行政总统的交易成本:特朗普时代减少《清洁水法》执法力度的证据

J. Barnes, Jayce L. Farmer
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摘要

过去二十年来,政治两极分化导致联邦国会在满足环境监管要求方面陷入僵局。因此,总统的权力不断扩大,以克服这一立法障碍,从而开创了 "行政总统 "的新时代。在这个新时代,总统越来越多地利用其行政权力来实现政治驱动的环境目标。然而,对于联邦层面的行政政治行动如何影响地方环境监管体系的结果和运作,我们仍然知之甚少。本研究通过实证检验联邦 COVID-19 《清洁水法案》(CWA)执法力度的减弱对从地表水(SW)取水的地方社区供水系统(CWS)《安全饮用水法案》(SDWA)实施结果的影响,填补了这一学术空白。利用基于交易成本的联邦主义框架,我们认为,出于政治动机减少联邦 CWA 执法力度与地方 SDWA 实施效果不佳有关。我们利用联邦安全饮用水信息系统数据库中的数据,采用差异计量经济学方法对这一假设进行了检验。我们的研究结果表明,CWA 执法力度的减弱导致从自来水厂取水的化水厂违反 SDWA 健康规定的情况增加了 50%以上。本研究的意义延伸到美国水政策和环境联邦制,强调了更好地协调 CWA 和 SDWA 的必要性,以及依靠扩大行政行动来推动美国环境政策的潜在风险。为了解行政政策变化对美国环境治理的影响,有必要开展进一步的研究。
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The Transaction Costs of the Administrative Presidency: Evidence From a Trump-Era Clean Water Act Enforcement Reduction
Over the last two decades, political polarization has gridlocked federal congressional capacity to meet environmental regulatory demands. As a result, presidential authority has expanded to overcome this legislative impediment leading to a new era of “administrative presidency.” In this new era, presidents have increasingly used their administrative authority to meet politically driven environmental goals. Yet, we still know little about how federal-level executive political actions impact the outcomes and operations of local regulatory environmental systems. This study fills this scholarly void by empirically testing the effect of a federal COVID-19 Clean Water Act (CWA) enforcement reduction on Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA) implementation outcomes for local community water systems (CWSs) sourcing from surface waters (SWs). Using a framework grounded in transaction cost federalism, we argue that a politically motivated executive reduction in federal CWA enforcement is associated with poor local SDWA implementation outcomes. We test this assumption with a differences-in-differences econometric approach using data drawn from the federal Safe Drinking Water Information System database. Our findings suggest that the CWA enforcement reduction resulted in an over 50% increase in SDWA health violations by CWSs sourcing from SWs. The implications of this study extend to U.S. water policy and environmental federalism, highlighting the need for better coordination between the CWA and SDWA and the potential risks associated with relying on broadened executive actions to drive U.S. environmental policy. Further research is warranted to understand the consequences of administrative policy changes on U.S. environmental governance.
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