For over a decade, scathing critiques of government have been fueled by a group of studies called regulatory scorecards, which purport to show that the costs of many government regulations vastly outweigh their benefits. One widely-cited study by John Morrall, an OMB economist, claims that government regulations cost up to $72 billion per life saved. Another study, co-authored by Bush\u27s regulatory czar, John Graham, claims that over 60,000 people lose their lives each year due to irrational government regulation. A third group of scorecards - compiled by Robert Hahn of the AEI-Brookings Joint Center for Regulatory Studies - claims that over half of all major regulations issued since 1981 fail cost benefit tests. These widely cited studie...
The author argues that John D. Graham, administrator of the Office of Information and Regulatory Aff...
Over the past three decades, regulatory agencies have made tremendous progress in the valuation of m...
It is The Regulatory Review’s fifth anniversary, and also five years since we first wrote about the ...
For over a decade, scathing critiques of government have been fueled by a group of studies called re...
Over the past few years the debate over the economic rationality of health, safety and environmental...
The entire U.S. federal regulatory apparatus, especially that part devoted to reducing (or deciding ...
As the Obama Administration seeks to reduce the regulatory burden on businesses (see related essay o...
Many debates over regulation focus only on the costs of new rules. Critics argue that the weight of ...
A 2010 study commissioned by the Office of Advocacy of the U.S. Small Business Administration claims...
The Value of a Statistical Life represents how much a population values reducing the probability of ...
With the full participation and consent of Congress, President Trump has embarked upon a radical pro...
It is so hard to get beyond cynicism these days. Even a symposium devoted to this goal has, as refle...
This paper has two objectives: first, to provide more information on the data used to construct a co...
To paraphrase French economist Thomas Piketty, the task of evaluating new regulations is too importa...
The author argues that John D. Graham, administrator of the Office of Information and Regulatory Aff...
Over the past three decades, regulatory agencies have made tremendous progress in the valuation of m...
It is The Regulatory Review’s fifth anniversary, and also five years since we first wrote about the ...
For over a decade, scathing critiques of government have been fueled by a group of studies called re...
Over the past few years the debate over the economic rationality of health, safety and environmental...
The entire U.S. federal regulatory apparatus, especially that part devoted to reducing (or deciding ...
As the Obama Administration seeks to reduce the regulatory burden on businesses (see related essay o...
Many debates over regulation focus only on the costs of new rules. Critics argue that the weight of ...
A 2010 study commissioned by the Office of Advocacy of the U.S. Small Business Administration claims...
The Value of a Statistical Life represents how much a population values reducing the probability of ...
With the full participation and consent of Congress, President Trump has embarked upon a radical pro...
It is so hard to get beyond cynicism these days. Even a symposium devoted to this goal has, as refle...
This paper has two objectives: first, to provide more information on the data used to construct a co...
To paraphrase French economist Thomas Piketty, the task of evaluating new regulations is too importa...
The author argues that John D. Graham, administrator of the Office of Information and Regulatory Aff...
Over the past three decades, regulatory agencies have made tremendous progress in the valuation of m...
It is The Regulatory Review’s fifth anniversary, and also five years since we first wrote about the ...