Instead they are being left in family homes, alone while family members work to pay the bills.
One of the problems with government regulations and business is that often times the regulation applies across the board with little regard to the size of the business or the size of the population that the business serves.
To implement a regulation to businesses across an entire geographic area can harm the business in the small town. Why should the same regulation apply to a business in a town of 330 as a business in a town of 1.5 million residents? To comply with certain government regulations businesses in small towns are often left with no choice but to close the doors.
Existing regulations already put a huge burden on the U.S. economy, more than $600 billion per year, according to detailed studies by economist Thomas Hopkins of the Rochester Institute of Technology. Former chief White House economic advisor, Professor Murray Weidenbaum of Washington University, St. Louis, calculates that about a quarter of this sum relates specifically to the environment. These astronomical costs do not show up in the federal budget or in income taxes, but are a direct expense on business -- which of course must pass it along to the consumer in the form of higher prices for everything he buys: food, housing, transportation, and all other goods. The average annual "environmental tax" on every American household now exceeds $1,500 and is growing rapidly."
Government regulations destroy more jobs than they create. For many small factories or other businesses the cost of compliance with the many government regulations is so cost prohibitive that they have to cut back on labor. Through lay offs or terminations the businesses are not able to produce the volume of products or services that they were in the past which can lead to further lay offs.
When a company has to terminate employees to reduce the cost of overhead due to government mandates and regulations it also reduces the amount of spend able income the families of those employees have at their disposable. This in turn has a negative impact on the overall economy.
The burden of governmental and particularly environmental regulation is particularly hard on small businesses. As their costs rise and they try to pass them along, competition from giant firms forces them to close down. Miners, factory workers, and other productive employees lose their jobs. But I suppose we can always retrain them -- to become environmental lawyers."
Large firms are not as directly impacted by the cost of government regulations however they often make up that cost by passing the cost onto the consumer by way of higher prices, fewer services or a combination of both.
In addition the government regulations often prevent new products or services from being introduced to the market, which in turn has an overall negative impact on the economy as the market has a reduced sense of competition leaving the current producers of goods in a position of power over the consumer.
Overall business owners appreciate and understand the need for some government regulations. They are appreciative of elements such as the anti-trust laws that protect incoming or smaller businesses from being bullied out of the market by larger companies. Today, however, businesses frequently feel that they are being regulated out of the ability to do business at all. Payroll, health care and environmental issues threaten to drive small businesses out of their industries. Large companies cannot...
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