepared and also gave me the opportunity to rebut that counterpoint. I do so here.

Katlyn Schmitt | February 27, 2023

Advocating for Climate, Labor, and Environmental Equity in Maryland

Everyone should have a fair chance to live the healthiest life possible, but that’s not always the case for many of our communities. That's particularly true of overburdened communities that bear the brunt of pollution and toxic chemical exposures. But help may be on the way in Maryland in the form of the Climate, Labor, and Environmental Equity Act of 2023, and I testified in strong support of the bill on February 23.

Marcha Chaudry | February 16, 2023

Protecting Industrial Workers from Toxic Chemicals

February started with news that's all too familiar in the United States: An incident involving highly toxic industrial chemicals sparked a large fire, threatening an explosion, forcing evacuations, and putting workers and community members directly in harm's way. In this case, the danger came from a derailed train in Ohio that was hauling cancer-causing vinyl chloride, used to make certain types of plastic; toxic phosgene, an industrial chemical that was also used as a chemical weapon in World War I; and other substances. But extreme, acute threats like the Ohio derailment aren't the only toxic chemical dangers facing workers and surrounding communities.

James Goodwin | February 15, 2023

Biden Regulatory Democracy Proposal Follows the Center for Progressive Reform’s Recommendations

Last week, the Biden administration took the next step on its important initiative to “broaden public engagement in the federal regulatory process,” announcing a set of proposed reforms and asking for more public feedback. As the announcement explains, these proposals reflect input the administration received during a public listening session and an open comment period it conducted last November — both of which I participated in along with several members of the public interest community. I was pleased to find that many of our recommendations were reflected in the proposals.

James Goodwin | February 9, 2023

Center Scholar Dave Owen Defends the Clean Water Act Before Congress

On February 8, conservatives in the U.S. House of Representatives began their assault on the Clean Water Act with a hearing aimed at attacking the Biden administration’s rule to more clearly define the law's scope of protections. Center for Progressive Reform Member Scholar Dave Owen, a law professor at the University of California College of the Law in San Francisco, was the only witness invited to fend off these dangerous attacks.

James Goodwin | February 9, 2023

Two Glaring Omissions from the State of the Union

“Finish the job” was a fitting theme for President Joe Biden’s second State of the Union address. It provided a valuable oratorical perch from which Biden could both tout his impressive legislative successes of the last two years and call on Congress to pass laws that, to quote Biden himself, help build an economy and support a society “from the bottom up and the middle out.” But Biden needs to heed his own call to “finish the job.”

Protestors holding a climate justice sign

Allison Stevens | February 8, 2023

In State of the Union, Biden Pays Little Heed to Climate Justice

In his second State of the Union address, President Joe Biden hailed his administration’s significant accomplishments over the last two years and called on lawmakers to “finish the job” on a wide variety of policy issues. He uttered the phrase over and over — more than a dozen times, in fact — in relation to everything from repairing the economy and controlling the cost of prescription drugs to expanding access to affordable health insurance and making the tax code fairer. About a third of the way through his 73-minute speech, he called on the country to “finish the job” when it comes to climate change.

US Capitol Building behind green trees

Daniel Farber | February 7, 2023

When Bad Things Happen to Good Regulations

In their crusade against “wokeness,” congressional Republicans are taking aim at a Labor Department rule about pension plan investments. The rule’s transgression is apparently that it makes it easier for pension plans to consider how climate-related risks might affect a company’s bottom line. To avoid being woke, the GOP would apparently prefer pension managers to close their eyes to financial realities, sleepwalking their way through the climate crisis. The real fear, of course, is that more wide-awake investment might disfavor some of the GOP’s biggest corporate supporters.

James Goodwin | January 31, 2023

Biden Administration’s Long-Overdue Regulatory Reforms Are Expected Soon. Here’s What to Look For.

Where are President Joe Biden’s regulatory process reforms? That’s the question many progressive advocates have been asking since the administration released its Day One memo inaugurating a “process with the goal of producing a set of recommendations for improving and modernizing regulatory review.” Two years later, this process remains in limbo.