In Virginia, No Degree Is No Problem
The state is the latest of several in recent months that have moved to eliminate college degree requirements for the vast majority of state government jobs.

In Virginia, you will soon no longer need a college degree to be eligible for most jobs in the state government. Starting next month, almost 90 percent of state government jobs will stop requiring applicants to have a college degree and stop giving preference to those who do.
"On day one we went to work reimagining workforce solutions in government and this key reform will expand opportunities for qualified applicants who are ready to serve Virginians," Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin (R) said in a Tuesday press release. "This landmark change in hiring practices for our state workforce will improve hiring processes, expand possibilities and career paths for job seekers and enhance our ability to deliver quality services."
The move comes on the heels of similar policy changes in a handful of other states. In March 2022, Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan (R) announced that the state would be removing the college degree requirement for thousands of state government jobs. Soon after, governors in Pennsylvania, Alaska, Colorado, New Jersey, and North Carolina enacted similar changes.
This shift even attracted the praise of former President Barrack Obama, who tweeted earlier this year, "Here's an example of a smart policy that gets rid of unnecessary college degree requirements and reduces barriers to good paying jobs. I hope other states follow suit!"
Virginia's Secretary of Labor Bryan Slater stressed in the Tuesday press release that the state's new policy would open up new opportunities for thousands of qualified applicants who simply don't have a college degree. He added that state officials are "also working hard to examine regulated occupations and professions to find ways to simplify and speed up credentialing processes and universal licensing recognition for individuals who want to live and work in Virginia."
While these changes are welcome, the rest of the labor market hasn't quite caught up. Though degree inflation can be hard to measure, one report from Harvard Business School researchers found that for a mid-level supervisor position, 67 percent of employers required a college degree, but only 16 percent of current workers in the position had the credential. But this inflation is in sharp contrast to a reality where college enrollment rates are plummeting and Americans are increasingly saying that a college degree isn't worth the cost.
In removing college degree requirements for the vast majority of state government jobs, several governors are making an encouraging response to rapid degree inflation, opening positions to individuals who are qualified based on past on-the-job experience rather than a university credential.
Despite concerns from some detractors of these policies, there's plenty of reason to think that a college degree doesn't actually provide extra job skills. Outside of a few obvious exceptions—clearly, doctors and engineers need higher education—most college degrees act as what George Mason University economics professor Bryan Caplan calls a "signaling" mechanism—something that shows employees that you have desirable traits, like an ability to show up on time and take direction.
"The labor market doesn't pay you for the useless subjects you master; it pays you for the preexisting traits you signal by mastering them," Caplan wrote in The Atlantic in 2018. "Every college student who does the least work required to get good grades silently endorses the theory. But signaling plays almost no role in public discourse or policy making. As a society, we continue to push ever larger numbers of students into ever higher levels of education. The main effect is not better jobs or greater skill levels, but a credentialist arms race."
The increase in state governments deciding to remove college degree requirements from most job postings will expand employment opportunities for thousands of qualified individuals. More state governments—and private employers—should follow in their lead.
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That's all fine and good but .. hear me out.. what about just eliminating the government jobs?
Doctor Jill Biden hardest hit.
Just created a pool of 100's of thousands of people lawyers will be able to turn into plaintiffs. Make it easier for illegals. No college degree? Fine. Mind stepping into this room for few hours? The next SAT exam is scheduled to begin in 30 minutes.
"Mind stepping into this room for few hours? The next SAT exam is scheduled to begin in 30 minutes."
This is how you get Mayor Pete running the Department of Transportation.
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I'm not saying that wearing a funny hat and parading around to a bit of Elgar brings about some sort of magical transformation, but there's something to be said for the idea that many of those with power in a certain Commonwealth (no names, no pack-drill) might consider themselves to be part of the state university system of that Commonwealth. One example: Oxbridge and Whitehall tend to keep each other grounded and safe from their own worst faults.
Mr. D.
Wait a minute! You mean a gender studies major will have to...compete for a job?
Do they still require law degrees for government lawyers?
Outside of a few obvious exceptions—clearly, doctors and engineers need higher education
I would assume lawyers would be on that list.
Pass the bar, be a lawyer. Why the hell not? Maybe they could stop writing shit in Latin.
Pass the bar, be a lawyer. Why the hell not?
Discriminates against the Irish. They can't pass a bar.
One suspects this is less about being able to hire qualified but undegreed people, and more about being able to hire unqualified but politically favored people.
Color me unimpressed.
State government as a jobs program, and a chance to provide salaries and benefits to supporters of the political party in power? That would never happen...
Whut?! How will the Commonwealth keep us in line without Bachelors Degrees in Underwater Basketweaving and Phys Ed?!
clearly, doctors and engineers need higher education
Huh? So the residency requirements for doctors and the requirements to work under a licensed engineer aren't going to weed out the ignorant? You must have a pretty poor opinion of the existing crop of doctors and engineers to buy that line of bullshit.
Disclosure: I have worked as an executive level accountant for the last 20 years without a degree. I am not eligible to sit for the CPA exam, but the business classes that I took without having to sit through the mandatory Marxist indoctrination classes prepared me just fine.
I am a recently retired University professor.
In many, many Departments there is no requirement of learning. Our colleges have become giant casks in which wine (students) are "aged" from 18 to 22. They are less capable for the experience.
College is a waste for most students and a definite lifetime financial drag on millions.
" . . . like an ability to show up on time and take direction."
From what I read, a degree no longer shows these things.
Thank you!
A college degree certainly does not show a knowledge of reading, writing, and arithmetic any more - not even what my father had to learn to graduate from 8th grade in a 2-room country school about 70 years ago.
Businesses are starting to relax their requirements, too. This is a good thing. Time to let the archaic "university" system crumble to dust.
I question the assertion in the article of a degree being needful for a career in a field such as engineering. For fourteen of the twenty-nine years in which I worked in electronics engineering, I was an independent consultant engineer. I was the guy that corporations called in when their degreed engineers were unable to solve their technical problems. Did I have a college degree in electronics? Nothing of the kind. I was in college for three years before I changed from a biology-major to a practitioner of electronics engineering, at which I am an example of an autodidact. My three years in college weren't entirely wasted, but they weren't the best use I could have made of my time. And I never got any degree. After my name come not letters signifying university approbation, but numbers, patent numbers. By the way, at the close of 1994, I retired before reaching the age of 51 and entered yet another field of endeavor, which has been far more satisfying than it has been remunerative. And I've thoroughly enjoyed both careers.
Except in professions where there are competency certifications, a college degree has been ignored by everyone except the resume filtering algorithms. Holding such a degree tells you very little, indeed. In my line of work (software development), we wanted to see your work and then hear your answers to hypothetical scenarios.
The best developer I ever hired was still in school, earning a degree in Japanese, and driving a local commuter bus for income. I asked him why he was even thinking of applying for a job as a programmer, and he answered, “I’m taking Japanese because it’s the most intellectually challenging coursework I could find, and I’m driving a bus because the thought of personally controlling a huge machine where the lives of dozens of people were at stake was exciting. I think I would make a very good developer and I want to work on something that thousands of people depend on.” I hired him on the spot.
No thanks, Virginia is hiring....
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