The Contradictory Attacks on Biden’s Climate Programs

“Job Killing” or “Overheating the Economy” — Which Is It?

“Job-killing regulations” is a longtime conservative meme. That attack has now been joined by the claim that major new spending for clean energy is overheating the economy. The inflation claim is new, prompted by the passage of the 2021 Infrastructure law and the 2022 IRA.   And if they were both right, the two problems would be offsetting. In fact, we might need even stricter environmental regulations to help cool the economy and cut inflation.

There’s never been real evidence for the job-killing claim, but it remains very much alive. The National Association of Manufacturers recently claimed that new regulations to cut air pollution would “threaten $162.4 billion to $197.4 billion of economic activity and put 852,100 to 973,900 current jobs at risk, both directly from manufacturing and indirectly from supply chain spending.” Specifically, “the proposed rule would put at risk approximately $138.4 billion of gross value added (in 2021 prices) and 501,000 jobs in 2027 in areas of nonattainment.” (I can’t help but note the sly wording: “put at risk” means only that there might be an impact of some kind, not that all of the harm would actually occur.)

Although “job killing” seems to be a constant refrain, the inflationary claim tends to surface only when inflation itself is a problem. Fifty years ago Nixon vetoed major spending for municipal sewage treatment as inflationary. The issue disappeared for many years until inflation once again reared its ugly head after COVID. But now it’s definitely back. The Wall Street Journal said beforehand that the infrastructure bill would fuel inflation. Republicans warned that “Congress must stop fueling inflation and stop throwing endless amounts of money at problems; it must carefully target where to spend Americans’ hard-earned tax dollars.” And Fox Business complained that the infrastructure bill and the IRA “juiced demand in the U.S. and contributed to inflation levels that haven’t been seen in decades.”

If they’re right and these spending bills are fueling inflation, it is by increasing demand. Overheating the economy means that supply is racing to catch up to demand, and that means hiring more workers, thus driving up employment and wages. So if the IRA and the infrastructure bill are inflationary, that means they are actually creating too many jobs, which is leading to wage increases.

Assume that both claims are right. If the IRA and the infrastructure law are supposedly creating too many jobs, we need to counter that inflationary effect. If Republicans are right, what we need right now to help cool off the economy is to offset the inflationary effects of spending on clean energy. And if their theory about the impact of regulations on jobs is right, stronger environmental regulations would actually be a good way of pouring some cold water on an overstimulated economy.

Obviously, I’m overthinking things a bit. We’re not really supposed to take the logic of these claims that seriously.  Regardless of the state of the economy, conservatives favor the same remedies: cutting spending and taxes while slashing environmental protection. If the economy is down, this is supposed to be create jobs. If the economy is up, it’s the recipe for preventing inflation.

Anything else would be “woke.”

 

 

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Reader Comments

7 Replies to “ The Contradictory Attacks on Biden’s Climate Programs”

  1. Anything to protect their rice bowls.

    The notable thing about virtually all aspects of “conservative” claims whether it’s economy, taxation, climate change, vaccination, or “woke”, there is a consistent failure to connect the dots. Something is reduced to a talking point, and then just coughed up like a hairball, but never connected to any other talking point. In many cases, such as the instant matter, it leads to a classic “reduction to the absurd”

    One wonders whether the talkers are actually unable to make connections; “their elevator doesn’t go to the top floor”, or if it’s intentional and they assume their supporters are readily fooled.

  2. Prof. Farber, you appear to have documented the greatest challenge in the history of the human race:  

    Can intellectuals/academics educate and motivate politicians to protect the human race from global warming with the greatest sense of urgency?

    An acceptable quality of life for our newest generations depends on your success in overcoming this challenge of change.  

    1. Dan,we never seem to produce and implement solutions that solve our out of control global warming disaster problems. In 2006 California Magazine published “Can We Adapt in Time?”
      https://alumni.berkeley.edu/california-magazine/september-october-2006-global-warning/can-we-adapt-time/ that explains why we haven’t made enough progress.

      The ultimate explanation appeared in a 2013 issue of California Magazine that featured Nicholas Dirks, who said in an interview “— so many intellectuals don’t want to take on the sort of complications and impurities that come from being public” that they consider (per Hofstadter) to be “Impure” while academics consider themselves to be “Pure.”

  3. Professor Farber,

    You note one should not “…take the logic of these claims that seriously.”

    Is the purpose of the article to caution one against conservative views, or capitalist views? One should not conflate these two outlooks … no matter how much they sound alike.

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About Dan

Dan Farber has written and taught on environmental and constitutional law as well as about contracts, jurisprudence and legislation. Currently at Berkeley Law, he has al…

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About Dan

Dan Farber has written and taught on environmental and constitutional law as well as about contracts, jurisprudence and legislation. Currently at Berkeley Law, he has al…

READ more

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