New federal appointees’ sharp differences will make EPA/OMB relationship one to watch

As Dan notes in an earlier post, Cass Sunstein has been selected to direct the White House office that oversees regulation by agencies, the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs within the Office of Management and budget.   An in-depth article  in today’s Los Angeles Times discusses the controversy over his nomination among environmental and labor advocates.  From the Times:

The Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs might sound like a remote bureaucratic outpost, but since the Reagan presidency it has influenced federal efforts to protect the public from unsafe food, dangerous chemicals, polluted air, climate change and workplace hazards.

That’s because the office reviews any major regulatory idea that comes from an executive branch agency. Business lobbyists already are applauding Sunstein’s nomination, hoping he might slow the march back to aggressive regulation under the new Democratic administration.

Labor and environmental advocates, on the other hand, want Democratic senators to question Sunstein closely at his confirmation hearing. Leading their concerns are his legal theories and their potential to hamper tough regulation.

Concern about Prof. Sunstein’s appointment results largely from his advocacy of cost-benefit analysis as an important decisionmaking tool.  Cost-benefit analysis has been criticized for skewing governmental decisionmaking in favor of actions that have quantifiable monetary benefits, and for assigning extremely low values to activities that will happen in the far future, among other reasons.  As Dan also notes, it appears that Prof. Lisa Heinzerling of Georgetown, perhaps the most incisive, comprehensive, and relentless critic of cost-benefit analysis in academia today, has been appointed as chief climate change advisor to the new EPA administrator Lisa Jackson.  (This monograph, Pricing the Priceless, provides a readable and interesting exposition of her critiques of CBA.) 

This pair of appointments makes the EPA/OMB relationship an important one to watch in the current administration.  It is likely that the extent to which cost-benefit analysis should  be used to inform federal decisionmaking, and the limits of its value as a policy tool, will be hotly debated in this administration in the context of many important decisions.

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Reader Comments

2 Replies to “New federal appointees’ sharp differences will make EPA/OMB relationship one to watch”

  1. I’d like to note one particular area where sparks may fly. Sunstein seems to find enough flexibility in nearly every statute to allow cost-benefit analysis or its cousin, risk-risk analysis. Heinzerling seems unlikely to agree. (My own views are closer to hers, just as a matter of ordinary statutory interpretation) In appellate cases, a further wrinkle is the potential role of the new S.G., Elena Kagan, who worked very hard to hire Sunstein to Harvard in her former life as a dean. On the other hand, Heinzerling is likely to be supported by Carol Browner. I can also imagine Sunstein and Larry Summers teaming up on some issues. On yet a third hand, Sunstein does not have a confrontational personality, has been known to change his mind on other issues, and may look for common ground whenever he can. Of course, on the really big issues, it all depends on Obama himself. Unlike his predecessor, he’s not likely to delegate the major policy issues to his V.P. or anyone else.

  2. The Browner-Summers relationship is going to be, well, extremely interesting. Summers is anything but a climate hawk, and I doubt he will have much use for someone like Browner. And they will run right into each other: you can’t be a chief economic advisor and NOT have strong positions on energy and the environment, and vice-versa.

    Suffice it to say that the Obama Administration’s tendency to centralize decision-making with a series of czars and czarinas is going to make things crowded at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.

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About Sean

Sean B. Hecht is the Co-Executive Director of the Emmett Institute on Climate Change and the Environment, Evan Frankel Professor of Policy and Practice, and Co-Director o…

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About Sean

Sean B. Hecht is the Co-Executive Director of the Emmett Institute on Climate Change and the Environment, Evan Frankel Professor of Policy and Practice, and Co-Director o…

READ more

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