High Yield Markets
  • World News
  • Politics
  • Investing
  • Stock
  • Editor’s Pick
Editor's PickInvesting

What Is the EPA’s Mission?

by May 28, 2025
May 28, 2025

Jeffrey Miron

coal, pollution

On March 12, the Environmental Protection Agency underwent its “greatest day of deregulation,” relaxing or reconsidering 31 major rules from power-plant and vehicle emissions standards to oil-and-gas methane limits. More generally, the administration’s director Lee Zeldin has taken aim at the EPA’s mission, saying its primary goal should be to “lower the cost of buying a car, heating a home and running a business.”

Is that the right goal for the EPA? It depends.

From one perspective, Zeldin’s approach is exactly backwards. The purpose of environmental regulation is to “internalize” externalities, which means raising the price of goods whose production or consumption adversely affects third parties. For example, when a factory’s fumes harm its neighbors, the free-market price of its output will be too low relative to the socially efficient level; the price will only reflect the private costs, but not the social costs (pollution), of producing the good.

The textbook remedy is a Pigouvian tax—a surcharge equal to the marginal social damage. By elevating the market price to the full social cost, the tax nudges production and consumption down until the marginal benefit to buyers equals the marginal total cost to society.

Of course, even in that tidy model, regulators can blunder. If the tax is too high relative to the externality, imposing it might be worse than not intervening. And other methods of addressing externalities are even more difficult to get right. Command-and-control standards overlook how abatement costs differ across plants; paperwork proliferates; and political ratchets keep tightening limits long after marginal benefits turn negative.

This leads to an alternative perspective, which might be what Zeldin is thinking. If environmental or other regulations are raising costs too much, then lowering the costs faced by consumers, by scaling back regulation, is appropriate.

The hard question is how to ensure that regulations focus on which goods generate externalities and to what degree. Estimating marginal damages, discounting benefits, and projecting abatement costs is notoriously difficult, and the answers vary widely by region and pollutant.

One plausible approach is to leave most environmental regulation to states. They know local conditions best and can therefore choose a healthier balance of costs and benefits. Plus, each state’s fear of driving economic activity away will push back against excessive regulation.

A second path to reasonable balance is to restrict environmental regulation to Pigouvian taxes. This makes it harder to hide behind complexity and easier for citizens to evaluate proposals. And the public’s aversion to taxes provides a useful counterweight to overzealous regulators.

Armed with price signals that can rise or fall with new evidence, and ideally at the state level, environmental regulation could safeguard the commons, restrain rent seekers, and still honor the libertarian promise of letting markets decide how best to cut pollution.

This article appeared on Substack on March 28, 2025. Jonah Karafiol, a student at Harvard College, co-wrote this post.

previous post
EPIC! Trump Offers Canada a Discount on the Golden Dome System if They Become the 51st State
next post
USDA Whistleblower Says Biden Regime Secretly Crushed White Farmers by Only Paying Off Farmer Loans if They Were Not White Males (VIDEO)

You may also like

Beyond the Finish Line: The Grand Teton Trail...

June 17, 2025

Protected US Shipbuilding Continues to Sink

June 17, 2025

Bureaucratic Sunburn: What the FDA Won’t Let You...

June 17, 2025

Trump’s Deportation Priorities Didn’t Shift, They Won’t Shift,...

June 17, 2025

Why Is Harvard the Only University That Can’t...

June 17, 2025

Postal Banking Continues to Fail

June 16, 2025

Baltimore Corruption

June 16, 2025

On the Separation of Powers and Judicial Supremacy

June 16, 2025

Secret Deals, Endless Wars: The America First Betrayal...

June 13, 2025

Friday Feature: Innovation School

June 13, 2025
Join The Exclusive Subscription Today And Get Premium Articles For Free


Your information is secure and your privacy is protected. By opting in you agree to receive emails from us. Remember that you can opt-out any time, we hate spam too!

Recent Posts

  • Beyond the Finish Line: The Grand Teton Trail & the Grand Disconnect

    June 17, 2025
  • Protected US Shipbuilding Continues to Sink

    June 17, 2025
  • Bureaucratic Sunburn: What the FDA Won’t Let You Prevent

    June 17, 2025
  • Trump’s Deportation Priorities Didn’t Shift, They Won’t Shift, and You Should Stop Falling for Rumors that They Will Shift

    June 17, 2025
  • Why Is Harvard the Only University That Can’t Have International Students?

    June 17, 2025
  • About Us
  • Contacts
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Email Whitelisting

Copyright © 2025 highyieldmarkets.com | All Rights Reserved

High Yield Markets
  • World News
  • Politics
  • Investing
  • Stock
  • Editor’s Pick