Posted on 08/19/2013 6:37:51 AM PDT by NotYourAverageDhimmi
President Obama has overseen a dramatic expansion of the regulatory state that will outlast his time in the White House.
The reach of the executive branch has advanced steadily on his watch, further solidifying the power of bureaucrats who churn out regulations that touch nearly every aspect of American life and business.
Experts debate whether federal rulemaking has accelerated under Obama, but few dispute that Washington for better or worse is reaching deeper than ever before into the workings of society.
It would be difficult for anyone to pretend that this isnt a high water mark in terms of regulation, said Douglas Holtz-Eakin, a former director of the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office who now heads the American Action Forum.
Obama famously signaled his intent to use the machinery of government to further his policy goals after the 2010 elections, declaring: Where Congress wont act, I will.
Since then, the administration has pressed ahead unilaterally on several fronts, including immigration, gun control, cyber security and sentencing guidelines for drug offenses.
Meanwhile, new federal rules are accumulating faster than outdated ones are removed, resulting in a steady increase in the number of federal mandates.
Data collected by researchers at George Mason Universitys Mercatus Center shows that the Code of Federal Regulations, where all rules and regulations are detailed, has ballooned from 71,224 pages in 1975 to 174,545 pages last year.
All incentives are to regulate more, said Susan Dudley, the director of George Washington Universitys Regulatory Studies Center.
The fight over executive power is increasingly pitting the three branches of government against each other, with Congress and the judiciary struggling to assert power over officials with broad discretion to issue rules.
(Excerpt) Read more at thehill.com ...
Believe it or not there are people out there that think this is a good thing.
Government regulations which increase costs undermine capital accumulation, and with it the demand for labor and the productivity of labor, and thus real wages and the general standard of living. Good-bye middle class.But, at least the libtards feel good.
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