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Environmental Report Card 2001-2002IntroductionGrades Executive Summary Complete Report Card This mid-term report card was developed by PERC--the Center for Free Market Environmentalism to evaluate actions affecting natural resources and the environment taken by the George W. Bush administration during its first two years. The report card assesses actions in the light of free market environmentalism (FME). Consideration was given to how the executive branch played the hand passed along by the Clinton administration and how the new team began to play its own cards. Free market environmentalism is a way of looking at environmental problems that recognizes the role of incentives and the importance of private property rights in encouraging stewardship. In viewing public sector activity, free market environmentalism identifies specific ways to improve public management by changing managers' incentives and opening up opportunities for voluntary action. These include: 1) decentralizing regulation where possible; 2) encouraging merit-based waivers of command-and-control where possible; 3) adopting only regulation that is, on net, beneficial and cost-effective; and 4) tying public sector managers' budget to their performance. We recognize that, even at best, this report card is an incomplete and imperfect assessment. As students and professors well know, this is the way it is with all report cards, but even more so in this case. In assessing an administration's environmental policy actions, there is no sure way to know how hard the leaders may have pushed to alter policy one way or another. Struggling to avoid the passage of laws that might violate FME principles may be as heroic as working to pass FME-based laws. However, like all report cards, this one does not assess effort as much as outcomes. In developing their assessments, the graders were asked to consider the following. Did the president and his administration meet the following standards?
This report undoubtedly raises an age-old problem experienced in schools and universities?how to interpret grades. Is a C in one professor's physics class comparable to a C in another professor's economics course? We do not guarantee that, for example, a B on agricultural chemicals policy from Delworth Gardner is the same as the B on White House regulatory review policy assigned by Brian Mannix. No effort was exerted by the editors to force the grading system into a mold of comparability. But each grader, who worked independently, offers a detailed explanation for the elements considered as well as for the grading logic applied. Each report card lists the areas covered and gives a letter grade for each, along with the grader's name. In most cases, grades are also provided for components of the larger topic. For example, Del Gardner gave an overall grade of B for agricultural chemicals policy. Within the category are individual grades for environmental polices associated with the new farm bill (D), genetically engineered crops (A), and organic crops (A). Each grader determined the overall grade for his or her category. To the extent that generalizations can be drawn, a grade of C seems to be given when the Bush administration maintains the status quo with respect to free market environmentalism principles. If policy moves toward FME, the grade rises; if policy moves away, it falls. When the grades were considered together, the result was a C-. The final grade of C- implies that the Bush administration's actions have drifted away from the FME position during these first two years. An overall grade of C- is not quite as good as a C. But these are mid-term grades and the reports contain recommendations for improving the final assessment. The graders have shown considerable care in making their assessments, determining grades, and communicating the logic they applied. Even so, we know that there could well be major areas of importance we missed and work by the Bush administration that we may have inadequately assessed. This said, we do what all fair-minded scholars do. We invite criticism, and we hope that the criticism we receive will help us to improve our final report card. We at PERC believe that inspiring debate is more important than the grade itself. We welcome discussion about the relative merits of free market environmentalism and the prospects for improving how we go about protecting and enhancing environmental assets. Fortunately, we continue to see environmental progress being made on most fronts, even with the decades-old command-and-control policies that are generally used. It is our belief that when FME is more fully applied, even more progress will emerge. |
"I look forward to a continuing dialogue with you and your colleagues about innovative approaches to environmental protection."
- David Baron, NPR |