COST-BENEFIT ANALYSIS IN POLARIZED TIMES

On nearly every major issue of regulatory policy and administrative law, the two parties are sharply polarized. Yet presidential administrations of both parties have used regulatory cost-benefit analysis for nearly a half-century. Why? This Article examines the political forces that have given cost-...

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Published inAdministrative law review Vol. 75; no. 4; pp. 695 - 785
Main Author Gould, Jonathan S
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Chicago American Bar Association 22.09.2023
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Abstract On nearly every major issue of regulatory policy and administrative law, the two parties are sharply polarized. Yet presidential administrations of both parties have used regulatory cost-benefit analysis for nearly a half-century. Why? This Article examines the political forces that have given cost-benefit analysis staying power. While much of the existing literature focuses on the incentives of a generic President, this Article places longstanding debates over cost-benefit analysis in the context of the two parties' divergent policy agendas, the rulemaking process as a whole, and other areas of administrative law. Cost-benefit analysis has persisted because presidential administrations of both parties have reasons to think that retaining the method is consistent with their regulatory policy aims. For Republican administrations, the main utility of cost-benefit analysis is that it erects hurdles to new progressive regulatory policymaking during Democratic administrations, by imposing onerous analytic requirements on regulatory agencies. This fact helps explain why Republicans have not fully abandoned the method, even though many conservative policy goals are not supported by cost-benefit analysis. Democratic administrations have also remained faithful to the method, but for very different reasons: they have discovered the method's progressive potential, especially but not exclusively on climate issues; balked at the seeming inconsistency of abandoning the method while purporting to be the party of science and technocratic governance more generally; and been hemmed in by the prospect of conservative courts striking down agency rulemakings not backed by rigorous cost-benefit analyses.
AbstractList On nearly every major issue of regulatory policy and administrative law, the two parties are sharply polarized. Yet presidential administrations of both parties have used regulatory cost-benefit analysis for nearly a half-century. Why? This Article examines the political forces that have given cost-benefit analysis staying power. While much of the existing literature focuses on the incentives of a generic President, this Article places longstanding debates over cost-benefit analysis in the context of the two parties' divergent policy agendas, the rulemaking process as a whole, and other areas of administrative law.
On nearly every major issue of regulatory policy and administrative law, the two parties are sharply polarized. Yet presidential administrations of both parties have used regulatory cost-benefit analysis for nearly a half-century. Why? This Article examines the political forces that have given cost-benefit analysis staying power. While much of the existing literature focuses on the incentives of a generic President, this Article places longstanding debates over cost-benefit analysis in the context of the two parties' divergent policy agendas, the rulemaking process as a whole, and other areas of administrative law. Cost-benefit analysis has persisted because presidential administrations of both parties have reasons to think that retaining the method is consistent with their regulatory policy aims. For Republican administrations, the main utility of cost-benefit analysis is that it erects hurdles to new progressive regulatory policymaking during Democratic administrations, by imposing onerous analytic requirements on regulatory agencies. This fact helps explain why Republicans have not fully abandoned the method, even though many conservative policy goals are not supported by cost-benefit analysis. Democratic administrations have also remained faithful to the method, but for very different reasons: they have discovered the method's progressive potential, especially but not exclusively on climate issues; balked at the seeming inconsistency of abandoning the method while purporting to be the party of science and technocratic governance more generally; and been hemmed in by the prospect of conservative courts striking down agency rulemakings not backed by rigorous cost-benefit analyses.
On nearly every major issue of regulatory policy and administrative law, the two parties are sharply polarized. Yet presidential administrations of both parties have used regulatory cost-benefit analysis for nearly a half-century. Why? This Article examines the political forces that have given cost-benefit analysis staying power. While much of the existing literature focuses on the incentives of a generic President, this Article places longstanding debates over cost-benefit analysis in the context of the two parties' divergent policy agendas, the rulemaking process as a whole, and other areas of administrative law. Cost-benefit analysis has persisted because presidential administrations of both parties have reasons to think that retaining the method is consistent with their regulatory policy aims. For Republican administrations, the main utility of cost-benefit analysis is that it erects hurdles to new progressive regulatory policymaking during Democratic administrations, by imposing onerous analytic requirements on regulatory agencies. This fact helps explain why Republicans have not fully abandoned the method, even though many conservative policy goals are not supported by cost-benefit analysis. Democratic administrations have also remained faithful to the method, but for very different reasons: they have discovered the method's progressive potential, especially but not exclusively on climate issues; balked at the seeming inconsistency of abandoning the method while purporting to be the party of science and technocratic governance more generally; and been hemmed in by the prospect of conservative courts striking down agency rulemakings not backed by rigorous cost-benefit analyses. This account of the politics of cost-benefit analysis helps explain current debates over the method and foreshadows likely future conflicts. When administrations of both parties have reasons to retain cost-benefit mandates, political conflict will center on how those mandates play out in practice. This dynamic helps explain partisan divisions over which rules are subject to cost-benefit requirements, who counts for purposes of cost-benefit analysis, how to discount future impacts of regulation, and whether and how to account for the distributional consequences of regulation. Only by understanding the politics of cost-benefit analysis can we understand why partisans act as they do and what the method's practical stakes are for regulatory policy.
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SubjectTerms Administrative law
Analysis
Bipartisanship (Politics)
Cost benefit analysis
Deregulation
Evaluation
Incentive (Psychology)
Judicial review of administrative acts
Laws, regulations and rules
Management
Methods
Partisanship
Policy making
Political aspects
Political parties
Politics
Public law
Title COST-BENEFIT ANALYSIS IN POLARIZED TIMES
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Volume 75
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