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The Bizarre Story of the Phantom Job Gains from Romney’s Deregulation Plan

Cross-posted from Legal Planet.

Deregulation is one of Mitt Romney’s five steps in his plan to add jobs.  But how do we supposedly know that deregulation will add jobs?  It’s a fascinating story, featuring a Nobel laureate’s economic model.  The model is very fancy, lots of complex math, but it’s justified on the basis of a discredited study.

The story begins with a new white paper from the Romney campaign. Four leading economists attempt to provide an explanation of the campaign’s job claims.  In terms of deregulation, the white paper says, “Recent research by Ellen McGratten and Nobel laureate Edward Prescott concludes that higher regulatory costs reduced both R&D and fixed investment during the financial crisis and its aftermath; and regulations continue to increase.”  So getting rid of regulations will increase jobs, apparently. This one paper is the sole basis given for the Romney claim (along with some figures about the length of the Federal Register.) As it turns out, even if the paper were valid, it would really only show that regulatory costs might have contributed to the recession.  But let’s move on to the paper itself.

I was definitely curious about McGratten and Prescott, and after a bit of a search I was able to find their paper.  Their model is based on real business cycle theory, which holds that economic ups and downs are caused by unexpected shocks to the economy rather than internal factors like collapsing financial markets or technology bubbles.   McGratten and Prescott argue that a “key factor” involved in the recession was the diversion of capital to meeting rising regulatory costs under Obama.  (On its face, this seems a bit implausible since the recession began before Obama was in office, it hit a lot of other countries besides the U.S. that aren’t subject to U.S. regulations, and it’s been getting better even though more regulations are being created.  But I’m not a Nobel-prize winning economist, so I guess I get more easily fixated on inconvenient facts.) In any event, putting aside the modeling, simulation runs, etc., the bottom line is that the theory assumes that businesses took a heavy hit from new regulations. As evidence for that critical assumption,  the authors cite “Crain and Crain” — the discredited paper from two economists working on a contract for the Small Business Administration to generate incredible estimates of regulatory costs. Then they say, “Most predictions for future costs are even higher because the current estimates do not include costs related to the Dodd-Frank legislation for financial firms and President Obama’s health care initiatives.” They point out that both of these laws will create complicated rules (citing a news journal as authority). Then they add in the budgets for regulatory agencies, to come up with the conclusion that the cost of regulation went up a lot.  That’s their empirical evidence: a discredited study (not, by the way, published in a peer-reviewed journal), a magazine article, and a few budget numbers. If this were a less intellectually serious blog, my next sentence would just be “OMG!”

I have to say that I was shocked by the Prescott paper.  I read a fair number of economics articles, including both empirical and theoretical works.  In my reading, I can’t recall seeing anything as shoddy as the McGratten & Prescott paper.  (What are they giving out Nobel Prizes for these days?) And how can the four Romney economists who relied on this study be holding reputable academic jobs? Even a law review, let alone an economics journal, would never publish something of this caliber, and even a lawyer on a retainer would think twice about using it as evidence.

Anyway, that’s the trail — from a discredited empirical study by contractors working for a minor government agency, to an shoddy paper by a Nobel prize winner, to a campaign white paper by four politicized economists.   It goes to show how hard it is have a serious policy discussion when even supposedly reputable economists throw aside their professional standards in the name of politics.

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Daniel Farber | October 24, 2012

The Bizarre Story of the Phantom Job Gains from Romney’s Deregulation Plan

Cross-posted from Legal Planet. Deregulation is one of Mitt Romney’s five steps in his plan to add jobs.  But how do we supposedly know that deregulation will add jobs?  It’s a fascinating story, featuring a Nobel laureate’s economic model.  The model is very fancy, lots of complex math, but it’s justified on the basis of […]

Ben Somberg | October 19, 2012

Clean Water Act at 40, Roundup Edition

Here’s a final compilation of our posts on the Clean Water Act at 40: William Andreen: The Clean Water Act at 40: Finishing a Task Well Begun Dan Tarlock: Forty Years Later, Time to Turn in the CWA Clunker for Something Suited for the 21st Century Robin Kundis Craig: The Clean Water Act at 40: […]

Michael Patoka | October 18, 2012

ACUS Must Ensure Neutrality and Cease Close Alliances with Industry Groups, Member Scholars Say in Letter

CPR President Rena Steinzor and Member Scholar Thomas McGarity sent a letter this morning to Paul Verkuil, Chairman of the Administrative Conference of the United States (ACUS), taking the independent federal agency to task for its increasingly apparent bias toward the views of industry groups and its troubling alliance with current and former officials at […]

Aimee Simpson | October 18, 2012

On the Farm and Looking to the Future of the CWA

Last week I visited a dairy farm with my two year-old son.  Complete with hayrides, homemade ice cream, cows mooing, and a bluegrass band, the fall festival provided us with some good, wholesome entertainment.  My son giggled as the baby cows licked his hand, oohed and awed at the fluffy baby chicks, and, of course, […]

Amy Sinden | October 18, 2012

Why the Entergy Decision Shouldn’t Hobble the Clean Water Act’s Future

The Clean Water Act turns 40 today.   One of the remarkable things about those four decades is the extent to which the Act has largely withstood repeated attempts by industry to water down its technology-based standard-setting provisions with cost-benefit analysis.   Just three years ago, when the U.S. Supreme Court decided Entergy Corp. v. Riverkeeper, environmentalists […]

Robert Verchick | October 17, 2012

The River Ganges Meets Climate Change

VARANASI — We slip into the river at night, and with an easy stroke, our oarsman moves our boat across the chestnut waters of “Mother Ganga,” India’s Ganges River. Spiritual life in Varanasi (also called Benares) is a passion. Hindus all over India save their money for the chance to visit this holy city and […]

Sandra Zellmer | October 16, 2012

The CWA’s Antidegradation Policy: Time to Rejuvenate a Program to Protect High Quality Water

This post was written by CPR Member Scholars Robert Glicksman and Sandra Zellmer. Visual images of burning rivers, oil-soaked seagulls, and other grossly contaminated resources spurred the enactment of the nation’s foundational environmental laws in the 1970s, including the Clean Water Act (CWA). Similarly, evocative prose like Rachel Carson’s description of the “strange blight” poisoning […]

Robert Adler | October 15, 2012

The Clean Water Act at 40: Can We Renew the Vision?

Congress adopted the “modern” version of the Federal Water Pollution Control Act, more commonly known as the “Clean Water Act,” forty years ago this week (Pub. L. No. 92-500, Oct. 18, 1972). As Congress faces persistent efforts to weaken this law, it is important to take stock of why the law was passed, how well […]

Robin Kundis Craig | October 15, 2012

The Clean Water Act at 40: Up to the Challenge of the Climate Change Era?

There is no question but that the Clean Water Act has led to enormous improvements in water quality throughout the United States. Funding for publicly owned treatment works (POTWs) has largely eliminated the use of the nation's waterways for the disposal of raw sewage. Most point source discharges are now subject to permitting and technology-based […]