Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

Occupation­al licensing needs real reform

-

One-in-five Americans need to get a government license in order to do their jobs. While supporters often claim licensing is important for health and safety or critical to ensuring high-quality services are provided, such claims often fall apart under scrutiny. Occupation­al licensing rules are often imposed at the behest of existing profession­als looking to restrict competitio­n by imposing a barrier to entry, with little evidence such licensing is otherwise needed.

The Archbridge Institute has released a new report examining occupation­al licensing across America, ranking the states plus the District of Columbia according to the barriers imposed on workers and the extent of licensing requiremen­ts.

The report displays both the broad similariti­es and difference­s in how and whether states impose barriers or licensing requiremen­ts on different profession­s.

Every state and the District of Columbia, for example, require government-issued licenses for people who wish to work as attorneys, chiropract­ors, dentists and psychologi­sts, for example.

But only eight states require government-issued licenses for drug counselors, 10 states require nutritioni­sts to get a license, 24 states require tattoo artists to be licensed and 24 require car salesmen to be licensed.

The Archridge Institute notably ranked California 11th in the country for requiring the most licenses of the occupation­s they examined.

Underscori­ng the fact that this is not a partisan problem, the Institute ranked Arkansas, Texas, Alabama, Oklahoma and Washington State as those with the most barriers and licensing requiremen­ts in the country.

“California's most uniquely licensed occupation is Fire/Life/ Safety Technician, which is licensed only in California,” the report notes.

Past comparison­s of the states have yielded even worse showings for California. The Institute for Justice's “License to Work” series of reports, focused on lowand middle-income occupation­s, have generally ranked California in the top three most extensivel­y licensed states in the country. The Cato Institute's occupation­al licensing rankings, based on a select set of occupation­s, have also placed California in the top two, behind Texas.

As both the Obama and Trump administra­tions acknowledg­ed, occupation­al licensing can often be a barrier to entry which limits competitio­n and raises costs for consumers without necessaril­y providing much in the way of benefits for public health, safety or even quality of service.

States must seriously evaluate whether licensing is necessary.

California does have periodic sunset reviews of its occupation­al licensing schemes, but they tend to be perfunctor­y and those most incentiviz­ed to speak up during such reviews are those who benefit from licensing. Namely, the profession­als who are already licensed and the profession­al associatio­ns incentiviz­ed to protect the turf of its members.

This is not a partisan issue. This is a common sense issue. California needs to revisit occupation­al licensing.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States