Another Illegal Power Grab From the FTC
Banning noncompete agreements goes well beyond the FTC's legal authority.

More than 30 million Americans have signed employment contracts that limit their ability to switch jobs to a competing company, and those contracts are regulated by laws in 47 states.
The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) swept all of that aside in one fell swoop this week, as the commission voted down party lines to ban future noncompete agreements and to block the enforcement of many of those existing contracts. (The retroactive ban on noncompete agreements does not apply to senior-level employees.) Even for an agency that has sought in recent years to stretch its regulatory reach, the new FTC rule banning noncompete agreements is a stunning expansion of federal power—one that courts almost certainly will be asked to rein in.
Banning noncompete agreements is "not only unlawful but also a blatant power grab," said Suzanne P. Clark, president and CEO of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, in a statement. "This decision sets a dangerous precedent for government micromanagement of business and can harm employers, workers, and our economy."
The chamber is already preparing to sue the FTC over the new rules, Clark said. That lawsuit could be filed as soon as Wednesday, according to The Wall Street Journal.
FTC Commissioner Lina Khan says the new rule "will ensure that Americans have the freedom to pursue a new job, start a new business, or bring a new idea to market."
But the commission's legal authority to issue such a rule seems extremely tenuous. The FTC claims that section Sections 5 and 6(g) of the Federal Trade Commission Act grant it the authority to regulate "unfair methods of competition," which may include things like noncompete agreements.
Traditionally, the FTC has operated more like a law enforcement agency—that is, going after firms and industries that engage in anti-competitive behavior like price fixing or that hold monopolies. In issuing this rule, the commission is trying to switch gears towards being a regulatory agency that can promulgate sweeping rules applying to the whole economy. In doing so, Khan is pushing against the commission's history and decades of legal precedents.
The Supreme Court has twice struck down attempts by the FTC to expand its regulatory authority via those sections of the law, as lawyers for TechFreedom explained in comments to the FTC filed last week. "The text and structure of the FTC Act establish, beyond a shadow of a doubt, that Section 6(g) does not empower the agency to issue substantive rules, that is, rules with the force of law," wrote Berin Szóka and Corbin Barthold.
"The final rule to ban all noncompete agreements nationwide—except existing noncompetes for senior executives—is a radical departure from hundreds of years of legal precedent," Ben Brubeck, vice president of the Associated Builders and Contractors, said in a statement. "Ultimately, this vastly overbroad rule will invalidate millions of reasonable contracts—including construction project contracts—around the country that are beneficial for both businesses and employees."
Three states—California, North Dakota, and Oklahoma—already ban noncompete agreements. New York Gov. Kathy Hochul, a Democrat, vetoed a bill last year that would have banned those contacts in her state. That demonstrates that there is a robust, ongoing (and not particularly partisan) policy debate over noncompete agreements at the state level—a debate that the FTC has bigfooted with its decision on Tuesday.
The two Republican appointees to the FTC voted against the new rule on Tuesday. In a dissenting statement, both expressed the belief that the commission was overstepping its bounds.
Alden Abbott, a former FTC general counsel now working as a senior research fellow at the Mercatus Center, said in a statement that the FTC lacks the statutory authority to ban noncompete agreements. Even if the commission did have the authority to take such action, Abbott argued that a "one-size-fits-all" federal approach to regulating those contracts would be inferior to the longstanding practice of letting states regulate them.
"Non-competes have throughout our history been a matter of state law, allowing for fruitful policy experimentation among the states, consistent with American federalism," said Abbott. "Three politically-appointed bureaucrats who are not accountable to American voters should not possess the sort of power that the FTC is asserting over non-compete agreements."
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is it bad enough yet, Eric?
Indentured servitude polls well.
#SleepyJoeGonnaLose
especially with the ladies #downwith19th
Unironically
I understand the federal government need to cut costs; may I make a suggestion?
This is why you can’t have chicks in charge.
While I applaud nuking the non-compete shit, it should have been done through Congress, not unilaterally by the FTC.
Lina Khan don't play that.
Agreed, it's probably good policy but it's absolutely Congress's job to decide that, not a legitimate decision for an executive branch agency.
I wouldn't even concede that. I don't think it's sound policy. What's wrong with letting employers and employees decide whether a noncompete is a good idea or not? Why should you or I have any say in the matter?
Here's my prediction, should this stand: wages will go down a little bit and training budgets will get cut. Automation for low to moderate skill jobs will increase. Job turnover will increase and with that, prices will go up a little bit. I don't see how you'd be sure that's worth it.
^+1
It's stunning to think such a large fraction of the American work force would have such specialized skill and knowledge as to make non-compete agreements worth anyone's while. I can only imagine that employers figure it's not a cost to themselves, so why not, and that employees expect to treat them as so much toilet paper, so why not?
Stretch that imagination just a little. What is the tradeoff? Hiring in tech industries is very competitive.
* Employees get more pay, and sometimes guaranteed longer severance pay.
* Employers don't worry as much about training someone who skips to a competitor as soon as they know enough to be valuable.
If you can't see the tradeoff, you don't understand the question.
Oh, I get it — it's mostly not about skills, but a fear that an employee will steal names from established client and contact lists. Right? The only problem is that for some businesses, essentially everyone who might potentially deal or have dealed with them is on that list, so it's like they want to monopolize all the clients and customers who are out there. In some cases a lot of work went into establishing relationships, while in others they're just names from a search list.
Names?!? Contact lists?!? Is that what you think it means to train an engineer?
Wholly mackerel.
You are arguing apples to oranges. R writes about people without specialized skills and you are arguing engineers.
Now I'm not one who defends engineers often (try building a building off blueprints only), but I'd say they fall into the category of having specialized skills.
I run a business in a non-tech industry in the Midwest, and the contact lists is a real problem for certain vendors. There may be some gray area where the employee has cultivated new clients, but I have reps that I see rotating through multiple employers that inherited customers that they leave and start trying to pump with their new employer.
Pretty much anybody who sells a business signs a non compete. I have. It's boilerplate. The calculation is that the benefit outweighs the liability.
In the case of a local business the non compete is sometimes restricted to a geographic area. The customers are the business. That's what you're paying for. I wouldn't sign a purchase contract without a non compete.
In fairness, it depends on the industry. Non-competes in technical fields are more often about recouping your investment in training the employee but non-competes in sales-heavy fields (like financial services) are often about creating a time-gap so the employee doesn't take customers with him/her.
Roberta, I mostly agree. They are stupid for rank and file employees but they have their place for more senior employees entrusted with very sensitive information that could severely hurt a business if leaked to a direct competitor. NDAs don't cut it unfortunately, as in practice they are very hard to enforce as its nearly impossible to show what an ex-employee may have revealed behind closed doors.
Pretty much anybody who sells a business signs a non compete. I have. It's boilerplate. The calculation is that the benefit outweighs the liability.
This is about employees. Not business owners.
The FTC was created in 1914 for the purpose, among others, of enforcing the Clayton Antitrust Act of that same year. But Section 6 of the Clayton Act expressly states, “the labor of a human being is not a commodity or article of commerce,” for the express purpose of excluding the labor of human beings from the scope of antitrust laws. How can the FTC now purport to regulate the “labor of a human being?” Was there some subsequent enactment that overrides the Clayton Act in this regard?
The FYTW act of STFU.
Constitution Schmonstitution. It's a good thing, so it's in the Biden Administration executive powers.
On the one hand: Non-Compete Clauses are stupid.
On the other: Lina Khan.
100% this.
"The Supreme Court has twice struck down attempts by the FTC to expand its regulatory authority via those sections of the law"
Lina don't care. Lina don't hafta care! Lina a socialist in power.
More competition between businesses is hardly a socialist idea. Using the power of the state to prevent people from working and using their knowledge in fields where they have expertise is hardly libertarian.
Nothing says libertarian like state managed "competition". State intervention in a freely negotiated contract between two parties is socialism.
State enforced prevention of workers from using their skills and knowledge in fields where they have expertise is not capitalism. Capitalism supposedly encourages competition between businesses.
" State intervention in a freely negotiated contract between two parties is socialism."
It's capitalism as well. The state employs police, judges etc whose job it is to enforce contracts.
Just say you love Mussolini and leave it at that.
Unlike Mussolini, I am not a Capitalist. In any case governments and businesses colluding to suppress competition is normal in any society, capitalist or otherwise. It's understandable too. While competition engenders innovation, it's also very wasteful. Think of the arms race. We get more and more sophisticated weaponry and counter weaponry on both sides, ie innovation, but at tremendous cost for weapons likely to sit in storage for their entire shelf life.
I recently read a history of the tomato. The author outlined how competition in the modern American tomato market favored price over quality. There are still high quality imports available, but local growers are incentivized to produce the cheapest, most tasteless tomatoes they can.
Unlike those who can think, you're not one.
I notice this is the day where Reason (reluctantly) notices fascism.
“Noticing “ is problematic.
There’s a good chance Biden will be re-elected this year because the GOP has chosen Trump as its standard bearer. The business community will thus suffer from having progressives like Lina Kahn forcing unilateral decisions from above on businesses small and large.
"There’s a good chance Biden will be re-elected this year because the GOP has chosen Trump as its standard bearer..."
Stuff your TDS up your ass.
While I agree this should have been done by congress (shouldn't much be tho and it isn't), and salespersons and contact lists are a consideration, THIS IS LONG OVERDUE! I've been a specialized scientist in industry for over 30 years and I can't tell you how many situations I've witnessed where scientist of all ranks were abused horribly because they needed a job, they had to sign this, and employers threatened them that if they left and went elsewhere, with legal action - not to mention an employer just mentioning to competitors that an employee has one, whether they do or don't, and they aren't even considered for a position.
My situation - I've had to do without a promotion for over six years because our then new owners insist on this, WITHOUT any compensation for the period of non-compete. I'll never sign this knowing the horror stories colleagues of mine had endured.
Now, my boss will finally put me in for a promotion (he wouldn't before today because he knew I wouldn't sign the non-compete).
In most cases, companies ONLY use this to keep employees in line - they'll abuse them knowing they can't go anywhere else and work in their bread and butter. And if they get laid off, they're just shit out of luck. If it were about protecting IP, then they'd compensate for the period of non-compete with full salary. The fact that they usually don't speaks volumes.
Good riddance to Non-competes!!!!!!!!
Marc, you don't have to sign a non compete, and you can certainly negotiate the specifics of a non-compete before taking a job offer too. I have been on both sides, as an employee and an employer, and negotiated equitable arrangements in both cases.
In my case, my company was bought by another company, and in order to get promoted after that, I'd have to sign it. I tried negotiating with them, but they were steadfast - sign it or no promotion. They wouldn't even consider compensation during the period of non-compete, which I think is reasonable.
Be this all as it may - non-competes give way too much power to companies, whom all ready quintessentially hold all the cards when it comes to getting hired. Outside of executives, rarely does a person find themselves with several offers from several companies; usually it's one company choosing between several people, and you dearly hoping one chooses you - and not finding out about the non-compete until your first day - sign this or no job. How is that fair?
As Libertarians, we all believe in free markets AND at-will employment. Non competes stifle at-will employment and if all companies require non-competes, which they could, then at-will in your field of expertise is shot.
Wouldn't you rather be in a world where companies had to keep you with competitive benefits and salary rather than signing away your career to them even if they let you go - don't you think it's rather rich for a company to both claim you're valuable and can't compete with them and, if laid off, no longer of any value to the company?
Hell, I would've been very happy if the FTC simply declared that all non-competes must compensate the employee with full salary and benefits for the duration of the non-compete period. If they did, I'm pretty sure all the "let's control employees" non competes would have gone away.
If you are so valuable, go start your own place.
Meh, firms will start charging employees for training costs(a certain time frame) through a transparent salary package… Training costs us ${#%^ per hour per your position. After that the salary resets to $3$@&.
Training is expensive. The youngins think they’re going to get a six figure job, hang out in training while collecting the check, then rinse and repeat at the next firm.