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The Regulatory State Adds ‘Ten Thousand Commandments’ Every Year
The Regulatory State Adds ‘Ten Thousand Commandments’ Every Year
Jan 5, 2026 6:57 AM

In the Old Testament there mandments. Apparently,God deemed those to be enough to regulate almost every aspect of the lives of his people for thousands of years. You could read all of them in less than 30 minutes.

The American federal government, however, is not so succinct. There are over 1 million restrictions in the federal regulations alone (i.e., not counting the statutory law). And thousands more are added every year.

Each year the Competitive Enterprise Institute puts out annual survey —Ten Thousand Commandments —that reveals the size, scope, and cost of federal regulations. Here are some highlights from the 2016 edition:

• The federal regulatory cost reached $1.885 trillion in 2015.

• Federal regulation is a hidden tax that amounts to nearly $15,000 per U.S. household

each year.

• In 2015, 114 laws were enacted by Congress during the calendar year, while 3,410 rules were issued by agencies. Thus, 30 rules were issued for every law enacted last year.

• Many plain about taxes, but pliance costs exceed the

$1.82 trillion that the IRS is expected to collect in both individual and corporate

e taxes from 2015.

• Some 60 federal departments, agencies, missions have 3,297 regulations in development at various stages in the pipeline.

• The top five federal rulemaking agencies account for 41 percent of all federal

regulations. These are the Departments of the Treasury, Commerce, Interior, Health and

Human Services, and Transportation.

• The 2015 Federal Register contains 80,260 pages, the third highest page count in its

history. Of the seven all-time-highest Federal Register total page counts, six occurred

under President Obama.

• The George W. Bush administration averaged 62 major regulations annually over eight years, while the Obama administration has averaged 81 major regulations annually over seven years.

You can find CEI’s report here.

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