An executive order signed by President Biden makes it easier for agencies to impose regulatory changes without review or public scrutiny.
President Biden signed the order on April 6. It significantly alters how the government reviews major regulatory changes by allowing some to escape cost-benefit analysis and making it more difficult to track them.
The Biden rule doubled the threshold for regulations to qualify for special government review based on estimated economic impact, from $100 million to $200 million.
Mr. Biden cited inflation to justify the change.
He tasked the government with altering the way it conducts cost-benefit analyses of regulation changes. Those proposed changes, which have not been finalized, would make the government less objective and more likely to advocate for regulations issued by the administration, economic analysts said.
Ryan Young, a senior economist at the Competitive Enterprise Institute, said results of Mr. Biden’s executive order and the other proposed changes include “fewer challenges to rules, less transparency and a freer hand for the executive branch to act without the legislature and the judiciary checking them.”
Mr. Young said the $200 million threshold is already shielding new regulations from scrutiny. He calculates that the Biden administration is on pace this year to issue only 18 economically significant rules that will meet the $200 million threshold and thus require additional review and transparency. Last year, under the $100 million threshold, the administration issued 43 rules.
“That’s a fair amount of rules that are now going to be flying under the radar,” said Mr. Young, who tracks federal regulations.
It’s tougher to track rules dodging the extra analysis because any regulation with an economic impact of less than $200 million won’t be flagged in the Federal Register.
“We may hear about it, and we may not,” Mr. Young said.
Only one of the nine regulations issued by the Biden administration qualified for scrutiny under the new threshold. The June 5 regulation made annual adjustments to Medicare Advantage, Medicare prescription drug benefits, Medicare Cost Plans and other federal benefits for older Americans.
Among the eight regulations that ducked additional scrutiny are rules to establish a health care benefits program for U.S. Postal Service employees and to increase State Department visa fees for students, tourists and others.
A Brookings Institution analysis characterized the change as “incremental” and overdue.
The $200 million threshold should be raised even higher, to $332 million, if adjusted fully for inflation, said Connor Raso, senior associate general counsel at the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board and a Brookings contributor.
Mr. Raso said the higher economic impact threshold will better use limited staff resources in the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, which conducts the oversight, and allow the agency to deliver “higher impact” reviews.
Criticism of Mr. Biden’s regulatory push is increasing.
Mr. Biden’s green energy goals have led to various efficiency rules for household appliances, including microwaves and toothbrush chargers. The effort is forcing manufacturers to produce more costly products that they say reverse innovation by decades and potentially eliminate thousands of U.S. jobs.
Congress has tried to put the brakes on some of Mr. Biden’s regulations and has passed a series of bipartisan measures to overturn them. The president has vetoed most of the legislation, including a measure to overturn new emissions limits for heavy-duty trucks that critics say will boost equipment costs and, ultimately, consumer prices.
Mr. Biden also vetoed congressional legislation overturning his $400 billion student loan forgiveness program and an Environmental Protection Agency rule expanding federal regulatory power over land and water.
Republicans and other critics have accused Mr. Biden of executive branch overreach, and the Supreme Court has sometimes sided with them.
The high court recently tossed out the student loan forgiveness program and rejected the new EPA water regulations in May.
As the Biden administration has sought to decrease regulatory scrutiny, Republicans in Congress are seeking ways to increase it.
The Republican-led House passed legislation this year requiring congressional approval for any new regulation that impacts the economy by more than $100 million annually.
Across the U.S. Capitol, Sen. John Thune said even the regulations that meet the economic threshold are dodging scrutiny because agencies are using “cherry-picked data” that overstates benefits and understates costs.
Mr. Thune, South Dakota Republican, introduced a measure this year requiring federal agencies to conduct a more “transparent and objective analysis” of the economic impact of proposed regulations, particularly for small businesses. His proposal would also require agencies to justify the need for the regulation and consider less-burdensome alternatives.
The measure is set to die in the Democratic-controlled Senate. It is more likely to reach the floor for a vote if Republicans win control of the chamber in 2024 and look for ways to tighten controls on executive branch regulatory actions after Mr. Biden’s spree.
“All too often, federal agencies issue overly burdensome regulations without adequately assessing the impact on consumers and small businesses,” Mr. Thune said. “Unfortunately, this lack of transparency has become commonplace in the Biden administration. My legislation would hold government agencies accountable by enforcing rules that require them to analyze the economic impacts of onerous regulations before imposing them on the economy.”
• Susan Ferrechio can be reached at sferrechio@washingtontimes.com.
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