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October 15, 2018
In an effort to deal with the market and non-market forces inflicting economic losses on coal- and nuclear-power plants, the Trump administration is seeking through regulation to force state and regional grid operators to purchase bulk power from coal- and nuclear-power producers to slow the (early) retirements of those facilities. The administration is justifying this policy on national-security grounds:…
October 4, 2018
They have translated the climate policy equivalent of the Dead Sea Scrolls. They have uncovered the smoking gun of smoking guns. They have provided final and convincing proof that the Trump administration — the bête noire of the Paris climate agreement, the facilitators of planetary destruction, the knuckle-dragging deniers of “science,” the heroes of polluters, belching cattle, and…
October 1, 2018
Environmental protection can be an important government function, in particular because private incentives, as reflected in market prices, often do not capture the full social value of environmental quality, or perhaps more precisely, changes in that quality. In the standard analytic framework, private actors cannot capture the value of environmental improvements, or do not bear…
July 25, 2018
My AEI colleague Mark J. Perry has written a short essay arguing that “Trump’s Energy Policy Is Deeply Flawed,” the central themes of which are: These arguments are rather uncharacteristic of Mark, truly a first-rate economist and policy thinker. Let us begin with a first principle: The magnitude or degree of “dependence” on foreign sources of…
July 23, 2018
Environmental policy as a tool of wealth redistribution is nothing new. The latest example is a proposal for a greenhouse-gas (GHG) tax just introduced by Representative Carlos Curbelo (R., Fla.). Curbelo’s tax would start at $24 per metric ton of GHG emissions, growing 2 percent per year above inflation and an additional $2 per ton…
July 17, 2018
The central broad objective of the U.S. constitution is the protection of unpopular individuals and political groups from the whims and passions of the political majority of the moment. It is curious therefore that the election of prosecutors, in particular that of state Attorneys General, seemingly is accepted as a norm by many despite the…
June 21, 2018
Demand and supply. Supply and demand. That fundamental analytic framework, simple and powerful as a tool with which to examine the sources of shifts in market prices, often is forgotten in the cacophony that characterizes Beltway efforts to score political points. And increases in gasoline prices — visible every day to many millions of Americans…
May 18, 2018
I betray no secret when I report that reverence for the silliness embodied in conventional wisdom is a central characteristic of policy debates in the Beltway. No amount of evidence, no amount of logic, and no amount of proof showing that the earth indeed is round are sufficient to diminish the credibility of arguments that…
May 8, 2018
Editor’s Note: This post represents AEI Resident Scholar Benjamin Zycher’s original content and does not include edits found on the publishing site, The Hill. To access that version of the text, click here. Several municipalities are suing the major oil companies for causing climate change and for the large asserted costs of preventing and mitigating its…
April 20, 2018
Earth Day is upon us yet again, and it is difficult not to notice its transformation into a vehicle for corporate virtue signaling: Full-page ads in national and local print media, yielding a revenue stream for which the newspapers and magazines are sincerely grateful. Advertisements on broadcast media and heavily trafficked websites. Booths at ubiquitous…