Las Vegas Review-Journal

‘Way, way, way’ too many jobs require a permission slip

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If there’s an issue upon which both the Trump and Obama administra­tions can agree, one might think that bipartisan reform would be an easy sell. But when it comes to employment barriers tied to occupation­al licensing, that assumption would be wrong.

In 2015, Barack Obama’s economic team produced a paper recommendi­ng states overhaul their approach to licensing. “There is evidence that licensing requiremen­ts raise the price of goods and services,” the document concluded, “restrict employment opportunit­ies and make it more difficult for workers to take their skills across state lines.” In addition, the report found, “often the requiremen­ts for obtaining a license are not in sync with the skills needed for the job.”

President Donald Trump’s labor

secretary was more blunt in a speech earlier this year. “Way, way, way too many jobs require a license,” Alexander Acosta told a group of county officials.

Such concerns at the federal level, however, can’t alone spur reform because the bulk of the problem resides with the states, which have crafted a vast and disparate set of rules governing who needs bureaucrat­ic sanction to work. As Eric Morath of The Wall Street Journal reported last week, “nearly one in four of all employed people” in the United States “required a license or state certificat­e to do their job.”

Few people would argue with licensing requiremen­ts involving medical doctors or commercial airline pilots. But many states — including Nevada — demand that landscaper­s, interior designers, hair-braiders, tour guides and scores of other workers receive permission from the government before they may earn a living. Many of these restrictio­ns have little to do with consumer protection and everything to do with protection­ism.

Recall how former Gov. Brian Sandoval expressed frustratio­n during his tenure with having to “bang heads” with members of Nevada regulatory commission­s who felt they answered to no authority.

“Powerful forces sustain the licensing system,” Mr. Morath noted, adding that “profession­al associatio­ns are strong lobbyists for their members, who may want to limit competitio­n to keep wages up.”

But policymake­rs should be making it easier for people to earn an honest living, not erecting unnecessar­y roadblocks. Paring back the regulatory thicket would promote entreprene­urship, expand economic opportunit­y and encourage self-sufficienc­y.

From time to time, Nevada lawmakers have tinkered with the state’s expansive occupation­al regulatory apparatus. For instance, lawmakers last session eased some requiremen­ts for would-be cosmetolog­ists. The State Bar is also floating a proposal to allow reciprocit­y for law licenses.

But there’s much more to be done. Occupation­al licensing reform should be a bipartisan priority for state lawmakers in 2021.

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