Geez, what happened to this thread...the point is that regualtions need to be examined on thier merit and are not 'job killers' as the GOP claims..is there a cost? of course...
Just another example of how irrational and dishonest the GOP is when discussing an issue...
Again though, the idea that regulation kills jobs isn't actually supported by the evidence. What regulations do however is increase costs. Some regulations create more benefit than their cost, some don't. If we want to argue about the merit of regulation in that sense it is a perfectly good argument. Arguing that they kill jobs is not, as the empirical evidence shows otherwise.
Really? So who works at the gas, solar, and wind powerplants? Unicorns?
Small businesses employ 50% of all working adults in this country. There are many burdensome regulations that these small companies are subject to the same as a larger company. a larger company has the resources to comply with these. Corporations can slash costs in other areas like salary and benefits on a larger scale and remain profitable. Small businesses don't have that luxury. Regulatory uncertainty is shown as a major reason for limited growth in hiring.
Here is a fairly recent data from a Harris poll small-business owners who felt that too many regulations were an impediment to more hiring.
http://www.uschamber.com/sites/default/files/reports/1107usc_summit _harrisnteractive.pdf
I figured people leaning to the left would be more supportive of small businesses. I guess you would prefer everyone in this country either work for the government or one of the companies controlled by the 1%.
For some reason there seems to be a really big disconnect in this thread.
Sounds a lot like the US education system. They throw money at the problem and proudly claim how much money is spent per student, then conveniently forget to say that's because each school has more administrators than teachers and the classes are still packed with 40 students.They are job killers for the industry but a boon for the paper pushers(lawyers and compliance officers). Is it a good thing that the steel industry lays off 20,000 steel workers and employs 21,000 lawyers? Which is worse for the middle class the left is so worred about? To its logical conclusion one can regulate an indsutry to the point their company is staffed by paper pushers.
The Obama Administration, girding for election-year attacks on its record, is trying to highlight the upside of government rules. The Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs claims the net benefits of regulations Obama enacted in his first three years in office total $116 billion. This is a reach. Part of that total comes from projections of how many lives the regulations will save, multiplied by a dollar amount per life. The EPA, for example, puts a life at $8.9 million, a number based on decades-old surveys in which economists tried to assess the value of peoples lives in part by estimating the value of their labor.
The number, adjusted for income growth through the years, has been controversial since the Reagan Administration first used it to justify regulations. To say its not a precise science would be the worlds greatest understatement, says Sidney Shapiro, a professor at Wake Forest University School of Law who specializes in government regulation. He advises skepticism when figures start flying in the heat of the campaign. The numbers get politicized because no one knows what they mean, he says. So people pick a number that suits their viewpoint.
The bottom line: New coal rules could force thousands of layoffs while creating thousands of cleanup industry jobs.
“The job creation and the job destruction roughly cancel each other out.”
So by regulation, the government moves jobs from one industry which is market-driven, to another which is regulation-driven.
Those firms which are now created to help other firms comply with regulations; what is their product? Their products are ostensibly those things which help the latter firm comply with regulations. So the latter firm is now not only faced with rising costs and the cutting of its workforce, but now must pay another firm to help it comply with regulations. Sure, that's job creation. Like previously said, it's no different than having to hire tax lawyers to keep the IRS at bay.
What this amounts to is simply the creation of a government agency in an indirect way. That the firms are private doesn't change the fact that they're serving a government mandate, and leaching from firms which sustain themselves by catering to the whims of the consumer.
Such an effect is created by all regulation. I assume you are not claiming that all regulation is bad. Regulation creates compliance costs, and that's a drag on the economy. What regulations on air quality and mercury content and other things like that do however is lower medical costs from cancer patients, deformed children, etc, etc. This is a boost to the economy. Good regulations create greater benefits than their compliance costs. Bad ones don't. The fact of jobs being shuffled around to accomplish this is basically irrelevant as to the worth of a regulation.
Such an effect is created by all regulation. I assume you are not claiming that all regulation is bad. Regulation creates compliance costs, and that's a drag on the economy. What regulations on air quality and mercury content and other things like that do however is lower medical costs from cancer patients, deformed children, etc, etc. This is a boost to the economy. Good regulations create greater benefits than their compliance costs. Bad ones don't. The fact of jobs being shuffled around to accomplish this is basically irrelevant as to the worth of a regulation.
I wish there was some data on the state of people's health, air quality, water quality and whatnot before the EPA. Googling seems only to turn up EPA sources.
I wish there was some data on the state of people's health, air quality, water quality and whatnot before the EPA. Googling seems only to turn up EPA sources.
His customers are wary of talking publicly, fearing the FDA will come after them.
"I can't believe in 2012 the federal government is raiding Amish farmers at gunpoint all over a basic human right to eat natural food," said one, who asked not to be named but who got weekly shipments of eggs, milk, honey and butter from Rainbow Acres. "In Maryland, they force taxpayers to pay for abortions, but God forbid we want the same milk our grandparents drank."
The FDA, though, said the judge made the right call in halting Mr. Allgyer's cross-border sales.
We don't need to provide evidence because it is a logically self-evident fundamental truth about reality. It's called the broken window fallacy.
No, I'm sorry. If you believe this has something to do with the broken window fallacy, you do not understand either the topic or the broken window fallacy itself.
You most certainly must provide evidence. Please do so, and you might want to review what the broken window fallacy actually says.
Creates jobs for law enforcement, judges and the FDA. I'm sure glad they stopped this evil farmer from selling raw milk to people that want it.
http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2012/feb/13/feds-shut-down-amish-farm-selling-fresh-milk/print/
lol troll. Do you even realize unpasteurized milk can be harmful to pregnant women and carries with it all sorts of potential negative side effects? You fake conservatives are funny.
lol troll. Do you even realize unpasteurized milk can be harmful to pregnant women and carries with it all sorts of potential negative side effects? You fake conservatives are funny.
What a tool you fucking idiot.
I gave a Jstorm style answer.
lol troll. Do you even realize unpasteurized milk can be harmful to pregnant women and carries with it all sorts of potential negative side effects? You fake conservatives are funny.
I gave a flippant answer earlier, but there's just not much of a point if you feel that the FDA is perfectly justified in persecuting people that think drinking raw milk is a good thing. To me it always comes down to people knowing what they want and be willing to take the informed risk. To you it comes down to the government does what it thinks best whether the citizen wants it or not.
It's just a different philosophy that basically separates those on the left and those on the right.