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|    alt.politics.economics    |    "Its the economy, stupid"    |    345,379 messages    |
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|    Message 343,638 of 345,379    |
|    davidp to All    |
|    The economy of the U.S. has become more     |
|    20 May 23 23:11:53    |
      From: lessgovt@gmail.com              More regulation yields more profits for large firms while crushing small ones:       Study       by Timothy P. Carney, May 18, 2023, The Washington Examiner              The economy of the U.S. has become more consolidated and more regulated over       the past generation, and it turns out that regulation is a leading cause of       the consolidation.              So if you ever wonder why Big Business is lobbying for bigger government, just       check out this paper from finance scholar Shikhar Singla.              His study finds “an increase in regulatory costs results in lower sales,       employment, markups, and profitability for small firms,” but more       importantly, they find that greater regulatory costs result in higher sales,       employment, markups, and        profitability for large firms.              That is, Big Government is good for Big Business.              Singla used “machine learning” technology to force computers to read every       single U.S. regulatory filing since 1970 that laid out the costs the       regulation imposed on businesses. He found that “regulatory costs have       increased by $1 trillion from        1970 to 2018.” That’s a lot of money. So how have those massively       increased costs affected businesses?              The federal filings were pretty granular and could show how much regulatory       costs increased in each industry. So Singla compared big and small businesses       in the affected industry.              The big finding: “We find that increase in regulatory costs leads to small       firms becoming smaller and large firms becoming larger. It also leads to an       increase in markups and profitability of very large firms.”              That second part is key here and bears repeating:              Increasing regulatory costs increases profits and markups for large firms.       That both explains why Big Business regularly calls for more regulation (see       the artificial intelligence industry for this week’s example), and it points       toward the harm of        these regulations. The increased Big Business margins come from decreased       competition, which in turn harms consumers and workers.              For a crystal-clear real-world example of this, go back to 2010 when H&R Block       and Jackson Hewitt supported the Obama administration’s (illegal) attempt to       regulate tax preparers, requiring lengthy and costly certification for paid       preparers.              "We support this IRS initiative to improve and increase compliance standards,       requirements, and expectations for the individual income tax return preparer       community," Sheila Cort of Jackson Hewitt said.              At the time, UBS issued an investment alert, effectively saying that these       regulations made H&R Block a better bet: "The new regulations should help       Block by: 1) reducing fraudulent preparers (that generate oversize refunds       dishonestly), 2) add barriers        to entry (or continuation) for small preparers, 3) provide revenue as Block       may sell their continuing education and competency tests to others, and 4)       perhaps boost paid prepared share."              What’s more, Big Government is a home game for Big Business. Do you know who       was the IRS commissioner when the IRS wrote its rules? Mark Ernst, who a few       months before had been the CEO of H&R Block.              The big guys hire the best lobbyists and lawyers to navigate and tweak the       rules — often these lobbyists and lawyers were the lawmakers and bureaucrats       who wrote the law and the regulations.              Big Business lobbies for and profits from Big Government.              https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/more-regulation-yield       -more-profits-for-large-firms-while-crushing-small-ones-study              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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