Monday, November 05, 2012

Now Hiring: Center for Economic Freedom Policy Analyst

The Texas Public Policy Foundation is in the process of hiring a policy analyst to work with me in our Center for Economic Freedom promoting free markets and private property rights in various areas of public policy. See below for more details and how to apply. If you have any questions, please feel free to give me a call or send me an email.

 

Take care,

 

Bill

 

Bill Peacock

Vice President of Research

Director, Center for Economic Freedom

Texas Public Policy Foundation

o: (512) 472-2700

c: (512) 965-6476

bpeacock@texaspolicy.com

 

Now Hiring: Center for Economic Freedom Policy Analyst

Description: The economic freedom policy analyst will research, write about, and educate policymakers, the media, and the public on various policy issues, including energy/electricity markets; homeowners’ insurance; telecommunications; economic freedom; property rights; and tort reform, so that Texas’ public policy reflects sound free-market principles.

 

Responsibilities include, but are not limited to:

·         Writing well-researched, well-argued papers with detailed, workable recommendations on many of the complex policy issues facing the state of Texas

·         Helping the recommendations from the Center’s research become public policy in Texas through meetings with policymakers, staff and other stakeholders, public testimony, and outreach to the media and the public

·         Proactively organizing and carrying out the day-to-day activities of the Center, including identifying and taking advantage of opportunities where the Center can impact public policy, such as:

·         collaboration with various stakeholders, organizations, and state/national think tanks to ensure quality research and recommendations

·         input into the policy development process of legislative committees and state agencies

·         generating research and commentary that anticipates and takes advantage of media coverage of the Center’s issues

·         Drafting model legislation and amendments

·         Organizing various policy events/activities designed to educate policymakers, stakeholders, the media, and the general public

·         Supporting other work of the Foundation

 

Qualifications:

·         Completion of an educational level that, in conjunction with relevant job experience, demonstrates a level of competence in the areas necessary to fulfill the responsibilities and duties of the position.

·         Three to five years of relevant legislative, policy, and/or media experience

·         Excellent writing, editing, and public presentation skills

·         Understanding of core economic principles and support of free market principles

·         Ability to comprehend/analyze complex legislative and regulatory issues

·         Ability to effectively advocate the Foundation’s principles and recommendations

 

The position’s salary will be commensurate with the experience, expertise, and skills of the analyst who takes the position. Please send cover letter, resume, salary requirement, and references to: Greg Sindelar, Director of Operations administration@texaspolicy.com.

 

Bill

 

Bill Peacock

Vice President of Research

Director, Center for Economic Freedom

Texas Public Policy Foundation

o: (512) 472-2700

c: (512) 965-6476

bpeacock@texaspolicy.com

 

Monday, July 30, 2012

Thinking Economically: July 31 Austin Event - The Role of States in Antitrust Enforcement

Musings on Economic Freedom from the Texas Public Policy Foundation’s

Center for Economic Freedom

 

Texas recently led a coalition of  15 other states and the U.S. Department of Justice in charging Apple and three of the nation’s largest book publishers with colluding to fix prices in violation of antitrust law. The charge stems from Apple’s work with the publishers to develop alternative distribution channels for ebooks in order to bring the publishers higher prices than they could command through Amazon.

 

At least two issues arise from this action.

 

First, it is worth examining whether markets and consumers are helped or harmed by this action. Milton Friedman seemed doubtful of the benefits when he said, “instead of promoting competition, antitrust laws tend to do exactly the opposite.”

 

Second, there is a legitimate concern in this age of global markets as to what role, if any, states should play in antitrust enforcement. It is possible that even if there are benefits from antitrust laws regulating national and even international markets, an overlapping, multijurisdictional approach to antitrust enforcement might hamper markets and makes them less competitive.

 

The Foundation is holding a policy primer tomorrow, Tuesday, July 31, at 11:30 to examine what role states should play in this area. The panelist are: J. Bruce McDonald, Partner, Jones Day & Former U.S. Deputy Assistant Attorney General; Stacie deBlieux, Assistant Attorney General, Louisiana Department of Justice; and Berin Szoka, President, TechFreedom.

 

Antitrust law is moving to the forefront of the discussion of how to regulate businesses in light of global competition. With Texas being one of the more active states in this sphere,  the issue is also of great relevance to the Texas public policy arena. Please join us for an interesting discussion among these three leading experts on the issue as we also celebrate Milton Friedman’s 100th birthday.

 

This update and all our previous Thinking Economically updates can been viewed under the Related Commentaries heading in the Thinking Economically section of the Foundation’s website. We will be adding automatic subscribe and unsubscribe functionality to this email. In the meantime, if you’d like to do either, please send an email to bpeacock@texaspolicy.com.

 

Bill

 

Bill Peacock

Vice President of Research

Director, Center for Economic Freedom

Texas Public Policy Foundation

o: (512) 472-2700

c: (512) 965-6476

bpeacock@texaspolicy.com

Monday, July 09, 2012

Thinking Economically: Texas' electricity market can power our future

Musings on Economic Freedom from the Texas Public Policy Foundation’s

Center for Economic Freedom

 

Here’s how we wind up with more government involvement in our lives:

 

·         someone in government or with a friend in government doesn’t like the outcome of voluntary exchanges between producers and consumers in the marketplace;

·         the government then intervenes, i.e., regulates the market, to make future market outcomes fit the preferred outcome;

·         the intervention not only fails to provide the preferred outcome, but its “unintended consequences” make even more people unhappy with the outcome of the now regulated market;

·         the government further intervenes in the market, leading to even more distorted outcomes and broader dissatisfaction.

 

This scenario is essentially what we are experiencing in the Texas electricity market today.

 

Texas moved to a competitive electricity market over a period of about 12 years, from 1995 to 2007. The results for consumers have been amazing: billions of dollars of new investment in generation, lower prices, and a high level of reliability with robust reserves.

 

The industry experience has been a bit rockier. That, however, isn’t surprising. Consumers were in part paying higher prices to provide guaranteed returns for the industry. Without those returns, businesses are having to compete, and some are competing more successfully than others.

 

There is a fear, though, that consumers will soon experience more of the pitfalls of competition. Thus as private sector investment slows, we have calls for the government to step in and once again raise prices to provide the stability that the market is failing to achieve.

                                                                                                                         

Except that it is the government, not the market, that is the source of the problems facing consumers today.

 

One reason that we are experiencing the lower investment and reserve margins today is because the market has become more efficient each year it has operated. This means that profits are harder to come by for market participants. And that intervention is having a bigger impact on profit margins than in the past.

 

When we take the regulations/subsidies that existed before full competition was ushered in in 2007 (the federal production tax credit, the state renewable portfolio standard, market power regulation, the state’s energy efficiency program, etc.) and add newer regulations to the mix (the wholesale price cap, PUC approval of mergers and acquisitions, federal environmental laws, PUC disgorgement authority, etc.), it is no surprise that the outcomes of this regulated market fail to satisfy.

 

The answer, as I pointed out in a commentary in Saturday’s Houston Chronicle (see below), is not to increase intervention, but to reduce it. In other words, let’s let Texas’ world class electricity market work as planned. In particular, we shouldn’t abandon Texas’ energy-only market, where investors rather than consumers bear the market risk. The problem facing consumers right now—unreliable service—is a regulatory creation. The answer to that is not more regulation.

 

There are real challenges facing Texas’ competitive electricity market. The question before us is whether a few policymakers and regulators in Austin can somehow make better decisions about how to deal with those challenges than the collective and cooperative decisions of millions of producers and consumers in the marketplace.

 

My take on it is that they can’t, and that Texas consumers will have greater access to a less expensive, more reliable supply of electricity if we let the market work.

 

Here’s the Chronicle commentary:

 

Texas' electricity market can power our future

By Bill Peacock
Updated 09:09 p.m., Friday, July 6, 2012

Opinion

Texas’ growing population and economy combined with high temperatures last week to produce new June records for peak demand on consecutive days. The 66,000-plus megawatt load strained the Texas electricity grid.

Two days later, the Public Utility Commission of Texas (PUC) increased wholesale price caps to address concerns that Texas may not have enough generation capacity in reserve to meet peak summer demand.

Investment in new generation has slowed as price signals, i.e., low prices, have caused companies to shy away from Texas. Critics blame the lack of new generation on the market. However, the market is not the problem.

Today’s low prices are the result of many factors, such as the low price of natural gas. But there are also many instances where prices are artificially lowered through government interference.

Renewable energy is one example.

Between the Texas renewable portfolio standard (RPS) and the federal production tax credit (PTC), wind generators receive more than $20 per megawatt in government subsidies, enabling generators to make a profit even if they give away their electricity for free.

This doesn’t make the electricity any cheaper for consumers, who pay for wind energy through higher taxes instead of their electricity bills.

The subsidies also distort the market by pushing overall electricity prices lower. This in turn reduces the revenues that generators need to make investments in new supply.

Wind-generated electricity also does little to make up for the reduction in conventional generation. Last week, wind provided barely 0.5 percent of the electricity used during peak demand.

Renewable energy subsidies help no one beyond investors and workers in that industry. The federal PTC is scheduled to end this year. Though the renewable energy industry is making a strong push to renew it, the PTC should end. Combining this with repeal of the Texas RPS next year would solve a significant part of Texas’ resource adequacy problem.

Another external source leading to reduced investment has been various forms of price regulation.

As Texas moved into full-scale competition, electricity prices were not directly regulated. But fear of consumer angst over high prices has led regulators to gradually increase regulation of wholesale prices.

This began with claims of market power abuse, based on the theory that there is something wrong with selling electricity at a profit. When this didn’t work as planned, a “shame cap” on wholesale prices was introduced, using publicity to shame companies into selling electricity at a loss. This didn’t work either, so it eventually morphed into the hard price cap we have today.

The problem with the cap is that it reduces prices at times of peak demand, when electricity is the most expensive to produce. If generators can’t sell electricity at a profit at times of peak demand, they won’t build generation plants that will supply electricity when we need it most.

The PUC last week took a good first step in raising the price cap, but should take the next step and eliminate it.

We must also reduce the ability of PUC to regulate prices through other means, such as spurious claims of market power abuse, its recently enacted power to disgorge revenues, and current proposals to increase its fines and issue emergency cease-and-desist orders.

These regulatory actions are all based on highly questionable theories about prices in perfect markets that don’t exist. Regulators apply them haphazardly in real life and introduce a high level of regulatory risk in Texas markets. It makes perfect sense that investors move billions of dollars in capital from Texas to other states where they can get more predictable returns because of less regulatory uncertainty.

About the turn of the century, California pretended to have a deregulated electricity market, but it was really a poorly-designed, government-controlled system that eventually collapsed under its own weight.

Texas’ economy is outperforming California’s and the rest of the country because we put fewer burdens on markets. This is why Texas has the most competitive and successful electricity market in the United States, if not the world.

Calls to “fix” Texas’ electricity market with more government and ending our “energy only,” i.e., free-market, approach to generating electricity won’t help—in fact, they will make electricity more expensive for consumers and make our market look more like California’s.

If we let it work, the world-class Texas electricity market will power Texas’ future.

Peacock is the vice president for research and director for the Center for Economic Freedom at the Texas Public Policy Foundation.

This update and all our previous Thinking Economically updates can been viewed under the Related Commentaries heading in the Thinking Economically section of the Foundation’s website. We will be adding automatic subscribe and unsubscribe functionality to this email. In the meantime, if you’d like to do either, please send an email to bpeacock@texaspolicy.com.

 

Bill

 

Bill Peacock

Vice President of Research

Director, Center for Economic Freedom

Texas Public Policy Foundation

o: (512) 472-2700

c: (512) 965-6476

bpeacock@texaspolicy.com

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Thinking Economically: Texans Seeking Real Budget Solutions

Musings on Economic Freedom from the Texas Public Policy Foundation’s

Center for Economic Freedom

 

The Wall Street Journal recently reported, “States are moving to cut jobs and other spending to close budget deficits, even though their protracted fiscal crisis is easing a bit in an improving economy.” Commenting on this, Delaware Gov. Jack Markell, a Democrat who serves as vice-chairman of the National Governors Association, said, “I think the new normal is that we are every single year going to have to be very much focused on wringing efficiencies out.”

 

It appears we are beginning to get bipartisan agreement on the importance of keeping the growth of government spending in check.  And just in time, as Texas moves closer to deliberating perhaps the most important budget it has ever adopted.

 

To this end, the Foundation joined today with other groups in the Texans for a Conservative Budget coalition to release Real Texas Budget Solutions: 2013 and Beyond. This plan provides a road map for achieving short-term budget savings ($9.4 billion over the next three years) and implementing long-term spending reforms that will help Texas balance its budget in 2013 and beyond without raising taxes or fees, or seeking out other means of raising new revenue.

 

Certainly, 2003 and 2011 were important milestones in controlling spending growth in Texas. But as I’ll show below, the spending restraint that accompanied the budget shortfall in 2003 gave way to higher spending in sessions afterward, resulting in another budget shortfall in 2011. If we are going to get Texas back on long-term, sound economic footing, we will need a second consecutive session of spending restraint in 2013. That’s the purpose of our Real Texas Budget Solutions.

 

While some might criticize this as an “austerity budget” as we are currently seeing over in Europe, it is anything but that. States that move “to cut jobs and other spending to close budget deficits” actually increase prosperity by allowing for the creation of even more jobs in the private sector economy. The difference between government jobs and private sector jobs is important.

 

Government jobs exist only because a few people in government think they should exist, and they are paid for by money taken from citizens through taxes. Private sector jobs, though, exist because millions or even billions of consumers think they should exist in order to meet their needs, and those same people pay for those jobs voluntarily out of their own pockets through the purchase and consumption of goods and services.

 

In other words, controlling government spending leads to more jobs that better serve the people who are paying for them while letting more workers keep more of what they earn. It is the path to prosperity.

 

However, those people think that Texas already did too much trimming of its budget last session are even now calling on the Legislature to “restore” funding to schools and other programs. Before we go too far down this road, however, let’s take a look at what actually happened last session.

 

There was much debate last year about the actual size of this biennium’s revenue shortfall. The Foundation’s Center for Fiscal Policy pegged it at about $15 billion, while advocates for higher spending claimed it was about $27 billion—the state’s Legislative Budget Board supported that figure as well. But looking back now, the numbers back up our $15 billion estimate.  

 

The Legislature appropriated $86.9 billion in 2009 out of GR/GRD funds for the 2010-11 biennium. For 2012-13, they appropriated $87.6 billion—an increase of $700 million. And appropriations from other funds (including the State Highway Fund, the Texas Mobility Fund, trust funds, bond proceeds, etc.) increased by $1.5 billion from the previous session. So overall appropriations from state funds session to session is up this biennium by about $2.1 billion. Of course, there was an $11 billion decrease in appropriated federal funds. This would point to about a $9 billion revenue shortfall. However, Texas actually received quite a bit more federal funds than we originally estimated, which would bring the federal revenue shortfall to about $18 billion.

                                                                                                                                                                                                       

Adding it all up, Texas’ overall revenue shortfall this biennium fell between $9 billion and $16 billion. And with state revenue growing faster than expected, that number is likely to decrease. So $15 billion seems right on the mark, or perhaps even a little high.

 

Now let’s look at spending.

 

To deal with the revenue shortfall, Texas took several steps. One thing we did (as seen below) was pretend that more than $6 billion of education and Medicaid spending did not exist. We also came up with about $500 million in in one time revenue, borrowing much of that from next biennium. And we also engaged in $4.3 billion worth of deficit spending by using unexpended balances to balance the budget. The table below shows the details:

 

Budget Gimmicks and Adjustments Used in 2012-13

Foundation School Program Deferral

$2,300,000,000

Medicaid Caseload Underfunding

$3,900,000,000

One-time Revenue Boost

$488,000,000

Unexpended Balances used to balance Budget

$4,300,000,000

Total

$10,988,000,000

 

So depending on how you account for these, Texas used between $6.2 billion and $11 billion of budget gimmicks, revenue enhancements, and deficit spending to deal with a $15 billion or so revenue shortfall. This means spending cuts were far less than the actual shortfall. This can be seen in total state spending for the last three biennia:

 

Biennium

2008-09

2010-11

2012-13 Estimated

Total Spending

$172.131 billion

$187.516 billion

$179.684 billion

 

When we add in the $6.2 billion for the Foundation School program and Medicaid that we deferred until 2013 and are going to spend (we just haven’t appropriated the money yet), spending this biennium decreased only about $8 billion from 2010-11, or about two percent per year. Looking at it another way, spending this biennium will be up $7.5 billion from 2008-09, about a one percent annual increase in spending from 2008 to 2013.  

 

So while conservatives cannot creditably claim that the state has recently engaged in runaway spending, neither are liberals accurate when they claim we took an ax to the budget.

 

The one thing that stands out clearly from these numbers is that the main reason that Texas faced a revenue shortfall in 2011 was that we used federal stimulus funds to spend beyond our means in 2009.

 

Of course, there have been winners and losers in this battle. Advocates for limiting the growth in government spending—like the Foundation—have to be pleased with the recent one percent annual increases. But we can’t rest on our past successes.

 

Going forward, everyone agrees that as the economy recovers the Legislature is going to have more revenue available in 2013 than it did in 2011. So spending is likely to increase again in 2014-15. The question is, will the Legislature keep spending within available revenue, or will it seek to somehow increase revenue?

                                                                                

If we are going to live within available revenue, we won’t be able to pay for every program at its current level and come up with the $12 billion or so needed to reconcile the old budget gimmicks and pay for federally-mandated Medicaid caseload growth. So we are going to have to find some real savings in 2013. Otherwise, it is hard to see how we avoid tax and fee increases.

 

But avoiding them is precisely what we ought to do. Reigning in government spending is at the heart of expanding economic freedom. Less spending means less taxes and less regulation. It means more jobs and greater prosperity. And it means a more charitable population with more resources to help others in need.

 

Texas has proven many times that economic freedom is the only way to actually accomplish the compassionate goals that many people seek to accomplish with government.  It’s time to prove it once again.

 

This update and all our previous Thinking Economically updates can been viewed under the Related Commentaries heading in the Thinking Economically section of the Foundation’s website. We will be adding automatic subscribe and unsubscribe functionality to this email. In the meantime, if you’d like to do either, please send an email to bpeacock@texaspolicy.com.

 

Bill Peacock

Vice President of Research

Director, Center for Economic Freedom

Texas Public Policy Foundation

o: (512) 472-2700

c: (512) 965-6476

bpeacock@texaspolicy.com

Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Thinking Economically: The Spending Burden on Texas Taxpayers

Musings on Economic Freedom from the Texas Public Policy Foundation’s

Center for Economic Freedom

 

The Foundation recently updated the chart below on the state spending burden in Texas, which originally appeared in our 2010 paper, Texas vs. California: Economic Growth Prospects for the 21st Century. The chart shows that Texas has much lower government spending as a percentage of the private economy than the U.S. or our largest competitor, California.

 

In other words, Texas generally imposes a lower spending burden on it citizens, which translates into lower taxes. But a low spending burden isn’t a constant in Texas. The chart also shows that Texas spending burden has increased at certain times. This is certainly the case in 2009, for which our new data shows a sharp uptick in Texas’ spending burden.

 

 

The spending burden can increase for two reasons: because of a decrease in the size of the economy relative to spending or because of an increase in spending relative to the economy. Quite often the increased spending burden can be attributed to both. That has been the case recently in Texas.

 

The chart quite obviously shows the increased spending burden leading up to 2003, when Texas lawmakers showed up in Austin facing a $10 billion budget shortfall. Yet they met the challenge by balancing the state’s budget without raising taxes. Because of this policy decision, Texas’ spending burden declined significantly, and even after a recent increase remained slightly below its 1987 levels—a major accomplishment since our paper also shows a close negative correlation between government spending and economic growth: the less spending, the more growth.

 

However, increased spending in 2007 and 2009 led to the jump in the spending burden in 2009, even before the effects of the Great Recession hit Texas. When we get more updated data, we expect the 2010 burden to be even higher as 2010 spending increases combine with the onset of the Great Recession in Texas. So for the third time in 20 years, the spending burden has significantly increased.

 

The impact of the increased spending burden can be seen in the $15 billion shortfall the Texas Legislature faced in 2011, only eight years after spending restraint successfully dealt with the last major shortfall.

 

A state that keeps its taxes low and overregulation at bay is one that fosters economic development. On the other hand, a state that plows its cash into government spending is one whose businesses and citizens will soon be leaving for greener pastures. The state spending burden is perhaps the best measurement to gauge which one of these paths a state is traveling.

 

**********

 

Also, don’t miss these recent Speaking Freely blog posts from the Center:

 

The “App Economy” – From 0 to 500,000 Jobs in Just 157,784,630 Seconds by Nathan Macias

 

Fixing the Buy-Back Provision by Bill Peacock

 

OPIC “Advocating for You” by Bill Peacock

 

Green Energy Good for Only a Few by Bill Peacock

 

And please join me in welcoming, Nathan Macias, as the Center for Economic Freedom’s new senior policy analyst.

 

This update and all our previous Thinking Economically updates can been viewed under the Related Commentaries heading in the Thinking Economically section of the Foundation’s website. We will one day be adding automatic subscribe and unsubscribe functionality to this email. In the meantime, if you’d like to do either, please send an email to bpeacock@texaspolicy.com.

 

Bill Peacock

Vice President of Research

Director, Center for Economic Freedom

Texas Public Policy Foundation

o: (512) 472-2700

c: (512) 965-6476

bpeacock@texaspolicy.com