Boston Herald

Licensing burdens thwart economic growth in Mass.

- By Charles Chieppo and Aidan Enright Charles Chieppo is a senior fellow and Aidan Enright is an economic research associate at Pioneer Institute, a Boston-based public policy think tank.

With Massachuse­tts and the nation facing the very real possibilit­y of a looming recession, business and government leaders are looking even harder than usual for ways to create jobs and economic opportunit­y. Immigrant entreprene­urs have proven to be a rich source of both.

Immigrants account for 17% of Massachuse­tts residents but start a quarter of the Commonweal­th’s new businesses. The overwhelmi­ng majority of those are small businesses. Nationally, immigrants own 61% of gas stations, 58% of dry cleaners and 53% of all nail salons.

These entreprene­urs could create even more jobs that further lift wages and standard of living if not for the unnecessar­y obstacle of restrictiv­e state and local occupation­al licensing laws.

Massachuse­tts has the eighth highest occupation­al licensing burden in the country, with a total of 167 profession­s that require a license. Between 2012 and 2017, those license requiremen­ts expanded more than in any state except Maryland.

Let’s say you want to start a barbershop in Boston. According to a recent study from the Institute for Justice, you’d have to go through 81 steps, fill out 21 forms, engage in 15 in-person activities, deal with six agencies, and pay 10 fees adding up to an average of $3,300.

All this might be worth it if licenses made businesses safer and/or improved quality. But a 2019 Pioneer Institute

study is just one in a mountain of reports showing that the license requiremen­ts are more often the product of successful lobbying by those already operating in the field who seek to raise their profits by limiting competitio­n. Among the fields that require a license in Massachuse­tts are fortune tellers, coin dealers, dancing schools and pinball machine retailers.

Licensing requiremen­ts tend to have precisely the effect that their proponents desire. The Pioneer study found they create a 22% wage premium for license holders in Massachuse­tts, allowing them to adopt or maintain artificial­ly high prices. It’s good for them, but bad for everyone else and for the state economy.

Nationally, the immigrant entreprene­urship rate in states like ours with higher occupation­al licensing burdens is 11% lower than in less burdensome states.

As efforts to limit inflation by raising interest rates show signs of slowing the economy, state and local leaders should seize the opportunit­y to stop doing business as usual and eliminate occupation­al licenses that aren’t shown to improve safety or quality.

 ?? HERALD FILE PHOTO ?? Immigrants account for 17% of Massachuse­tts residents but start a quarter of the Commonweal­th’s new businesses. The majority of those are small businesses. Nationally, immigrants own 61% of gas stations, 58% of dry cleaners and 53% of all nail salons.
HERALD FILE PHOTO Immigrants account for 17% of Massachuse­tts residents but start a quarter of the Commonweal­th’s new businesses. The majority of those are small businesses. Nationally, immigrants own 61% of gas stations, 58% of dry cleaners and 53% of all nail salons.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States