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Government Red Tape Hinders Private Sector Job Creation
Posted by Jack on July 29, 2012
 Red Tape vs Small Business
If the past few years are any indicator, Fridays are reserved for bad news from the federal government.  This Friday held true with a report from the Commerce Department that economic growth had slowed to an anemic 1.5 percent in the second quarter.

While it is hard to bring that 10,000 foot statistic to a more relatable level, consider this: Friday’s report confirms that this is the weakest “recovery” in the post-World War era.  Annualized, growth is less than half of the previous nine recoveries.  Clearly something is not working.

While the federal government cannot create the kind of jobs we need to get our economy back on its feet, it can create an environment that encourages the private sector to expand and create jobs.  The first step to creating such an environment is to quit being a stumbling block to expansion and job creation.

Since the beginning of the year, the federal government has imposed $56.6 billion in compliance costs and more than 114 million annual paperwork burden hours.  That is time and money that could have been invested in expanding businesses and hiring new workers.  If you thought that was bad, the Washington bureaucracy is on overdrive right now to create new regulations.

A report by the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform found that the Obama Administration issued 106 new rules in its first three years that collectively cost taxpayers more than $46 billion annually.  That is four times the number of “major” regulations and five times the cost of rules issued in the prior administration’s first three years.

The same report found that, over the past decade, the number of “economically significant” rules (those which could cost $100 million or more annually) has increased by 137 percent.

While the sheer number is alarming, the impact they have on business is chilling.

A recent Gallup poll found that nearly half of all small businesses are not hiring because they are worried about new government regulations.

Who could blame them?  This is the same government that literally likened spilt milk to an oil spill and expected dairy farmers to come up with an environmental mitigation plan on par with an oil company.

This week, the House worked to bring some common sense to the regulatory process by passing with bipartisan support the Red Tape Reduction and Small Business Job Creation Act (H.R. 4078).  This legislation combines several proposals to provide relief from red tape and bureaucratic overreach.

Among them, it would freeze “economically significant” regulations until unemployment reaches 6 percent and would prevent “lame duck” administrations from issuing such regulations literally on their way out the door.

Our plan would give impacted parties a voice before federal agencies agree to binding legal settlements which require them to issue new regulations, ending the practice of “sue and settle” by which regulators exploit the legal system to achieve their agenda.

It also includes several provisions similar to those put forth by President Obama’s Jobs Council.  These include making independent agencies like the National Labor Relations Board subject to the same regulatory review and transparency requirements as other agencies, streamlining the federal permitting process for construction projects, and requiring more thorough cost-benefit analyses from regulators.

While there is no silver bullet to reigniting the American economy, this proposal would go a long way toward encouraging economic growth by addressing what the National Federation of Independent Business identified as the single-most important problem for small business.

As President Reagan once said, “small business is the gateway to opportunity for those who want a piece of the American dream.”  Let’s make sure the federal government is not blocking their way.

Comments
The opinions expressed below are those of their respective authors and do not necessarily represent those of this office.
  • 07/29/12 08/31/10 False
    Alice from Miami commented on 7/29/2012
    Government is not only blocking growth and expansion of businesses but is actually destroying businesses. Small businesses can no longer survive under the maze of red tape and impediments created by a monstruous bureacratic government. It is imperative that you and your colleagues eliminate these agencies that have been the root of this problem.
  • 07/29/12 08/31/10 False
    Charles Whatley from Ochlocknee, GA commented on 7/29/2012
    my partner and i created and lead "native american ministries" taking mission teams from south georgia to the navajo reservation in northern arizona. the very worst impediment to our "business" right now is the uncertainty about what new, ludicrous thing the government will do next! we plan each team 3-6 months in advance and that's almost impossible in the present climate...
  • 07/29/12 08/31/10 False
    JOHN from DARIEN commented on 7/29/2012
    Dear Congressman Kingston, Most of these regulations are put into place as a guise to protect public interests,But in reality they are there to collect money in one form or another.Everyone wants a piece of the pie mentality.Only difference being those that want a piece of the pie do not do any of the work.Take the scam of charging an impact fee on building a new home,or your so called Real Estate fee generated by do nothing but collect a check agencies.We have reached an impass on these collect and do nothing agencies. Also, we have a adminstration that passes what jobs are now available to foreign nationals,like the bridge work in California. An administration that cuts jobs like halting constuction of the oil line from Canada, like the handouts to illegal alien workers coming in across the border,like HUD building houses for a population that will degrade and destroy them within a few years because they do not have one dime or any sweat equity invested in them, to name just a few.Needless to say I don't like the CHANGE.I have yet to see one viable idea that will get people off the streets and back to work that will put the money back into the public hands.Not like the passing of our tax dollars to the banking industry so they can lend it back to you at 20% and not like the Insurance industry that has captured this administration on a round robin affair with the Medical communities that will eventually break the economy. I have to ask myself what a doctor would charge for services if he/she were not dealing with insurance dollars? More like 70% less than what they charge now. Now we have a administration that wants to be the insurer? It does not take a rocket scientist to to figure out we are now being forced to buy into health insurance,weather you want it or not. Just another one of those do nothing collection agencies.Designed to look good for you while they are dipping into your pocket.Regardless of the fact it's not Constitutional it is just outright common sense that it's WRONG. a FORCED purchase and without a public vote by the way. If a man/woman is working and making a good salary and then wants to insure his family,then by all means go for it. Regarding WORK,what we need is several good major ideas that will not only put people to work but that will also be a major benifit to the USA for future generations. What comes to mind is something on the order of FDR's dam project. I have several idea's along this line but they are complex,to much so. for for this blog site.
  • 07/29/12 08/31/10 False
    michael griffin from nashville commented on 7/29/2012
    i cant think of one instanse of a time i aree with jack on anything due to his bull headed opinion of marijuana legalazation .and the effect it has on everyday people he doesent even realize 0ver 58 percent of americans want this at least access to it for medical use .i see this as his support for outdated federal laws .but i do agree with him whole heartedly about this goverment regulation thing .as a buisness man and job creator i could not agree more bank regulations im being told by other buisness men and our bankers the hoops they must jump through to just borrow money for expansion .where it used to take just a phone call to my local bank to borrow a 100,000.00 to buy materials or build a house .now the process can take a month or longer our bankers say this is because of new goverment regulations . this is just plain stupid .im with jack 100% on this .now if he would just take the time and had the political courage to change the law so our farmers could grow hemp and enter our product on the market wich now we use so much of in the usa and are currently importing it would be a good first step.i dont see why we are the only industrial nation in the world not growing this valuable crop.really jack come on .mike griffin
  • 07/29/12 08/31/10 False
    Diane from Savannah commented on 7/29/2012
    It's not just federal regulation. Uppity bureaucratic thugs torment business owners of all stripes on the local level. as well. Locals are really hesitant to patronize restaurants and retail shops throughout the year because of the over-zealous hoarde of meter maids from Savannah's Parking Services. They are over paid micro-managers, and really nasty to deal with on ALL levels. I hope our new mayor will be much more business-friendly and run a tighter ship. Thank You! Keep up the good work...
  • 07/30/12 08/31/10 False
    David Culverhouse from Savannah Ga commented on 7/30/2012
    Jack--Keep up the good work! You are correct re the red tape involved. We hold a GSA small business contract, and we have an issue now, where we sell them new furniture, but cant put the stapler on the desk. We dont have a contract for supplies so they say...Thanks--DFC
  • 08/26/12 08/31/10 False
    James from Richmond Hill, GA commented on 8/26/2012
    As of September 4, 2012, the South Atlantic Fisheries Management Council will close the black sea bass fishery in federal waters. It opened in June and was only open for two months. This is part of the Mangueson-Stephens Act as reauthorized and is said to stop overfishing. There is no shortage of black sea bass off the Georgia coast and this just another example of the bureauticratic red tape that is destroying our economy and our nation. The Department of Commerce is the top agency in the chain of command and the Secretary of Commerce must sign off on all ruling of this agency. They have and are destroying the recreational fishing in this country. We have no pursuit of happiness left in the nation. The boating industry, tackle manufacturers, and other related ancillary industries such as motels, tackle shops, cafes, etc., are being detroyed as well. It appears that Congress does not care about this segment of our economy one little wit. It they did, then something would be done to abolish the power of these bureacrats to wreck our economy. Jack Kingston lives on the coast of Georgia but has done little if nothing to help us to stop the Department of Commerce, National Marine Fisheries, and SAFMC on this path of ending offshore fishing for all of us who love this sport and contribute billions to the economy. One thing that he should do is support extension of Georgia State Water to three leagues just as it is for Gulf states. Out state can pass a law to extend the boundry of our state waters just as in the state of LA, but Congress must ratify it. That will give us as Georgians more home control over our offshore waters up to 10.350 miles rather than a paultry three miles as it is not. With the possibility of wind power from offshore windmills and oil from offshore rigs, that just makes sense for Georgia and the United States in light of the recent Oceans executive order by our president. Jack, you need to start listening to us who are saltwater fishermen and who vote.
  • 08/27/12 08/31/10 False
    Robert from Hinesville commented on 8/27/2012
    What Mr. Culverhouse spoke about in regards to GSA is only a portion of the problem with GSA. In the past I had a GSA credit card while working for the federal government. The practice was that you were to buy only from GSA approved sources. What this actually means is that if you need a stapler to go on a new desk that you have to order it from a GSA catalog or from a GSA contracted re-seller and you would pay up to 200% of the products value if you were to buy the same exact item from a store locally. Basically a 10 dollar stapler becomes a 17 dollar stapler. I have seen it all too often. I had access for years to FEDLOG and seen the prices of the items that were NSN items that we could buy and the prices were outrageous. I have seen Tires in the stock system for passenger trucks and cars cost 1.5-3 times what you could buy them from a local business for and not to mention if you are buying them through the system it will kill your budget and takes away prespective business from your local economy. I have seen so many wasteful things in the years I have for the U.S. Government that it makes me sick. I dont care if office furniture is made federal prisoners and then sold to the federal goverment for a profit but isnt that taking money out of your left pocket and putting into your right? The best thing the federal goverment could possible do is abandon half of the GSA program especially the things relative to purchases under the contracting threshold of 2500 dollars and then also use real mathematics to figure out who deserves contracts and not the buddy system. The funny things is when you learn the system of procurement by the govt it all makes sense on paper to people who are actually doing anything. But if you are one of the unfortunate people who use the system you just want to bang your head into a wall. One last example is GSA leased vehicles... Wow what a waste. I had to take a vehicle to a GSA approved shop to get wiper blades and it cost 49 dollars for the blades and installation which I paid for with the GSA card that's in the vehicle. If I had been allowed to go to Advance Auto or Napa or Autozone I could have gotten the same blades for 20 dollars and they would install them for free but that is not allowed... Is there anyone who can tell me why the govt is operating in such a silly manner and being so frivolous with our tax payers money.
  • 09/02/12 08/31/10 False
    Sherryl from Alma commented on 9/2/2012
    Go John from Darien!!!!! Just for point in fact. A hospital has to be in compliance with over 3600 regulations each and every day from a multitude of different entities many are redundant and are evaluated with a different perspective. I know many serve important purposes, but 36000 get real. I am a provider and was a Compliance Officer in my old life. We are strangling every aspect and cutting off competion and creativity for appropriate change. What is it with all the pork that does not apply to the nature of the actual bills just to get someone's agenda through the back door. Make the bill what the bill represents, NO MORE PORK. Where's the transparency?? Thank you for allowing me to participate.
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