The FTC Wants To Outlaw Noncompete Clauses, but Does It Have the Authority?
The Commission's lone dissenter says Congress has not charged it with regulating noncompete clauses.

The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) last week proposed a near-total ban on noncompete clauses for employees and contractors, calling them an "unfair method of competition." The rule would prohibit employers from enforcing existing noncompete clauses and making them a condition of future employment. If it can survive legal challenges, the FTC's ban on noncompetes would have a massive impact on the rights of employers and workers.
The noncompete clause usually sets a time or geographical limit within which an employee is barred from working for her employer's competitors or starting her own competing business. While there is broad agreement that noncompetes have been abused by employers, they also serve to protect proprietary data and incentivize companies to train their workers. In many contexts, noncompetes foster a mutually beneficial exchange between firms and workers. For instance, a worker who contractually agrees not to leave for a competitor in the same region may in turn receive skills training at his company he couldn't otherwise obtain.
"If noncompetes are banned outright…the effect will be less information-sharing within the company," George Mason University economist Tyler Cowen wrote Tuesday in Bloomberg. "New workers in particular, who have not demonstrated their long-term loyalty, will have a hard time getting access to information and getting ahead."
The FTC, however, portrays noncompetes as anti-competitive measures with no redeeming traits. Eschewing incremental reform, the agency has sprung straight to considering an outright ban that would go so far as to nullify existing noncompete agreements (with an exception for certain individuals attempting to sell a business).
While reasonable people can and do disagree about the merits of noncompete contracts, the FTC's announcement makes no mention of the fact that most states already regulate noncompete clauses and employees can generally sue to escape unreasonable ones. Indeed, there are colorable arguments for regulating some noncompetes, particularly those for entry-level positions. In 2016, for instance, multiple state attorneys general forced sandwich chain Jimmy John's to settle over clauses imposed on low-wage employees, despite there being no risk of spilling proprietary secrets. More deviously, one report from Cornell University's Matt Marx found that nearly 70 percent of engineers surveyed were not informed by their employer that they must sign a noncompete until after receiving a job offer, and about a quarter of respondents were informed on their first day.
The FTC proposal would further ban contractual terms that are "de facto non-compete clauses," which in effect prohibit "the worker from seeking or accepting employment with a person or operating a business after the conclusion of the worker's employment with the employer." This language is broad and nonspecific, which means the FTC is essentially giving itself a regulatory blank check. FTC Chair Lina Khan, an unapologetically aggressive enforcer, may well exploit the text to its legal breaking point.
That is, if the new rule can survive judicial scrutiny.
FTC Commissioner Christine Wilson, the lone dissenter on the new policy, wrote that the FTC likely lacks the authority to enact the proposal. "Section 6(g) [of the FTC Act] was believed to provide authority only for the Commission to adopt the Commission's procedural rules," she argued. "For decades, consistent with the statements in the FTC Act's legislative history, Commission leadership testified before Congress that the Commission lacked substantive competition rulemaking authority."
Wilson and others contend that the proposed rule is unlikely to comply with the major questions doctrine—the centerpiece of Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts' watershed 2022 opinion in West Virginia v. EPA—which holds that an agency must have clear congressional authorization to regulate on a "major question." If the FTC proceeds in suddenly and unilaterally outlawing a standard business practice, it would almost certainly find itself in court.
An FTC spokesperson declined to comment on the matter.
"With all due respect to the majority, I am dubious that three unelected technocrats have somehow hit upon the right way to think about non-competes, and that all the preceding legal minds to examine this issue have gotten it wrong," Wilson wrote.
Employers and employees weigh many kinds of benefits and drawbacks when considering whether to sign a contract—monetary and otherwise. Fully banning noncompete clauses may help some, but will undoubtedly wreak unanticipated havoc on many others.
As put by Brian Albrecht, chief economist at the International Center for Law and Economics, "If implemented, the FTC's total ban of noncompetes replaces the decision making of businesses and workers, as well as the oversight of state governments, with a one-size-fits-all approach. Under that new regime, we need to ask: How quickly will they respond to new information—for example, that it had destructive implications? How easily can they make incremental changes?"
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Then they should ban gas stoves instead.
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Entire doctrine of delegating our Constitution and government to non elected regulators running some Alphabet Agency, has to be examined.
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There's no authority for the FTC to even exist. Hope this clears things up for you guys. I'm trying to help you be more libertarian.
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That should go without saying, but it has to be said, because Reason seems to have forgotten what libertarianism means.
Every FA here ought to discuss all aspects:
* Liberty
* US Constitutionality
* Practicality, utilitarianism, whatevs
I can't recall the last time they've done that.
I stumbled upon this
from the Congressional research service, which seems to explain a bit about whom one can sue when the Feds alter private contracts; mostly the answer seems to be it’s Federal sovereignty, so tough luck.
But what of the total contract between employer and employee. The non-compete is presumably a thing of value for the employer, and if lost throws the entire contract out of balance. Presumably in the totality of the contract, different values would have been assigned to the other components of compensation absent the value of the non-compete to the employer. Maybe the contract has a severability clause, which states that if one portion is outlawed, that all other parts remain in force, or maybe it does not.
Excellent points.
In some cases, the employer may have already provided the benefit to the employee that the employee received in exchange for the noncompete agreement. For example, a CEO of a large corporation who was paid And eight figure severance payment in exchange for agreeing not to compete against his former employer for three years has already received the money. Is he going to be required to pay it back? And what about the employee who received specialized training in exchange for the noncompete agreement? Will she be expected to return her training?
Those cases had not crossed my mind immediately. Certainly seems like a fair exchange freely entered between parties when there is clearly something of value for both parties. Though watching my kid entering engineering job market, his contract is not a non-compete, but rather specific performance to obtain a bonus at start of year three and year five if he stays there; over a year's salary on the line, so it makes a competitor have to offer quite a bonus to jump ship. Carrot rather than stick.
The non-compete offered my daughter teaching at a pre-school is surely a crock; merely handcuffs to make it impossible for a lower paid employee to look elsewhere for opportunity. She did not sign, and because they needed teachers she got the job anyway.
Worse still for fast food places to be foisting non-competes on minimum wage workers. That smacks of unconscionable servitude if substantial numbers of the industry does that.
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Good. If you want markets to happen, ban anti-market contracts
No. Markets always happen, as inevitable as gravity.
What you are proposing is government distortion of markets, dams across rivers in effect, without regard for liberty or any consequences. See above comments by Gasman and Number 2 for excellent examples of consequences of market distortion by government fiat.
Fuck off, slaver!
"Good. If you want markets to happen, ban anti-market contracts"
I'ma go with stupidity, but it could be sarc.
>>rule would prohibit employers from enforcing existing noncompete clauses
15 yards for contract interference.
That was my thought. How would voiding existing non-competes not violate the contracts clause?
: . . . prohibit employers from enforcing existing noncompete clauses . . . "
Sounds a bit ex post facto and all that jazz to me
Pretty sure a case could be made regarding A1 also.
Thanks for the share.
No, they don't.
But... They don't have the authority to do the nonsense they have been doing over the current AND prior administrations in-re antitrust, and that hasn't stopped them...
Fascism isn't just what happened in Italy 85 years ago.
101 years ago in Italy. 90 in Germany. get with the times, Pops!
On the one hand, noncompetes are generally used as a tool by employers to treat their workers like garbage. "Oh, you don't like it here? Too bad....If you leave you can't work in your field."
On the other hand, this isn't something for a regulatory agency to correct with the stroke of a pen.
Remember that day the people passed an amendment to make the FTC everyone's managers???
Ya; Me neither...
F'En National Sozialists(Nazi's).
Is it weird that a company can tell you that you can't work in your specialized field ? That you, an able bodied person, now have to flip burgers or go on the government dole or something because of a non-compete clause ? I thought the whole point was to let able bodied people work for their own livelihoods, not prevent them from working. Who is going to pay for a 6 figure earner to not work ? It's going to come from some where, it isn't free.
"Is it weird that a company can tell you that you can’t work in your specialized field ? That you, an able bodied person, now have to flip burgers or go on the government dole or something because of a non-compete clause ?"
I’ma go with stupidity, but it could be sarc.
"I thought the whole point was to let able bodied people work for their own livelihoods, not prevent them from working."
No, the whole point is to allow consenting adults to make agreements for their mutual benefit.
Even more concise than usual.
Employment contracts that extend beyond employment don't make a lot of sense. Maybe a reasonable exception might be to prevent politicians and public servants to peddle their skills and influence gained at the public purse from working in private industry. Otherwise an ex employee preventing a person, their family and friends, from working for a competitor is hardly the free market at work.
Almost the entire reason that the FTC is discussing this has to do with Unions. I work for a company that builds large electrical machinery. There are times that we have to have contractors come in and do work for us. Many times those contractors are Union shops. With the non-compete agreements in place, those same Union workers can't be sent to a Competitor's Company for a set period of time. This can cause some of the Union Worker's to lose out on work. This is one of the few times that I agree with a Union. I'm pretty sure that non-disclosure agreements could accomplish the same thing.
"The FTC Wants To Outlaw Noncompete Clauses, but Does It Have the Authority?"
What difference, at this point, does it make?
Much to do about nothing. Only paid non-competes have the weight of law. If my former company compensates me to an acceptable level, who outside of our arrangement cares?
We don't need no stinkin' authority, we are the government!
Oh, prescribed, not proscribed. So what do you care about the non-compete issue? I thought you were on-topic there for a sec.
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