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Eakinomics: The
Unified Agenda
The Obama Administration became notorious for dropping news about its
expensive regulations late on Friday afternoons. This past Friday, the Biden
Administration showed it had not mastered this technique as well as its
predecessor, dropping its Unified Agenda closer to midday.
Recall that the Unified Agenda
of Regulatory and Deregulatory Actions (UA) is a look at the
priority regulations that federal agencies are planning to work on over the
next year. So, while it arrived a few hours earlier, it did nothing to
dispel the notion that it, in the words of
Daniel Bosch, “shows that the Biden Administration plans to revive – or in
many cases go beyond – the regulatory policies of the Obama Administration.”
One focus of the administration will be environmental rules. In
particular: “The Department of Transportation and Environmental
Protection Agency plan to
propose new fuel economy standards for cars and light trucks next month. The
proposal, when finalized, would replace the Trump Administration’s signature
deregulatory rule –
which saved an estimated $199.5 billion over the previous rule of the Obama
Administration. Whereas the Trump Administration rule eased annual required
increases in fuel efficiency, the Biden Administration’s UA says the
standards ‘shall be the maximum feasible for each model year.’ The
implication is the rule will be more stringent than the Obama
Administration’s version, which is the most expensive rule recorded
in the Regulation Rodeo database.
That’s just the beginning. There will be further rules on methane, air
pollution, mercury, and the like. Over at the Department of Energy, the
climate goals will dictate rules for energy efficiency. And, the Department
of Labor will revisit the controversial fiduciary rule, re-engage in the
battle over how tips are handled, and once more impose a new joint-employer
rule.
Bosch also note a variety of treats on the regulatory buffet. “These include:
- A rule on
Gainful Employment from the Department of Education;
- The Affirmatively Furthering
Fair Housing rule from
the Department of Housing and Urban Development;
- A rule reconsidering
changes to the definition of a showerhead from the Department of Energy
that became an ongoing talking point of President Trump;
- A revision of
a Trump Administration rule on blowout preventers for offshore drilling
operations, which reversed an Obama Administration rule; and
- Several Trump Administration
immigration rules, including the Public Charge rule,
a rule limiting
asylum eligibility, and a rule that
raised certain immigration fees.”
So, rest assured,
even though the Week in
Regulation tracking effort seems to suggest that the Biden
Administration is light on regulatory cost, the wave is coming.
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