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Thursday, June 25, 2009

Those Crazy Kooks At WSJ Are At It Again

From Wall Street Journal:

The Cap and Tax Fiction


Democrats off-loading economics to pass climate change bill


House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has put cap-and-trade legislation on a forced march through the House, and the bill may get a full vote as early as Friday. It looks as if the Democrats will have to destroy the discipline of economics to get it done.

Despite House Energy and Commerce Chairman Henry Waxman's many payoffs to Members, rural and Blue Dog Democrats remain wary of voting for a bill that will impose crushing costs on their home-district businesses and consumers. The leadership's solution to this problem is to simply claim the bill defies the laws of economics.

Their gambit got a boost this week, when the Congressional Budget Office did an analysis of what has come to be known as the Waxman-Markey bill. According to the CBO, the climate legislation would cost the average household only $175 a year by 2020. Edward Markey, Mr. Waxman's co-author, instantly set to crowing that the cost of upending the entire energy economy would be no more than a postage stamp a day for the average household. Amazing. A closer look at the CBO analysis finds that it contains so many caveats as to render it useless.





For starters, the CBO estimate is a one-year snapshot of taxes that will extend to infinity. Under a cap-and-trade system, government sets a cap on the total amount of carbon that can be emitted nationally; companies then buy or sell permits to emit CO2. The cap gets cranked down over time to reduce total carbon emissions.

To get support for his bill, Mr. Waxman was forced to water down the cap in early years to please rural Democrats, and then severely ratchet it up in later years to please liberal Democrats. The CBO's analysis looks solely at the year 2020, before most of the tough restrictions kick in. As the cap is tightened and companies are stripped of initial opportunities to "offset" their emissions, the price of permits will skyrocket beyond the CBO estimate of $28 per ton of carbon. The corporate costs of buying these expensive permits will be passed to consumers.



Read the rest here.

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3 COMMENTS:

galensmark said...

For once I am happy to announce that I don’t have to contact my congressperson on this particular issue. Lynn Jenkins leaves no doubt where she stands on C&T.
This is her excellent explanation (like you needed it?).

http://www.lynnjenkins.house.gov/?sectionid=2&sectiontree=2

Southern Savvy said...

I am so disgusted! I sat there yesterday watching the vote count on CSPAN and just shook my head. With each new legislation (that no one reads by the way), I feel more of our freedom and rights are being stripped away. UGH!

Euripides said...

I got a note back from John McCain and, while this legislation hasn't gotten through Senate committee yet, he promised not to let the Senate be steamrolled with this bill like the House was. Some good news about Cap and Trade at least....