Occupational Licensing Hurts the Vulnerable Without Helping the Public
Hispanics get slammed the hardest by licensing requirements that regulators can’t justify.

The main point of occupational licensing is, we're told, to protect the public from incompetent and crooked practitioners in various trades and professions. That licensing more often protects the licensed from competition and jacks up prices in the process has been revealed by many researchers (and even defended by a few advocates of intrusive regulation). But evidence continues to grow from multiple sources that occupational licensing acts as a barrier to entry for the most vulnerable people without offering much in the way of benefit to the public.
"In the United States, nearly one in every four workers is licensed. However, this rate is not constant across groups: workers of color are substantially less likely to be licensed relative to White, non-Latino/a workers," finds a study published earlier this month by the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. "The disparity is largest for Latino/a workers, who are about half as likely (11 percentage points less) to be licensed than White, non-Latino/a workers. Asian, Black, and American Indian and Alaska Native workers are also less likely than White workers to be licensed, by 6, 5, and 4 percentage points, respectively."
Authors Tyler Boesch, Katherine Lim, and Ryan Nunn point out that not only do licenses act as a ticket to ride in a range of occupations that has grown in recent decades from 5 percent of the workforce to roughly one-quarter, but that "workers who secure a license tend to receive higher wages than similar unlicensed workers and may also enjoy more job security."
Such insulation from market forces and padding of income isn't usually considered a major selling point of occupational licensing. But it has been defended in certain quarters.
"This anticompetitive effect may itself serve the public interest in some contexts," wrote Nick Robinson, then of the Center on the Legal Profession at Harvard Law School, in a 2018 Washington Law Review article. "For example, occupational licensing may protect producers from market instability in a market that the public relies on for needed goods or services." He added: "Such anticompetitive protectionism may also be used to explicitly stabilize the labor market for the benefit not of consumers, but of labor."
But that's an awfully bloodless way to defend the exclusion of new labor including aspiring entrepreneurs, tradespeople, and professionals, especially when the burden falls most heavily on those who have historically had the toughest time climbing the economic ladder. Earlier studies found similarly disparate impact from the barriers raised by occupational licensing.
"The higher the rate of licensure of low-income occupations, the lower the rate of low-income entrepreneurship," reported economist Stephen Slivinski in a 2015 Goldwater Institute study that was subsequently cited by the White House. Slivinski noted that "African Americans, Asians, and American Indians are represented in the ranks of low-income entrepreneurs in roughly the same proportion as their numbers in the general population" and that "the share of low-income entrepreneurs that are Hispanic is over 2.5 times the share of Hispanics in the general population." That is, occupational licensing badly harmed would-be entrepreneurs with limited resources and that, as in the Minneapolis Fed study, Hispanics especially suffered.
What makes this worse is that the states that create and enforce occupational licensing (because it's almost exclusively a state-level requirement) tend to find little justification for their rules when they bother to study them. In a February survey of "sunrise" reviews of the necessity of occupational licensing laws across 15 states, the Institute for Justice (IJ) found that officials saw little need for regulation.
"About 80% of reviews declined to recommend licensure. Most—54%—concluded no new regulation was needed, while 20% favored other, usually less restrictive, alternatives," according to authors Kathy Sanchez, Elyse Smith Pohl, and Lisa Knepper.
The IJ report was made possible by sunrise review laws in many states requiring they "evaluate the need for new occupational regulations" as licensing has become more pervasive and controversial. "All sunrise laws require a showing of harm to justify regulation, though some set more stringent standards than others," notes IJ. "Ten states require evidence that unregulated practice poses a moderate threat of harm to public health and safety."
Not every state with sunrise laws is diligent about complying with them, but IJ was able to examine reviews from Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Kansas, Maine, Minnesota, Nebraska, South Carolina, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, and West Virginia. In most cases, sunrise reviews were invoked when a professional association requested new licensing requirements, supporting the contention that licensing laws are of far greater interest to existing practitioners then they are to people who engage their services.
"As these findings illustrate, licensing policy is typically driven by special interests, not the public interest," notes the IJ report. "Overwhelmingly, demands come from motivated parties, who may put professional status or economic gain ahead of sound policy, and, in fact, independent government reviews most often conclude these demands are wrongheaded."
How can occupational licensing be made less damaging and more sensible? Sometimes, the best answers are the simple ones.
"Licensing requirements that are not needed to protect public safety (e.g., some portions of an occupation's training curriculum) could be removed," suggest Boesch, Lim, and Nunn of the Minneapolis Fed. Failing that, they suggest that "experience and training acquired abroad could be more fully recognized," since that's a major hurdle for immigrants whose credentials are frequently discounted by licensing authorities.
IJ's Sanchez, Pohl, and Knepper bluntly say: "Despite the claims of occupational lobbies, 30-plus years' worth of sunrise reviews suggest licensing often is not the answer." They point to alternative means for protecting the public, including voluntary third-party certification. That's an alternative recommended elsewhere, including in Slivinski's 2015 report.
Fundamentally, occupational licensing offers little in the way of benefit, unless you're a big fan of limiting competition to existing practitioners and raising barriers for would-be entrepreneurs. Given that the negative effects of licensing fall most harshly on low-income people and racial and ethnic minorities, the case for maintaining these restrictions becomes ever sketchier.
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Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis is doing studies on this? Too much, way to much government with too much time on their hands.
Yes I suppose government should remain ignorant of everything going on and keep doing what they're doing blindly.
Of course that is more preferable.
Because state licensing falls under the purview of the federal banks?
Fucking idiot.
I make $100-200 an hour working from home. In case you recognize that’s great. bgh My partner has twins and made over $16,000 in his first month. It’s so amazing to earn a lot of money when others need to work less for it….. http://WorkStar24.blogspot.com/
Excessive licensing is CLEARLY a function of Government Almighty! Any time ANYONE (including Government Almighty) studies, and issues findings that criticize over-sized Government Almighty (as things are here and now, not some hypothetical place and time where Government Not-So-Almighty is too small)... Any time ANYONE denounces too-powerful Government Almighty in a data-driven manner... Is a DAMNED GOOD day, and about time!
(Or do you LIKE over-sized Government Almighty, and if so, why?)
Federal Reserve's a private organization. Or, as Bob and Ray said, "a semi-quasi-governmental" body.
Crikey, nearly as bad as a public-private organization. If they were a non-profit, I would likely suggest decapitation, then fire, to be absolutely certain the thing was dead.
This is just such an utterly absurd thing, and it has been getting worse for decades!
Rethugglicans won't do a damned thing about it, 'cause they're too busy variously having conniptions about gays, abortions, disrespect to the flag, illegal sub-humans picking our fruits and veggies instead of letting them rot in the fields, and, especially lately, the Lizard People who have supported the Demon-Craps in dis-respecting Donald Trump, and STEALING the election, which would otherwise have made him Emperor for Life!
Demon-Craps won't do a damned thing about it, 'cause they're too busy variously defending the rights of tranny "women" to compete against real women in sports, making excuses for Muslim fanatics but not Christian vaguely-fanatics, trying to use Government Almighty to over-regulate the possible killing of the endangered yellow-bellied slime-sicking bacterial species, and making more and more of the charity choices of private property owners and earners!
I am dreaming of a day when common sense, and paying attention to the MOST IMPORTANT AND OBVIOUS issues will return! We NEED more "illegal sub-human" fruit-pickers to come here and harvest the "low hanging fruits"!
None of those assemblages are too busy to do anything. They just try to steer clear of issues they think (often correctly) would split their respective coalitions.
" . . . White, non-Latino/a workers . . . "
What the hell does that character string mean?
"a" for Asian? Asians are no longer "honorary whites"? ... (Just a wild guess. It fits, in context. Government Almighty now licenses REAL white people at a higher rate than any others, including Asians and other "no-longer-even-honorary-white" people... All at the same time that Government Almighty fiercely decries racism, and will prosecute and persecute you for it, whether it be real or imagined!)
'" . . . White, non-Latino/a workers . . . "
What the hell does that character string mean?"'
I am assuming it refers to "Latino/Latina." Yeah. A bit cumbersome. On the other hand, it's better than "Latinx," which almost nobody seems to like. Whatever happened to "Hispanic?" Sure, it is "colonialistic," (now THERE is a word for you!) but at least it isn't gendered.
As someone with a Masters Degree in the field, I can tell that language sometimes just sucks. And then they change it. And it still sucks.
But what about people of Latin heritage who identify as non-binary? Why impose either-or gender titles on them?
Yeah, we need to go back to Hispaniards.
Or, maybe, call Mexicans Mexicans and Cubans Cubans and Columbians Columbians because they totally aren't the same thing just because they were colonized by Spain and speak spanish.
A Mexican and a Cuban have about as much in common as a Fish and a Turtle. You have to be a pollster or politician to be ignorant enough to think all hispanics are one bloc.
Hispanics have more in common with each other than "Asians" who are lumped in a single category. If you answer a poll question affirming you are hispanic, you will be directed to page two asking to confirm what kind, Mexican, Cuban, Spanish, etc?
Presented without comment…….
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d_CaZ4EAexQ
Yep. When I was in school, back in the Dark Ages (before we were all "Woke") There were NO Asians, no Latin(o)(a)s, just Mexicans, Cubans, Vietnamese, Koreans, etc.
Maybe that was just too much work for the current generation, eh? -- actually having to learn that there is more than one culture per continent? I grew up in Oakland, CA. Hell, we had more than one culture per block 🙂
Call them Latinxy.
The next time I sneeze, I will reach for a latinx.
I don't see what's "colonialistic" about pointing out that Hispanics are the descendants of mass murdering, slave holding, culture destroying imperialists.
The Spanish and English languages are fine. What sucks is progressives trying to implement some kind of Newspeak.
"I don't see what's "colonialistic" about pointing out that Hispanics are the descendants of mass murdering, slave holding, culture destroying imperialists."
LOVE IT.
It does exclude the media's favorite, white Latinos. Which, I am guessing, happened after poor innocent little trayvon martin totally didn't provoke his own death.
You can’t criticize hyper-racialized thinking in one context, then use it to bolster an argument when it suits you. It shouldn’t matter whether this group or that is more affected than others. These policies rob the working poor of their shot at the American dream. That’s good enough justification to drop them entirely. Splitting the data by race is a tactic used by those seeking to inject emotional weight into a weak argument, and it that isn’t necessary or remotely constructive in this case.
NPR ran a piece about nurse licensing recently.
State nursing boards are taking months to issue licenses. They are also taking months to authorize licensing examination.
They are obfuscsting actual processing times by starting the clock when an application has been deemed complete. The story provided examples of people who argued for months that their applications were complete. The state boards often refuse to answer phone or email, or you wait on hold for three hours, only to be told they can't help you. These people eventually got their legislature or governor involved. Turns out the missing documents were sitting in someone's email the whole time.
Processing times are stretching into months.
CA refuses to participate in compact licensure, which recognizes licenses from other states, and reduces fees The CA board made $66,000,0000 in fees from nurses in a recent year.
Nurses have been, and still are, bailing en masse. Reasons are burnout, workload, COVID, and not getting paid serious money. It's ok money, and travelers can make a lot right now, but staff nurses in hospitals do not get paid commensurate with their expertise and responsibilities.
Nursing boards who take months and months to fufill their basic functions, while charging hundreds of dollars, and refusing to interact with the profession they regulate, are not helping.
Fewer nurses equals worse patient care and more overwork for nurses in the workforce, which leads to more burnout, which leads to more nurses leaving for travel assignments or other professions, which leads to more overwork for nurses in the workforce...
IANAN, but I know many. They are over it.
"CA refuses to participate in compact licensure, which recognizes licenses from other states, and reduces fees The CA board made $66,000,0000 in fees from nurses in a recent year."
Well, then, other states should refuse to recognize California licenses, like driver's and marriage licenses.
Or sue the bastards for interfering in interstate commerce.
Almost all of the licensing requirements are nonsense. Even in "professional" fields like engineering. The increased regulation and standards are not in response to any problem, but rather in response to academia. You point out that it is often as the request of existing practitioners, but a look at the boards of licensure quickly leaves you with board members from academia rather than the general public or even the supposed professionals. Most of the stuff these boards enact are not even popular with the existing professionals.
For Medical and Engineering the entire licensing apparatus has been captured by academia as a method to assure full employment for professors and revenue for colleges. I assume that it is much the same for most other licensing. As a MODEST start at fixing things anyone working for, or ever having worked from, a college, trade school, or other educational facility should be barred from serving on licensing boards.
Most engineers don't have licenses.
Most don't need them. In Pennsylvania there are licensed engineers called "Professional Engineers" (PE). There's a whole procedure for acquiring the license including hours of experience and State tests. There are certain things that you need a Professional Engineer's stamp for. Several years ago I was designing an overhead lift system for a friend's garage. I finished the design and the drawings. We then took them to a PE. He basically double checked my math and my material selections. He asked me why I chose one I-beam over another and I explained (the exact one was a specialty beam and expensive, the one I picked was common, cheaper and stronger). We paid $1500 and he stamped the drawings. Once he stamped the drawings, he took responsibility for the design. To me there is an advantage for this. I don't have the time to keep up with the changes in this area because I don't do much of it. I had to go back to textbooks to look up the equations for many of those calculations.
But if we get rid of licenses, how will we handle the massive jump in unemployed bureaucrats? They don't have any real skills, and are incapable of surviving on the street. I suppose we could round them all up, and ship them to Ukraine to be sure the Russians are filing the correct environmental statements.
They don't have any real skills
Not true. Most high-ranking bureaucrats are incredible whores.
What an insult to whores, who are capable of voluntary interactions that please the client.
Bureaucrats must use force to compel interactions that displease everyone but the bureaucrat.
To send them to the Ukraine uses fuel, flight hours, housing, board, power there. It would be more economical to have the most qualified, which would no doubt be a piece of software, run a cost-benefit analysis to determine the staffing requirements necessary for any given location. After this, render the unnecessary staff for water and component minerals. Give their property to legal immigrants as housing. Heartwarming American success story!
Render the tubbier ones for fuel to send the rest overseas to fight on behalf of Ukraine.
(1) Most Hispanics are white.
(2) Cut the Latino/a crap.