The Volokh Conspiracy
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Notice and Comment Symposium on Reviving Rationality by Livermore & Revesz
An extended symposium engaging with an important new book on the use and misuse of cost-benefit analysis in regulatory review.
The Yale Journal on Regulation's Notice & Comment blog is hosting an online symposium discussing the book Reviving Rationality: Saving Cost-Benefit Analysis for the Sake of the Environment and Our Health by law professors Michael Livermore and Richard Revesz.
Here is Professor Christopher Walker's introduction to the symposium. Contributions will be posted over the next week or so, and indexed here.
My own contribution is "Cost as the Ultimate Regulatory Restraint." Here is a taste:
Much of Michael Livermore and Richard Revesz's Reviving Rationality is devoted to critiquing the Trump administration for its ill-grounded and poorly executed deregulatory initiatives. Many (though not all) Trump administration deregulatory actions were undertaken with insufficient analytical grounding and without regard for relevant legal constraints and procedural requirements. As a consequence, the administration lost early and often in federal court. The Environmental Protection Agency, in particular, suffered numerous early defeats in court and ultimately accomplished little in the way of lasting accomplishments, deregulatory or otherwise.
The authors' detailed critiques of several Trump administration initiatives are forcefully presented and often compelling. Some of the authors' broader claims about the role of regulatory review and cost-benefit analysis are less powerful and are less likely to persuade those who do not share the authors' progressive outlook and regulatory sympathies. It is one thing to excoriate the Trump Administration for its disregard of the legal and administrative norms governing regulatory agency activity. It is another to brush aside concerns for aggregate regulatory burdens or suggest that ex ante cost-benefit assessments should be the central focus of regulatory policy. . . .
Like many critics of the Trump administration's regulatory policies, the authors note the federal government's poor record defending Trump-directed initiatives. Such critiques are fair. (I have made some myself.) Going forward it will be interesting to see whether such legal failures were an artifact of the Trump administration, or are signs of larger problems within the administrative state, including Congress's failure to update and revise the statutes delegating agencies the authority to act. If the Biden Administration likewise struggles in court, it may be a sign of deeper rot, and not something that was particular to Trump.
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I've suspected a lot of what was going on was a deliberate failure on the part of the bureaucracy to "dot the 'i's and cross the 't's" for deregulatory initiatives they disapproved of. We shouldn't be assessing these things as though 'the resistance' wasn't a real thing.
In this sense it would both be an underlying problem with the bureaucracy, AND specific to Trump, as a President whose policies were in better agreement with the desires of the bureaucracy wouldn't face the same problem.
These are people who believe in mind reading, in forecasting, and that standards of conduct are set by a fictitious character. When they use the word, rational, one has to laugh.
Yep. It's all a conspiracy. Just like everything. Trump can only be failed.
Simple incompetence looks like a lot better explanation.
Your inability to assume professionalism in anyone makes me wonder how you acted when there was a chance to do a crappy job to further some agenda or other.
Lack of professionalism is already established here, (See the OP's last paragraph.) we're discussing the motive for it.
And we can't be required to ignore the existence of a formal "resistance" movement.
No, that's not remotely what the OP's last paragraph says.
Oh, you can, because there absolutely was no such thing.
Yes, but you are literally a paranoid loon. If you really believe this, rather than merely are claiming this as a rhetorical device, you should get help. This is as irrational as thinking lizard people are secretly controlling world affairs.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I_Am_Part_of_the_Resistance_Inside_the_Trump_Administration
"...an important new book on the use and misuse of cost-benefit analysis in regulatory review."
The book's sales will really shoot up once Oprah puts it in her Book Club.
It seems to me that a lot of those 'early and often' losses were APA challenges. VC Conspirators can decide for themselves whether APA was used cynically as a tool to stymie POTUS Trump's agenda.
Yes, the unelected administrative bureaucracy is a huge problem.
These are persons who think that fictional characters define moral standards and that they can predict the future. One has to giggle when they use the word "reasonable." https://wordletoday.io/