Abstract
The impact of federal regulations from 1997 to 2015 on the Michigan economy is associated with the following regressive effects: 170,780 people living in poverty, 2.9 percent higher income inequality, 273 fewer businesses annually, 3,913 lost jobs annually, and 7.35 percent higher prices. With regard to the volume of state-level regulations, Michigan ranks 36 of 44 states for which data are available (where a rank of "1" is most burdensome). Regulations have unintended consequences. Recent research shows that a greater regulatory burden (as measured by the number of regulatory restrictionsof the words and phrases shall, must, may not, prohibited, and requiredin rules and regulations) is associated with increased poverty rates, higher levels of income inequality, reduced entrepreneurship, and increased consumer prices (especially for the products consumed by individuals living in poverty). Focusing specifically on Illinois, this snapshot describes each of these regressive effects.